A federal choose is ordering the Division of Justice to show over unredacted variations of a number of the information associated to the late convicted intercourse offender Jeffrey Epstein or clarify why the supplies have been withheld.
U.S. District Choose Emmet Sullivan sided with an impartial journalist who sued over the withheld supplies, concluding that the Trump administration probably violated the phrases of the Epstein Files Transparency Act.
The Division of Justice has till July 2 to both flip over the paperwork with much less redactions — particularly figuring out the sender and recipient of some emails and the names of co-conspirators included in a draft indictment — or clarify “why the redactions shouldn’t be eliminated.”
This photograph illustration exhibits redacted paperwork from the Epstein Library information launched by the US Division of Justice in Washington, DC, on February 18, 2026.
Brendan Smialowski/AFP by way of Getty Photographs
He additionally ordered the Division of Justice to publish a log detailing all of the redactions.
Among the many paperwork included within the ruling, Choose Sullivan ordered the DOJ handy over the underlying notes from the FBI’s interview with a woman who accused President Donald Trump of assault. These claims have been uncorroborated, and Trump has denied the allegations. The DOJ has launched the interview reviews from a few of these interviews, however not the underlying notes.
The Trump administration additionally was ordered to disclose the sender and recipients of a collection of emails that reference the recruiting of younger ladies.
“The important thing are the 14 to fifteen yr previous girls–i am a sexual pervert as a result of i say they’re now of a reproductive age?” stated one electronic mail despatched to Epstein in 2015. “My coronary heart goes out to you brother … being known as a sexual pervert is not any enjoyable.”
“She is like Lolita from Nabokov , femme miniature 🙂 So now I ought to ship you her kind of candidates solely,” one other electronic mail, despatched to Epstein in 2017 stated.
Choose Sullivan rejected the DOJ’s arguments in opposition to releasing the supplies and concluded that the Public Integrity Undertaking, a public curiosity legislation agency, demonstrated that impartial journalist Katie Phang was harmed by the supplies being withheld.
“The Court docket concludes that Ms. Phang satisfies the second a part of the take a look at: she is struggling the kind of harm–lack of transparency–that Congress sought to forestall by requiring disclosure of the data and the disclosure of the data that Ms. Phang seeks would assist her in her work,” the ruling stated.
The Public Integrity Undertaking stated that the ruling will guarantee “the general public will lastly get transparency round Jeffrey Epstein and his community.”
“The federal government ignored a legislation handed by Congress after which refused to defend its personal conduct in court docket, all for the sake of defending the wealthy and highly effective,” stated Brendan Ballou with the Public Integrity Undertaking.
The DOJ started releasing hundreds of pages of paperwork associated to Epstein late final yr, following the discharge of the Epstein Recordsdata Transparency Act.
Nonetheless, the division confronted criticism from some lawmakers who questioned whether or not the division has violated the act by withholding some supplies and lacking the deadline to launch the information.
As well as, some Democratic lawmakers criticized what they known as “completely unnecessary redactions” in a number of the information and stated the DOJ had did not redact the names of some victims.

Appearing U.S. Lawyer Common Todd Blanche appears on throughout a signing ceremony for the Safe America Act within the Oval Workplace of the White Home, June 10, 2026 in Washington.
Alex Wong/Getty Photographs
Appearing Lawyer Common Todd Blanche has acknowledged repeatedly that the DOJ has complied with the law, whilst he has acknowledged that the division continues to withhold tens of millions of extra pages that he says aren’t related to the legislation’s calls for — both as a result of they’re duplicates or include specific materials.
In April, the DOJ’s inner watchdog introduced it was launching an audit into DOJ’s compliance with the legislation.
