The Justice Department has filed a request to unseal grand jury exhibits and testimony from its prosecutions of Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell, with redactions to protect the identities of victims, according to court documents filed on August 8.
The filing, signed by Jay Clayton, U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, states that unsealing will proceed only after notifying individuals named in the exhibits who did not appear in grand jury transcripts.
The DOJ has asked Manhattan U.S. District Judge Richard Berman to delay the unsealing until after August 14, while notification processes are completed.
The grand jury material stems from the criminal cases against Epstein, a deceased financier and convicted sex offender, and Maxwell, a British socialite convicted of sex trafficking young girls alongside Epstein. The request comes amid ongoing public demand for greater transparency in the handling of these cases.
The DOJ previously revealed in a July 6 memo that Epstein’s crimes impacted over 1,000 victims. However, some victims have criticized the Justice Department’s handling of the case, accusing it of prioritizing the protection of wealthy third parties over justice for victims.
One victim wrote in a court submission that the DOJ’s focus seemed to be on “scrubbing their names off the files” rather than combating child exploitation, per the New York Post.
Another victim criticized the department after Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche met with Maxwell last month before her transfer from a federal jail in Florida to a minimum-security facility in Texas. The victim called for the DOJ to handle the “Epstein Files” with more respect toward those affected.
Much of the evidence and exhibits have already been made public following Epstein’s July 2019 arrest and his death by suicide in a Manhattan jail cell a month later. Maxwell was convicted in 2021 and sentenced to 20 years in prison for her role in Epstein’s sex trafficking ring.
President Donald Trump ordered the release of “credible” grand jury material on July 17 after his administration faced criticism for a brief memo indicating there was no evidence to charge additional third parties. That memo also denied the existence of a “client list” naming Epstein’s high-profile associates.
Despite this, scrutiny remains high as Epstein maintained close ties with influential figures including politicians, business leaders, academics, and celebrities.
Last week, former President Bill Clinton, who had received political donations from Epstein, was subpoenaed by a Republican-led House panel for a deposition in a related investigation.
The DOJ’s efforts to unseal these records come as demands grow for full disclosure of all parties involved and for accountability in one of the country’s most notorious criminal cases involving human trafficking and abuse.
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Author: Anthony Gonzalez
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