The Mystery of the “Missing” Trump–Epstein Files

The U.S. Department of Justice says it will soon release nearly 50,000 additional documents connected to the Jeffrey Epstein case after journalists and lawmakers flagged records that appeared to be missing from a major disclosure earlier this year.

The documents were temporarily taken offline for review and redactions, but officials say nothing was deleted. Some files reportedly include unverified allegations involving former President Donald Trump, which he has strongly denied. The DOJ previously said such claims were “unfounded and false.”

The missing records are believed to include additional FBI interview notes from a woman who alleged she was assaulted by Trump and Epstein in the 1980s. The FBI never reached a conclusion about the credibility of the claim, and the woman was not eligible for the Epstein Victims’ Compensation Program.

The situation has now drawn Congressional scrutiny, with lawmakers requesting testimony from Justice Department officials and potentially others connected to Epstein.

As the DOJ prepares to release the remaining files, the key questions are:

• Why were these records not included initially?
• What exactly is in the unreleased interviews?
• Will the new documents change public understanding of Epstein’s network?

The upcoming disclosure could add new details to one of the most controversial investigations in recent U.S. history—and may renew political pressure around Epstein’s past associations.

#Epstein #EpsteinFiles #MissingFiles

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