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Congress Presses Bondi Over Epstein Files Redactions, Victim Data Errors, and Logged Searches

The Justice Department says recording lawmakers' searches guarded victims' privacy under the new disclosure law.

Overview

  • House Democrats, joined by Republican coauthor Thomas Massie, criticized the Justice Department for blacking out names of possible Epstein accomplices despite the statute’s transparency mandate.
  • Lawmakers and victims condemned the mistaken publication of some victims’ names, contact details, and photos in the January release before the materials were removed.
  • Attorney General Pam Bondi delivered a combative performance at the House hearing, hurled insults at critics, and declined to apologize to victims over the disclosure errors.
  • The department confirmed it recorded members’ searches of non-public documents, a practice displayed in hearing materials and opposed by Democrats and Republican Speaker Mike Johnson.
  • The January 30 release exceeded three million pages, including a transcript recounting a 2006 call in which Donald Trump allegedly praised Epstein’s arrest, a detail reported without implying wrongdoing.