Overview
- Attorney General Pam Bondi told Congress the DOJ has published all materials required by law and attached a roughly 300-name list of figures referenced in the files, asserting no redactions were made for embarrassment or political sensitivity.
- Co-authors of the disclosure law, Reps. Thomas Massie and Ro Khanna, dispute DOJ’s claim, saying key internal memos and notes remain hidden under deliberative‑process privilege, and Massie publicly withdrew confidence in Bondi.
- Channel 4 News’ review of internal emails indicates the public release totals about 300 GB—roughly 2% of 20–40 terabytes investigators handled—raising questions about how much remains undisclosed.
- An internal DOJ slideshow reported by The New Republic describes the FBI hearing from a victim who accused President Donald Trump of sexual assault and labels her a “credible accuser,” with a separate allegation tied to a key Maxwell witness, though DOJ outcomes are unclear.
- A 2019 FBI document that initially masked Leslie Wexner’s name as an alleged co‑conspirator was later unredacted after pressure from lawmakers, who are still seeking the rationale for non‑prosecution; critics also fault the DOJ’s name list for mixing casual mentions and deceased celebrities, noting that being named does not indicate wrongdoing.