The U.S. Department of Justice has released a new and expansive batch of documents tied to the investigations into convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, drawing fresh attention because of the number of references to Donald Trump contained within the material.
Massive Document Release Under Transparency Law
The Justice Department’s latest disclosure includes thousands of new files — nearly 30,000 pages of photos, emails, court records, internal communications and other records tied to the Epstein investigation. This release comes under the Epstein Files Transparency Act — a law passed by Congress and signed by Trump in November 2025 requiring the DOJ to make unclassified Epstein-related documents public.
Department officials described the release as part of their commitment to legal transparency, although they acknowledged the vetting process to protect the privacy of Epstein’s abuse survivors has delayed results.
What Mentions of Trump Show
The newly released files mention President Trump in several key contexts, though none amount to criminal allegations:
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Flight Logs and Prosecutor Email: Among the disclosures is a 2020 email from a federal prosecutor stating that flight records indicate Trump flew on Epstein’s private jet “many more times than previously reported.” According to the records, Trump took at least eight flights on Epstein’s jet in the 1990s, including at least some trips with Ghislaine Maxwell aboard.
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Internal Communications & Emails: Other mentions of Trump in the files occur in DOJ emails and news clippings circulated among federal employees, but many are redacted or lack independent verification.
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Controversial Postcard / Card: The DOJ also released an image of a postcard allegedly sent by Epstein to convicted doctor Larry Nassar that references Trump in a crude context. The authenticity and provenance of the card are disputed, and the department has stated such sensationalist claims are unfounded.
Justice Department’s Stance and Reactions
In a post on social media platform X, the Justice Department emphasized that some claims included in the files — especially those about Trump — are “untrue and sensationalist.” DOJ officials noted that if such allegations had merit, they would likely have been used previously in public scrutiny or legal efforts.
Trump himself has dismissed the broader release as a distraction and criticized the publication of photos and references to high-profile figures who were socially connected to Epstein. In prior comments he defended other public figures mentioned in the files, including former President Bill Clinton, arguing that many met Epstein innocently years ago.
Political and Public Response
The document release has stoked political tension and calls for greater transparency. Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer has urged the Justice Department to provide more detail on at least ten potential Epstein co-conspirators referenced in the materials — including how they were identified and why they were not prosecuted.
Meanwhile, advocates for Epstein’s survivors and some lawmakers argue the DOJ’s phased and heavily redacted approach falls short of the transparency mandate established under the new law. The Guardian
No New Criminal Charges
Despite references to Trump and other prominent individuals appearing in the files, there are no new criminal charges or formal allegations of wrongdoing tied to Trump emerging from this release. The mentions mostly relate to social connections, flight logs and unverified or disputed tips included in the broader investigative record.










