On December 19, local time, the US Department of Justice began publishing investigation documents related to the Epstein case. The Ministry of Justice added a note to the page where it posted a link to the document, saying that it had “made every reasonable effort” to edit the victim's personal information, but warned that some of the information could be inadvertently leaked. According to reports, Deputy Attorney General Blanche said in a letter to Congress that during a comprehensive review of the files, the Department of Justice identified more than 1,200 victims and their families, and all relevant names and identity information had been deleted in accordance with the law. Branch said earlier in the day that hundreds of thousands of documents will be released on the 19th, but the full disclosure may take “several weeks.”

Zhitongcaijing · 1d ago
On December 19, local time, the US Department of Justice began publishing investigation documents related to the Epstein case. The Ministry of Justice added a note to the page where it posted a link to the document, saying that it had “made every reasonable effort” to edit the victim's personal information, but warned that some of the information could be inadvertently leaked. According to reports, Deputy Attorney General Blanche said in a letter to Congress that during a comprehensive review of the files, the Department of Justice identified more than 1,200 victims and their families, and all relevant names and identity information had been deleted in accordance with the law. Branch said earlier in the day that hundreds of thousands of documents will be released on the 19th, but the full disclosure may take “several weeks.”