Thousands of Jeffrey Epstein files published in Surprise House Document Dump

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The Chamber’s supervisory committee published a slice of thousands of documents related to the case of Jeffrey Epstein on Tuesday evening.
The Surprise file dumping up came before a voting at the Chamber’s scale planned to formalize the Epstein investigation on the committee on Wednesday afternoon.
This vote, although largely symbolic, would also order the Chamber’s supervisory committee to publish the Epstein files sent by the Ministry of Justice (DOJ).
Nearly 34,000 pages are published which include the interview with the Doj with Ghislaine Maxwell and videos that seem to show the interior of the house of Palm Beach of Epstein.
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The chairman of the Chamber’s Supervisory and Responsibility Committee, James Comer, publishes thousands of files related to Jeffrey Epstein. (SOMODEVILLA / GETTY Images)
Epstein’s brother Mark Epstein was Skepitcal about Tuesday’s release.
“There is no news there. I prefer to see the band in the morning when they removed his body from the level,” he told Fox News Digital. “It would show who was there, perhaps who directed the show, etc. may be news.”
The drop included law application of the law that showed interviews recorded with survivors conducted during the 2005-2006 Palm Beach investigation involving Epstein, as well as the police camera and the search images of the Palm Beach disgrace, Florida and interviews with Maxwell.
The committee said that the DoJ had produced the files with identities of protected victims, but the congress is currently publishing raw videos in a centralized benchmark.
There was also a video of the region outside the Epstein prison cell in the Metropolitan Correction Center in New York.
A file contained a messaging chain of Doj officials which included a calendar of the last hours of Epstein. It was written 24 hours after Epstein was found dead in his federal prison cell in Brooklyn, while waiting for a sexual traffic trial.
“Hugh / Ray: Can you check that the information below is correct? It is largely based on the calendar you have sent,” wrote an official, the email address of which has been expelled. “Is there a reason why this information should not be returned to the public?”
The details of the calendar have already been largely reported: Epstein was placed under suicide surveillance in the prison on July 23, 2019 and received daily psyche assessments. On July 29, the authorities withdrew him from Suicide Watch but placed him in a special housing unit, where he was supposed to be placed with a cellmaker for security.
His cell companion left for the court on August 9, and the judge let him return home, then Epstein was alone in his cell. His last contact with the guards came around midnight on August 10. Although the guards are supposed to make checks every 30 minutes, no one saw Epstein until about 6:30 am, when the staff serving breakfast found him insensitive to his cell. He was declared dead and the authorities said he had hanged himself.

On Tuesday, a large part of the Epstein documents published by the Chamber’s supervisory committee had already been made public. (Register of sex offenders from New York State via AP, file)
The chairman of the Chamber’s supervisory committee, James Comer, R-Ky., Assigned the DoJ in early August for all documents concerning his investigation into Epstein and Maxwell.
The assignment was led by a bipartite vote during a hearing of the surveillance committee of the independent chamber in late July.
“This is the most in -depth investigation into Epstein and Maxwell to date, and we get results,” said Comme at a meeting of the Rules of the Chamber Committee on Tuesday evening.
“We have already deposited the former attorney general Bill Barr, the Ministry of Justice has provided nearly 34,000 pages of documents and will produce more, which are made public when we speak.”
Representative Robert Garcia, D-Calif., The best democrat of the committee, said that around 97% of these documents were already public.
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The Chamber’s supervisory committee is investigating the federal government treatment of Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell cases. (Joe Schildhorn / Patrick McMullan via Getty Images)
The representative Summer Lee, d-pa., Said that the Democrats would continue to put pressure for unresaled files involving Epstein.
“We recognize that Doj Trump has all the incentives not to comply,” Lee told Fox News Digital. “It is, I imagine, a very small beginning, but we are waiting for the rest.”?
Lee notes that the massive majority of files published on Tuesday had all been published publicly “, which means that the Doj failed.”
The sudden release seems to be an attempt to neutralize an effort by the representatives Thomas Massie, R-Ky., And Ro Khanna, D-Calif., To force a vote on their own bill to make the publication of information on Epstein.
The bipartite pair is the spearhead of what is known as a discharge petition – a rare procedural decision which allows legislators to bypass leadership if a majority of room members connect.
Such a vote could place republican legislators, which also put pressure for more transparency, in a difficult position, forced to decide between political ramifications to rub the vote or challenge their own leaders.
Massie told Fox News Digital earlier this week that he expected enough signatures to reach this threshold by the end of this week.
“I think there is a very good chance of that,” he said.

Representative Thomas Massie, r-ky., Arrives from the Caucus meeting of the Chamber Republican Conference at the Capitol on Wednesday, June 4, 2025. (Bill Clark / CQ-Roll Call, included via Getty Images)
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But Commer said that the committee was “ahead” of Massie and Khanna’s decision.
“We are going to go beyond. We already get the administration documents,” said Commer. “I don’t think at all (the discharge petition is) necessary.”
In addition to depositing Barr and assigning the DoJ, the Camer’s panel also sent quotes to appear at the old general prosecutor Loretta Lynch, the former director of the FBI James Comey, former president Bill Clinton and the former secretary of state Hillary Clinton.