- The Justice Department said it temporarily removed nearly 48,000 files related to Jeffrey Epstein investigations from public access for further review and redaction.
- These files are expected to be restored online by the end of the week after personally identifiable information and images of a sexual nature are addressed.
- Among the withheld documents are materials detailing unverified allegations against President Donald Trump, which the Justice Department has labeled as "unfounded and false."
- The department was legally mandated to release millions of files under the Epstein Files Transparency Act, with an initial release of over 3 million pages, though that figure is now roughly 2.7 million, according to an analysis of the files by CBS News and The Wall Street Journal.
- Donald Trump has consistently denied any wrongdoing and has characterized efforts to release the full files as a "hoax." Trump has not been accused of criminal wrongdoing, and one’s appearance in the Epstein files does not suggest otherwise.
IN FULL