Attorney General Pam Bondi has confirmed that “all” of the documents tied to disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein have now been made public.
According to the 60-year-old, the full release was carried out in accordance with Section 3 of the Epstein Files Transparency Act, following months of staggered disclosures by the Trump administration.
Millions of emails, photographs, and documents connected to Epstein’s case were released in batches across December and January after federal workers spent extensive hours reviewing the material.
The final release includes the names of more than 300 high-profile individuals who appear in the files published by the Department of Justice.
Over 300 High-Profile Names Appear In The Files
Some of the 300 names listed include President Donald Trump, Microsoft founder Bill Gates, Margaret Thatcher, Barack and Michelle Obama, Benjamin Netanyahu, Princess Diana, and Bill and Hillary Clinton.
Industry stars such as Barbara Streisand, Amy Schumer, Bruce Springsteen, Kim Kardashian, Bill Cosby, and Robert De Niro are also on the list.
Credit: DOJ
Credit: DOJ
Credit: DOJ
Bondi’s letter, which was released on February 14, included a separate compilation of individuals who “are or were a government official or politically exposed person” and were also named “in the files released under the Act at least once,” per Daily Mail.
The attorney general and her deputy, Todd Blanche, noted that the names appear in a “wide variety of contexts,” underscoring that references range broadly in nature.
Being named in the files does not assume any guilt or wrongdoing connected to Epstein’s heinous child sex crimes.
Jeffrey Epstein and Bill Clinton in a photo released by the Justice Department. Credit: Department Of Justice
What Bondi’s Letter Says About Withheld Records
Bondi outlined the scope of the disclosures and addressed questions about withheld material in her letter.
“The only category of records withheld were those records where permitted withholdings under Section 2(c) and privileged materials were not segregable from material responsive under Section 2(a),” the letter stated.
“As discussed in the Department’s December 19, 2025, and January 29, 2026, letters to Congress (the Prior EFTA Letters), the privileges that applied to the withheld records were deliberative-process privilege, work-product privilege, and attorney-client privilege.”
Bondi further emphasized that reputational concerns did not factor into any redactions or withholdings.
“No records were withheld or redacted ‘on the basis of embarrassment, reputational harm, or political sensitivity, including to any government official, public figure, or foreign dignitary,’” she added.
With the final batch now released, the disclosure process under the Epstein Files Transparency Act has officially concluded.
