Summary
A US congressional panel has released over 33,000 pages of documents related to Jeffrey Epstein's investigation. These documents include flight logs, surveillance videos, and court filings, but they reportedly contain little new information. The release aims to address demands for transparency in the investigation of the late financier.
Key Facts
- The US House Oversight Committee published 33,295 pages of documents related to Jeffrey Epstein's case.
- The documents include flight logs, jail videos, court filings, and emails.
- Republicans and Democrats say the files don't contain new information.
- Pressure for transparency came from President Donald Trump's supporters.
- The newly released videos include additional footage from outside Epstein's cell but miss the "missing minute."
- Some documents date back 20 years, related to the initial investigation by Palm Beach police.
- Flight logs reportedly show Epstein's travel to and from his private island.
- A bipartisan bill seeks to mandate the release of all Epstein files within 30 days.