Donald Trump appears at a party alongside Jeffrey Epstein. Reproduction/Netflix Jeffrey Epstein’s victims claim that their alleged attackers “remain hidden and protected”, even after the publication, last Friday (30), of millions of new pages of the case by the United States government. Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said the White House had no role in the process of reviewing the millions of files released by the Justice Department, which include photos and videos. “This department was not told how to do our review, what to look for, what to censor, what not to censor,” Blanche said at a press conference. Epstein, a sex offender who had a close relationship with US President Donald Trump for years, died in prison in 2019 while awaiting trial on charges of sex trafficking of minors. The death was declared a suicide. See the videos that are trending on g1 The more than three million documents released on Friday cite Trump, as well as other public figures, such as Elon Musk, Bill Gates and former British prince Andrew. According to the Department of Justice, part of the documents contain “false and sensational allegations” about Trump, presented to the FBI before the 2020 presidential elections. Blanche, who previously served as Trump’s lawyer, denied that any compromising material about the president was excluded from the files released on Friday, which include at least 180,000 images and 2,000 videos. “We did not protect President Trump,” he said. “We neither protect nor fail to protect anyone.” He also explained that all images of girls and women were censored, with the exception of those showing Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein’s former companion and accomplice, who is serving a 20-year prison sentence for trafficking minors. Hidden and protected The victims of abuse committed by Epstein denounced, in a letter, that the files contain information that allows them to be identified, “while the men who abused us remain hidden and protected”. The letter, signed by 19 people — some identified only by pseudonyms or initials — demands “the complete publication of the Epstein files” and demands that United States Attorney General Pam Bondi testify to Congress next month. The documents released on Friday include a draft email in which Epstein claims Bill Gates had extramarital affairs. The Gates Foundation denied the information in a statement to the New York Times. Another document reveals an exchange of messages between Elon Musk and Epstein in 2012, in which Musk asks: “What day/night will the wildest party be on your island?” Musk declared this Saturday, on his social network X, that he was aware that messages could be “misinterpreted and used by my detractors to tarnish my name.” He called on the courts to prosecute “those who, alongside Epstein, committed serious crimes.” In other messages, Epstein associates Steve Tisch, 76, producer of the film Forrest Gump and co-owner of the New York Giants football team, with several women. According to the documents, former Prince Andrew, who lost his royal titles due to his ties to Epstein, invited the executive to Buckingham Palace in 2010, after the financier offered to introduce him to a Russian woman. The most conservative wing of Donald Trump’s supporters has been following the Epstein case for years and maintains that the financier ran a sex trafficking network aimed at the world’s elite. Maxwell, Epstein’s former partner, is the only other person charged with the financier’s crimes. The deputy attorney general downplayed expectations that the new documents will result in new charges. Publication delay Trump and former President Bill Clinton appear frequently in the documents released so far, but neither has been charged with any crime. The Republican president, who ran in the same social circles as Epstein in Florida and New York, resisted publishing the documents for months. However, strong discontent within the Republican Party itself led it to sanction a law that mandates the disclosure of all investigation documents. Trump gave different versions of the reasons that led to his separation from Epstein. He also criticized the release of the files, saying people who “innocently knew Epstein” over the years could have their reputations damaged. The deputy attorney general said Friday’s release “marks the end of a very thorough process of identifying and reviewing documents” that ended up being published late. The Epstein Files Transparency Act mandated that all Justice Department documents be published by December 19.
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Epstein case: victims protest after publication of documents and say attackers remain ‘hidden and protected’
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