President Donald Trump has formally signed a new law requiring the complete release of all unclassified government records connected to Jeffrey Epstein and his network. The legislation received overwhelming bipartisan support in Congress before reaching the president’s desk.
Lawmakers said the move aims to bring long-delayed transparency to one of America’s most controversial cases, ensuring the public gains access to documents that have remained sealed for years.
Under the new law, the Justice Department must publish all unclassified Epstein-related files online in a searchable format, with only limited redactions allowed to protect victims and national security.
Officials confirmed that the release will include communications, investigative reports, and government correspondences that could shed new light on Epstein’s operations and powerful associations.
The decision marks a sharp shift from Trump’s earlier resistance, as he now frames the release as a step toward “full accountability” and insists he supports exposing wrongdoing wherever it occurred.
The Justice Department has been given a strict deadline, prompting expectations of significant revelations once the documents are made public in the coming weeks.
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