Attorney General Pam Bondi informed Congress on Saturday that the Department of Justice has released all documents required under the Epstein Files Transparency Act and attached a list of more than 300 high-profile names that appear in the materials.
The letter, addressed to the chairmen and ranking members of both the Senate and House Judiciary Committees, marks what Bondi described as full compliance with Section 3 of the Act, Fox News reported. No records were held back to protect reputations. No redactions were made to spare the powerful from scrutiny.
For years, the political class promised transparency on Jeffrey Epstein. Bondi delivered it.
What the Files Contain
The scope of the release is enormous. Bondi's letter stated that the Department released all "records, documents, communications, and investigative materials in the possession of the Department" across nine distinct categories. Those categories span the full architecture of Epstein's trafficking and financial operations — reaching into corporate, nonprofit, academic, and governmental spheres.
The documents cover civil settlements, immunity deals, plea agreements, non-prosecution agreements, and sealed arrangements. They also include documentation surrounding Epstein's detention and death, including incident reports, witness interviews, and medical examiner and autopsy-related records. Materials addressing the potential destruction or concealment of relevant evidence are part of the release as well.
The redaction process, described as extensive, involved consultation with victims and victim counsel to protect identifiable information — medical files, records that could jeopardize an active federal investigation or ongoing prosecution, and images depicting death, physical abuse, or injury. The Department shielded victims, not perpetrators.
The Names
The list of more than 300 names includes individuals who are or were government officials or "politically exposed persons." Among the names that appeared: President Donald Trump, Barack Obama, Michelle Obama, Prince Harry, Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerberg, Woody Allen, Bruce Springsteen — and, in one of the more puzzling inclusions, Kurt Cobain.
Bondi's letter was careful to note that the names appear in a "wide variety of contexts." Some individuals had:
- Extensive direct email contact with Epstein or Ghislaine Maxwell
- Mentions in portions of documents — including press reporting — that on their face are unrelated to the Epstein and Maxwell matters
Appearing on a list is not an accusation. But appearing in these files — in whatever context — means a name crossed the orbit of one of the most prolific predators in modern American history. The public can now read the context for themselves. That's the point.
No Shields for the Powerful
The most significant line in the letter may be the most understated. Bondi wrote:
"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.'"
Read that again. For the better part of a decade, the Epstein case has been surrounded by the suspicion — not unfounded — that the machinery of government was more interested in protecting connected names than pursuing justice. Sweetheart plea deals. Sealed agreements. A death in federal custody that still raises more questions than answers. Every stage of this saga carried the scent of institutional protectiveness.
Bondi's letter draws a line. The Department acknowledged that any omissions from the list are unintentional, a product of the volume and speed of compliance rather than design. Names redacted for law-enforcement-sensitive purposes were excluded from the published list — a standard and defensible practice. But the principle is clear: embarrassment is not a basis for secrecy.
What Took So Long
The question conservatives have asked for years wasn't whether the files should be released. It was why every prior administration treated the Epstein matter like a hot stove. The political establishment — across both parties — showed a remarkable lack of curiosity about a man whose network reached into the highest corridors of power on multiple continents.
The Epstein Files Transparency Act forced the issue. Congress passed it. The DOJ complied. And now the material is public — not filtered through friendly journalists, not summarized by officials with incentives to minimize, but released in full to the committees that demanded it.
This is what accountability looks like when the people running the Department of Justice aren't trying to manage the story.
The Uncomfortable Reality
More than 300 names. Nine categories of records. Files touching trafficking operations that stretched across corporate boardrooms, university campuses, nonprofit foundations, and government offices. The sheer breadth of Epstein's network — the number of powerful people who orbited around him, dined with him, corresponded with him, flew with him — should disturb anyone who believes institutions exist to protect the vulnerable rather than the connected.
Some of these names will prove incidental. Some will prove deeply uncomfortable. The documents are now available for congressional review, public scrutiny, and whatever investigations may follow. That process will separate the peripheral from the culpable.
But the era of strategic opacity is over. The files are out. The names are public. And no one's reputation was treated as more important than the truth.

