The Justice Department has disclosed additional Jeffrey Epstein files subsequent to Attorney General Pam Bondi’s revelation that she was assessing classified documents in the case. However, the new documents do not include the client list.
In a statement on Thursday, Attorney General Pam Bondi stated, “This Department of Justice is upholding President Trump’s pledge to transparency by exposing the abhorrent actions of Jeffrey Epstein and his associates.”
These documents were largely made public during Ghislaine Maxwell’s federal trial, resulting in her imprisonment for an extended period. They encompass flight records, a list of evidence, a contact directory, and a censored “masseuse list,” suspected to denote Epstein’s victims. While many individuals listed in the documents have not been implicated in Epstein-related offenses, some notable personalities such as Maxwell, Prince Andrew (who has refuted the allegations against him), and Jean-Luc Brunel (a French modeling agent who passed away in custody while awaiting trial), are mentioned.

Jeffrey Epstein mugshot from 2019 after federal authorities filed trafficking charges against him. (Kypros/Getty Images)
In addition to Maxwell, another Epstein associate, French modeling agent Jean-Luc Brunel, was also charged with sex trafficking. Like Epstein, he turned up dead in a jail cell.
Maxwell is appealing her conviction while serving a sentence at a federal prison in Tallahassee.
She is due for release in the summer of 2037.
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