The Department of Justice turned over a first batch of Jeffrey Epstein-related documents to Congress in response to a subpoena. A review of the produced files found only 3% to be previously unreleased while 97% were already public. The total Epstein file size is reported at about 300 gigabits, with less than one gigabit released so far. Released items include audio recordings and transcripts from prison interviews with Ghislaine Maxwell, who is serving a 20-year sentence for sex trafficking. Central questions about other participants, flight logs, and wider involvement remain unanswered.
Let me break some news this morning. Our lawyers were up all night, and we now have a fact that only 3% of the documents that were given to us were new. 97% were already in the public domain. And less than 1% of the Epstein files have actually been released. The Epstein files are 300 gigabits. We know this because that's what the FBI has said. And they've released less than one gigabit, Khanna said.
There are some transcripts related to the Maxwell prosecution, there is some evidence related to Epstein's death, nothing that is sensational or adding significant information. What is not new, what is missing is the central concern, which is who else was involved, who was on these flights, who engaged in illegal behavior and abuse of underage
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