The Justice Department will release some but not all of the files related to its investigation of convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein on Friday.

Justice department must release most documents by Friday, and failure to do so would provoke a firestorm

The DOJ for months had resisted calls to released the Epstein files.

The Friday deadline was mandated by a bill that got near-unanimous support in Congress, and was later signed into law by President Donald Trump.

Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche suggested the DOJ may not comply with the legally mandated deadline to make the records public.

The Justice Department will release some but not all of the files related to its investigation of convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein on Friday.

Todd Blanche, deputy attorney general, says release of files won’t include full set, prompting outrage from lawmakers

The Justice Department has started to release thousands of documents related to the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein but the law required the agency to make all of its…

The Justice Department on Friday released records from the Jeffrey Epstein case in accordance with the Epstein Files Transparency Act.

Justice Department has made public many, but not all, of its Epstein files. Here's how the current release stacks up against the others

Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche suggested the DOJ may not comply with the legally mandated deadline to make the records public.

The Justice Department's initial release of Epstein files sparks controversy over redactions and incomplete disclosures, angering lawmakers and the public.

Some Jeffrey Epstein case files released on Friday by the Justice Department are not available one day later, and other files have drawn criticism.