Democratic senator Ro Khanna says: ‘the most important documents are missing’

Although a new law requires the full release of the Epstein files, experts expect some records to be withheld or redacted. How many is the question.

The US Department of Justice is expected to release files relating to the disgraced late financier and sex trafficker, Jeffrey Epstein, this evening – what you need to know before…

Files that were viewable included images of Epstein socializing with Bill Clinton, as well as entertainers like Michael Jackson

It is unclear if the heavily redacted Epstein documents released by Trump’s justice department are the entirety of the government’s trove on the late sex offender

Lawyers for victims say they have been ‘repeatedly denied justice’ while deputy attorney general says more files will be released

‘Most transparent’ administration has slow-walked and stonewalled – the incomplete release smells of a cover-up

Long-awaited tranche of documents is heavily redacted but viewable files include images of Epstein with figures such as Bill Clinton and Michael Jackson – key US politics stories…

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

High-profile figures, including Bill Clinton and Michael Jackson, can be seen in the long-awaited files.

Jeffrey Epstein survivor Marina Lacerda has spoken out after thousands of documents released from the Jeffrey Epstein case were heavily redacted. Republicans and Democrats have…

Democratic senator Ro Khanna says: ‘the most important documents are missing’

US lawmakers who pushed for the documents to be made public have criticised the initial release as incomplete.

Outcry comes as US media report that at least 16 files have disappeared from the public webpage for the Epstein files.

The documents are disturbing. But they seem largely to reflect information that has already been made public

Survivors of accused sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein said the Justice Department's partial release of documents was riddled with 'abnormal' redactions.