By STEPHEN GROVES, Related Press
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Home Oversight Committee on Tuesday publicly posted the recordsdata it has obtained from the Justice Division on the intercourse trafficking investigations into Jeffrey Epstein and his former girlfriend Ghislaine Maxwell, responding to mounting stress in Congress to drive extra disclosure within the case.
Nonetheless, the recordsdata principally include data that was already publicly recognized or accessible. The folders contained a whole bunch of picture recordsdata of years-old court docket filings associated to Epstein and Maxwell. Additionally they included video recordsdata showing to be physique cam footage from police searches in addition to recordings and summaries of regulation enforcement interviews with victims detailing the abuse they mentioned they suffered.
The committee’s launch of the recordsdata confirmed how lawmakers are wanting to act as they return to Washington after a monthlong break. They shortly revived a political conflict that has flummoxed Home Republican management and roiled President Donald Trump’s administration. Home Republican Speaker Mike Johnson is making an attempt to quell an effort by Democrats and a few Republicans to drive a vote on a invoice that will require the Justice Division to launch all the data within the so-called Epstein recordsdata, except for the victims’ private data.
Survivors meet with lawmakers
On Capitol Hill Tuesday, Johnson and a bipartisan group of lawmakers met with survivors of abuse by Epstein and Maxwell.
“The target right here isn’t just to uncover, examine the Epstein evils, but additionally to make sure that this by no means occurs once more and finally to search out out why justice has been delayed for these women for therefore very lengthy,” mentioned Johnson, R-La., after he emerged from a two-hour assembly with six of the survivors.
“It’s inexcusable. And it’ll cease now as a result of the Congress is dialed in on this,” he added.
However there are nonetheless intense disagreements on how lawmakers ought to proceed. Johnson is urgent for the inquiry to be dealt with by the Home Oversight Committee and supporting the committee because it releases its findings.
What’s within the launched recordsdata
The recordsdata launched Tuesday included audio of an Epstein worker describing to a regulation enforcement official how “there have been numerous women that have been very, very younger” visiting the house however couldn’t say for certain in the event that they have been minors.
Over the course of Epstein’s visits to the house, the person mentioned, greater than a dozen women may go to, and he was charged with cleansing the room the place Epstein had massages, twice each day.
Some pages have been virtually totally redacted. Different paperwork associated to Epstein’s Florida prosecution that led to a plea deal that has lengthy been criticized as too lenient, together with emails between the protection and prosecutors over the circumstances of his probation after his conviction. Barbara Burns, a Palm Seashore County prosecutor, expressed frustration because the protection pushed for fewer restrictions on their consumer: “I don’t know the right way to convey to him anymore than I have already got that his consumer is a registered intercourse offender that was lucky to get the deal of the century.”
A number of the interviews with officers from the Palm Seashore Police Division date to 2005, in accordance with timestamps learn out by officers originally of the recordsdata.
Most, if not all, of the textual content paperwork posted Tuesday had already been public. Notably, the possible trigger affidavit and different information from the 2005 investigation into Epstein contained a notation indicating that they’d been beforehand launched in a 2017 public information request. An web search confirmed these recordsdata have been posted to the web site of the Palm Seashore County State Lawyer’s Workplace in July 2017.
Rep. Robert Garcia, the highest Democrat on the Home Oversight Committee, chided Republicans on the panel for releasing materials that he mentioned consisted virtually totally of already accessible data.
“The 33,000 pages of Epstein paperwork James Comer has determined to ‘launch’ have been already principally public data. To the American individuals — don’t let this idiot you,” Garcia mentioned in an announcement.
Push for disclosure continues
If the aim of the discharge was to offer solutions to a public nonetheless curious over the lengthy concluded instances, the uncooked mechanics of the clunky rollout made {that a} problem.
Lawmakers at 6 p.m. launched 1000’s of pages and movies by way of a cumbersome Google Drive, leaving it to readers and viewers to decipher new and attention-grabbing tidbits on their very own. The disclosure additionally left open the query of why the Justice Division didn’t launch the fabric on to the general public as a substitute of working by Capitol Hill.
In the meantime, Democrats and a few Republicans have been nonetheless making an attempt to maneuver round Johnson’s management of the Home flooring to carry a vote on their invoice to require the Justice Division to publicly launch recordsdata. Rep. Thomas Massie, a Kentucky Republican who’s main the maneuver, spoke confidently that he would be capable of achieve assist from no less than a handful of Republicans, in addition to all Democrats, so as to drive a vote.
If Massie, who’s urgent for the invoice alongside Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., is profitable in forcing a vote — which may take weeks — the laws would nonetheless have to go the Senate and be signed into regulation by Trump.
The conflict suggests little has modified in Congress since late July, when Johnson despatched lawmakers dwelling early in hopes of cooling the political battle over the Epstein case. Members of each events stay dissatisfied and are demanding extra particulars on the years-old investigation into Epstein, the rich and well-connected financier whose 2019 loss of life in a New York jail cell whereas he confronted intercourse trafficking fees has sparked wide-ranging conspiracy theories and hypothesis.
“We proceed to deliver the stress. We’re not going to cease till we get justice for all the survivors and the victims,” Garcia instructed reporters.
Related Press writers Eric Tucker and Alanna Durkin Richer in Washington, Mike Sisak in New York and Meg Kinnard in Chapin, South Carolina, contributed.
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