House, Senate vote to pass Epstein bill
In a stunning victory for survivors of Jeffrey Epstein, both houses of Congress on Tuesday overwhelmingly passed legislation directing the Justice Department to release all its case files involving sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein.
The Government has kept most of the files under seal for almost two decades — since 2007 when the FBI and U.S. Attorney’s Office in South Florida first opened an investigation into whether Epstein had been sexually abusing underage girls at his Palm Beach mansion. The measure covers FBI and DOJ case files from both the 2007 probe into Epstein’s crimes, as well as the 2019 investigation that led to his second arrest, and the arrest of his accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell.
There are still several hurdles required before the files would be released, and it’s not clear to what extent the documents will be easily decipherable. House Speaker Mike Johnson indicated there will likely be swaths of material that would be redacted.
President Donald Trump, who first promised to release the files during his election campaign — later changed his mind and fought making them public before finally reversing course in recent days and again calling for them to be released. After survivors released a powerful video over the weekend, a number of Republicans indicated they were leaning toward voting for the petition. Trump then directed all Republican House members to vote for the measure.
On Tuesday afternoon, the Senate agreed to automatically advance the bill to the president’s desk, clearing the way for the President’s signature. He has said he will sign the measure.
Trump could have expedited the process by issuing an order to the DOJ to unseal the records, but he instead allowed House members to argue the bill, satisfied to allow political gamesmanship tp play out between Republicans and Democrats in Congress.
Johnson, who refused for months to swear in a new House member who would cast the deciding vote on a discharge petition forcing the vote, slammed Democrats for “forcing a political show vote” on the files. He derided the bill, saying it would harm victims, even though survivors had urged its passage.
Survivors made their frustration with Trump’s handling of the files clear on Tuesday, as they appeared at the Capitol for a press conference.
“I beg you President Trump to stop making this political,” said Jena-Lisa Jones, who said she was 15 when she was sexually molested by Epstein in Palm Beach.
“This is not about you, President Trump. You are our president, start acting like it! Show some class. Show some real leadership…I voted for you, but your leadership on this issue has been a national embarrassment. It is time to take the honest, moral ground and support the release of these files – not to weaponize pieces of the files against random political enemies that did nothing wrong.”
Portions of what are contained in the government files have been made public in the past through court proceedings. They include Epstein’s flight logs, some victims’ statements and emails that were exchanged between Epstein’s lawyers and federal prosecutors as part of the federal case against him in Florida in 2007 to 2008. During Maxwell’s 2021 trial other documents were also made public. But the full scope of Epstein’s crimes, the source of his wealth and the names of those who helped him or participated in his criminal network has remained a mystery.
The push to release more of the files garnered support from across the political spectrum.
Representatives Thomas Massie, a Kentucky Republican, and Ro Khanna, a California Democrat, joined together to persuade House members to pass the bipartisian legislation.
Its passage comes almost two decades since a parent first notified Palm Beach police that a girl had been sexually molested by Epstein in his Palm Beach mansion.
That initial probe led to a plea agreement that gave him federal immunity, allowing him to evade sex trafficking charges that would have put him in prison for life. Alex Acosta, the U.S. attorney in Miami, signed off on the deal after meeting one of Epstein’s lawyers.
The fact that Epstein was able to manipulate such a lenient plea deal has fueled questions about whether his ties to influential people led to a cover-up of his crimes.
After he was elected in 2016, Trump nominated Acosta as his labor secretary.
In November 2018, the Miami Herald published an investigation into the case that revealed DOJ prosecutors not only minimized the scope of Epstein’s crimes – they also secretly negotiated a plea deal without informing his victims in violation of the Crime Victim’s Rights Act.
After the series ran, federal prosecutors in New York opened a new case against Epstein, and he was arrested in July 2019. A month later, on August 10, he was found dead in his cell. His death was ruled suicide by hanging. Acosta — under fire again for his mismanagement of the case — also resigned his cabinet post.
In July 2020, Epstein’s former partner, Ghislaine Maxwell, was arrested on federal charges related to sex trafficking. She was convicted in 2021. Asked about her arrest at a press conference shortly after, Trump told reporters, “I just wish her well.” Maxwell was sentenced to 20 years in prison in June 2022.
— Julie K. Brown and Claire Healy / Miami Herald
Jeffrey Epstein appears in court, July 30, 2008, in West Palm Beach, Fla. (Uma Sanghvi/The Palm Beach Post via AP, File)
