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Epstein files over 3 million pages released

Crypto
Last updated: April 4, 2026 3:11 am
Crypto
Published: April 4, 2026
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Epstein files over 3 million pages released

More than 3 million pages of Epstein files have been released, prosecutors have brought no new charges against anyone in his network, and five legal experts have now laid out in precise terms why the evidentiary gap between public scandal and criminal conviction is nearly impossible to close. Summary More than 3 million pages of Epstein and Maxwell-related documents have been released since the passage of the Epstein Files Transparency Act, but no new arrests have been made in the U.S. since the files began dropping in 2025. The DOJ told NPR there has been “no credible evidence” that criminal activity extended to Epstein’s broader network — a statement released the same day Trump announced Pam Bondi’s firing, citing in part her mishandling of the files. Legal experts cite five compounding barriers: the “beyond a reasonable doubt” standard, the difficulty of proving criminal intent for conspiracy charges, expired statutes of limitations on tax violations, victim reluctance, and redaction that strips documents of the context needed to support prosecution. More than 3 million pages of Epstein files have been released in the months since Congress passed the Epstein Files Transparency Act, which forced the Justice Department to make all Epstein-related documents public. Yet no new arrests have been made in the United States — a gap that has drawn bipartisan frustration and generated intense public confusion. NPR asked five legal experts — four former federal prosecutors and one retired law enforcement officer — to explain exactly why. What the files contain and what they don’t The documents include accusations from alleged victims, thousands of emails, photographs placing Epstein alongside prominent figures in business, politics, and entertainment, and FBI network diagrams tracing his alleged abuse. The files confirm that many individuals maintained contact with Epstein long after his 2008 guilty plea on sex crimes involving minors. But as experts are clear to note: appearing in the documents is not evidence of criminal wrongdoing. In a statement to NPR, DOJ spokesperson Katie Kenlein was direct: “There have not been additional prosecutions beyond Epstein and Maxwell because there has not been credible evidence that their activities extended to Epstein’s network. However, if prosecutable evidence comes forward, the Department of Justice will of course act on it.” The five legal barriers Barbara McQuade, a professor at the University of Michigan Law School and former U.S. attorney, led with the foundational standard: prosecutors must prove every charge beyond a reasonable doubt — a bar that cannot be met by association or proximity alone. Jessica Roth, a Cardozo School of Law professor and former federal prosecutor in the Southern District of New York, explained that conspiracy charges require individually proving criminal intent for each named defendant. FBI documents in the files do use the term “co-conspirator” for certain individuals, but Ankush Khardori, a former federal prosecutor writing for Politico, told NPR those designations are interim investigative labels, not formal legal accusations. “The FBI does not determine who is a co-conspirator,” Khardori said. “That is a legal judgment that prosecutors make.” McQuade added that any potential criminal tax charges against Epstein associates have likely passed their statute of limitations. Retired police lieutenant Diane Goldstein, executive director of the Law Enforcement Action Partnership, pointed to victim reluctance as a structural barrier, noting that many survivors fear retaliation or do not believe law enforcement can help. The context problem — and the political fallout Roth told NPR the documents present a fundamental comprehension problem. Released in batches and heavily redacted, they appear in “isolation,” stripped of the investigative context that would explain what prosecutors already reviewed, pursued, and closed. “We’ll see an individual photograph that looks perhaps incriminating,” she said. The political consequences have been severe regardless. Trump fired Attorney General Pam Bondi on April 2 — the same day the NPR story published — with the Epstein files handling cited among the core frustrations driving the White House decision. The same Justice Department that disbanded its crypto enforcement unit under Deputy AG Todd Blanche in April 2025, declaring it would no longer pursue “regulation by prosecution,” now faces pressure from both parties over what critics describe as an equally selective approach to accountability in the Epstein case. In the U.K., where investigators pursued corruption rather than sexual abuse charges, two former government officials were arrested. Democrats who criticized the DOJ’s enforcement gaps in the crypto space now find themselves raising structurally identical arguments about the Epstein investigation — raising questions about whether the department’s reduced enforcement posture extends well beyond digital assets.

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