In a move marking a definitive chapter in one of the most scrutinized federal probes in modern history, U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi officially confirmed that the Department of Justice has completed the public release of documents tied to the late convicted financier Jeffrey Epstein.
The announcement, delivered via a formal letter dated February 14, signals the conclusion of a massive transparency initiative. Bondi stated that the DOJ has now met all disclosure requirements mandated under Section 3 of the Epstein Files Transparency Act, effectively placing millions of pages of once-secret investigative records into the public domain.
The final data dump follows months of exhaustive labor by federal staff, who spent December and January navigating a mountain of evidence, including emails, photographs, and internal records. According to the Department, this concluding cache contains references to more than 300 high-profile individuals.
A Divided Disclosure: Identifying “PEPs”
In an effort to provide clarity amid a sea of names, Bondi noted that the materials were organized into two distinct silos. The first is a general set of references; the second is a specific compilation of individuals identified as government officials or “politically exposed persons” (PEPs).
