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AG Pam Bondi says DOJ will likely release of Epstein files tomorrow

Attorney General Pam Bondi teased Wednesday that the Justice Department will likely release documents related to Jeffrey Epstein “tomorrow,” including the flight logs from the notorious sex predator’s private jet. 

Bondi, who revealed last week that the highly sought documents were sitting on her desk for review, told Fox News host Jesse Watters that the public should expect to see at least “some Epstein information” made public on Thursday, when redactions related to the dead pedophile’s victims are completed. 

“There are well over – this will make you sick – 200 victims … over 250, actually,” the attorney general told Watters, explaining the delay in releasing the documents.  

“So, we have to make sure that their identity is protected and their personal information, but other than that, I think tomorrow – you know, the personal information of victims –  other than that, I think tomorrow, Jesse,  breaking news, right now, you’re going to see some Epstein information being released by my office,” Bondi said. 

Bondi revealed last week that she had files related to Jeffrey Epstein sitting on her desk, raising questions about when they would be released. Fox News
Bondi teased that Epstein’s flight logs would be included in Thursday’s release. DOJ

When pressed if the documents being released would include information about individuals who traveled aboard Epstein’s private jet and alleged surveillance footage from inside his residences, Bondi confirmed that flight logs would be disclosed.

“What you’re going to see, hopefully tomorrow, is a lot of flight logs, a lot of names, a lot, a lot of information,” the top DOJ official said. “But, it’s pretty sick what that man did …   along with his co-defendant.” 

Speculation about Epstein’s associates have swirled since his 2019 suicide in a Manhattan jail cell as he awaited charges sex-trafficking charges. 

The financier’s co-defendant in the case, Ghislaine Maxwell, was sentenced to 20 years in prison in 2022 for her role in helping Epstein abuse young girls.

Epstein committed suicide as he awaited trial on child sex trafficking charges in 2019. REUTERS
Epstein owned a private island in the US Virgin Islands, Little Saint James, where he and his clients allegedly abused minors. Shutterstock for NY Post

Redacted versions of Epstein’s notorious “little black book” of rich and famous contacts and flight logs from his “Lolita Express” jet have previously leaked online or have been unsealed in lawsuits, but complete versions of both – as well as the alleged footage from inside his mansions – have yet to be made public. 

Last year,  unsealed documents filed in Epstein accuser Virginia Giuffre’s 2015 defamation suit against Maxwell named more than 170 people with ties to the pervert, including royalty, politicians and Hollywood A-listers

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