Epstein’s succession was assimilated by the chamber surveillance committee

The Chamber’s supervisory committee assigned the succession of the late Jeffrey Epstein on Monday while the legislators of the Congress are trying to determine who was linked to the financial in disgrace and if the prosecutors have poorly managed its case.
The committee’s subposte is the last effort of the Republicans and Democrats to respond to the public complaint for more disclosure in the Epstein investigation, which was found dead in its New York prison cell in 2019. The administration of Donald Trump.
The assignment, signed by the representative James Comer, republican president of the supervisory committee, and dated Monday, requires that the succession of Epstein provides documents comprising a book which was compiled with friends of friends for his 50th anniversary, his last wills and his tests, his agreements, which he signed with producers, contact books and his transactions and his transactions.
Comer wrote to the testamentary executors of the succession of Epstein that the committee “examines the poor management of the federal government’s investigation into Mr. Jeffrey Epstein and Ms. Ghislaine Maxwell, the circumstances and subsequent surveys on Mr. Epstein, the functioning of the sexual traffic rings and the means in the federal manner to fight them effectively, and the potential violations of the ethical rules related to the company.
The Ministry of Justice, trying to distribute Trump and Epstein, began last week to hand over to the documentation of the legislators of the Federal Investigation on Epstein. He also published interview transcriptions with Ghislaine Maxwell, his former girlfriend. But the Democrats of the Committee were not satisfied with these efforts, saying that the 33,000 pages of documents they received are mostly already public.
“The limited disclosure of the DoJ raises more questions than answers and clearly shows that the White House is not interested in justice for the victims or the truth,” said representative Robert Garcia, the best democrat of the Chamber’s supervisory committee in a statement.
Legislators’ pressure to disclose more information should only increase when Congress returns to Washington next week.
A bipartite group of members of the Chamber is trying to maneuver around Republican leaders to obtain a vote to adopt legislation intended to demand that the Ministry of Justice discloses full accounting of the survey on sex trafficking on Epstein.
https://fortune.com/img-assets/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/AP25230625645114-e1756157306845.jpg?resize=1200,600