The American panel releases more than 33,000 pages of Epstein files


A panel of the American Congress has published a mine of documents related to the federal survey on late sexual offender Jeffrey Epstein.
The supervisory committee of the House of Representatives published 33,295 pages, including flight newspapers, a prison surveillance video, legal files, audio recordings and emails.
But the Republicans and the Democrats said that the files contained little information and it is not clear if the Ministry of Justice retains other Epstein files.
Pressure increased the own supporters of President Donald Trump for more transparency in the well -connected financier survey after the Ministry of Justice said in July that there was no list of “incriminating” Epstein customers.
Chairman of the James Comer Supervisory Committee, a Republican, ordered the publication of online documents on Tuesday.
The Panel led by the Republicans received the files after having made a legal assignment to the Ministry of Justice last month.
But Commer, a member of the Kentucky Congress, admitted that there was little information.
“As far as I can see, there is nothing new in the documents,” he told NBC News.
Videos published on Tuesday include images from outside the New York prison unit in the night of his death.
It includes 1 p.m. and 41 seconds of video from the establishment covering the evening from August 9, August 10, 2019, when Epstein died.
It is two more hours of video more than the Ministry of Justice published two months ago.
The newly published video includes a so-called “missing minute”. Sequences previously published had a difference of 60 seconds which appeared immediately before midnight in the Time code. This gap has now been filled, reports the partner of the BBC CBS News.

The Attorney General Pam Bondi previously said that the “missing minute” was only the camera system of the prison reset every night.
However, the apparent anomaly had delighted conspiracy theories on the official conclusion that Epstein died by suicide.
The condemned pedophile had once socialized with Trump, former president Bill Clinton and the Royal British Prince Andrew.
The slice of documents also includes several 2006 clips showing interviews with people who said they were victims of Epstein.
Their faces are vague and the names withdrawn from the audio while they are talking about alleged sexual abuse while they have been hired for massages.
Other videos show images of Bodycam from the Palm Beach police in Florida, while they search a house belonging to Epstein.
Some documents date back 20 years, covering an initial criminal investigation into Epstein launched by Palm Beach police.
But Robert Garcia, the best democrat of the Chamber’s supervisory committee, said in a statement: “To the American people – do not be deceived.
“After a meticulous examination, the supervisory democrats found that 97% of the documents received from the Ministry of Justice were already public.
“There is no mention of a list of customers or anything that improves transparency or justice for the victims.”

Democrat deputy Summer Lee said that the “only new disclosure” was the flight newspapers taken by customs and the protection of American borders, which show Epstein’s journey to and from her private island to the US Virgin Islands.
The liberation intervened after the rebel republican of the great-ban Thomas Massie took before Tuesday with a bipartite effort to force the Chamber to vote on a bill obliging the Ministry of Justice to publish all its Epstein files within 30 days.
The member of the Kentucky Congress said: “People want these files to be released. I mean, look, it’s not the biggest problem in the country.
“These are taxes, jobs, the economy is always the big problems. But you cannot really solve any of this if this place is corrupt.”
Earlier Tuesday, the president of the Mike Johnson room, a Republican, and the members of the supervisory committee met six Epstein victims at closed doors.
Johnson, a Trump ally, told journalists thereafter that “there were tears in the play” hearing the victims of Epstein.
MP Nancy Mace, a Southern Carolina Republican, seemed to leave the meeting crying.
The Democrat Melanie Stansbury congratulated the survivors for having spoken and described the case as a “concealment of epic proportions”.
Epstein legislators and victims plan to hold a press conference on Capitol Hill on Wednesday.

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