Public Resources & Official Records
Survivor Protection
Protecting survivors who have not voluntarily identified themselves is our highest priority. The DOJ released nearly one million documents with inconsistent and often inadequate redactions — survivor names, photos, passport details, and contact information that should have been protected were left exposed throughout the corpus. Despite the automated guardrails and manual curation we have put in place, this site processes those documents using facial recognition and generative AI, which means we may inadvertently surface survivor identities that the DOJ failed to redact.
If you believe we are exposing a survivor’s identity, please email us immediately
so we can take corrective action within 24 hours:

To help us act quickly, please include as much of the following as possible:
We will never ask you for private information or proof of identity to process a removal request. You do not need to identify yourself as a survivor — third-party reports on behalf of survivors are equally welcome. See our full Survivor Protection & Takedown Policy.
Enter an EFTA ID to get the direct DOJ download link:
Criminal evidence against Leon Black and Jes Staley, victim diary entries (forensically verified), island visit documentation, prosecution memos, financial records showing $100M+ Wexner embezzlement, and more.
New EvidenceHandwritten victim diaries with full transcriptions. Includes forced pregnancy documentation, coded messages with rail fence cipher decoding, and interview notes naming Donald Trump, Harvey Weinstein, and Prince Andrew.
NewInteractive graph of Epstein's financial infrastructure — $158M+ Leon Black payments, $177M Deutsche Bank flows, $1B+ JPMorgan suspicious activity, trust structures, and shell entities.
TrackingResignations, suspensions, investigations, and other consequences triggered by the EFTA releases.
Interactive400+ profiles of individuals connected to Epstein, with document counts, key findings, network connections, and AI-generated summaries sourced from the EFTA corpus.
InteractiveChronological timeline of key events from the Epstein case, arrests, convictions, and document releases.
InteractiveFlight records from Epstein's aircraft — helicopters and jets — extracted from EFTA documents.
InteractiveInteractive map of properties connected to Jeffrey Epstein — NYC townhouse, Palm Beach, Little St. James, Zorro Ranch, and more.
TrackingFiles that have been removed from the DOJ website after publication, including a photo of Donald Trump.
Local ArchiveVideo files from the DOJ disclosures, with metadata filtering.
🔊 Note: Video audio has been transcribed using OpenAI's Whisper large-v3 model.
Local Archive665,000+ images extracted from PDFs. Filter by dataset, faces, redactions, or person. Facial recognition applied to identify individuals.
Local ArchiveAudio files from the DOJ disclosures, with transcriptions.
🔊 Note: Audio has been transcribed using OpenAI's Whisper large-v3 model.
Local ArchiveSpreadsheets and other non-PDF documents from the disclosures.
Local Archive83 thumbnail images extracted from two Windows Thumbs.db database files (EFTA01242503, EFTA01242504) in Dataset 9.
TranscriptFull transcript of Les Wexner's deposition on the Epstein probe (4h 56m). Transcribed with Whisper large-v3. Watch on YouTube →
Transcripts81 DOJ-OGR audio and video files from the House Oversight Committee release, transcribed with Whisper large-v3. Includes videos from NATIVE006, NATIVE008, NATIVE011, and NATIVE012.
FAQCommon questions about the black book, email attachments, document numbering, and navigating the disclosures.
| Set | Files | Pages | Images | Videos | Audio | Deleted | Metadata | Archive | Errors |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 3,158 | 3,158 | ✓ 3,158 | 0 | 0 | 9 | 3,158 | 3,144 | 0 |
| 2 | 575 | 699 | ✓ 698 | 1 | 0 | 8 | 575 | 577 | 1 |
| 3 | 96 | 1,847 | ✓ 1,717 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 96 | 69 | 0 |
| 4 | 179 | 2,704 | ✓ 2,249 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 179 | 154 | 0 |
| 5 | 141 | 120 | ✓ 120 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 141 | 122 | 0 |
| 6 | 19 | 487 | ✓ 484 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 19 | 20 | 0 |
| 7 | 26 | 660 | ✓ 660 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 26 | 19 | 0 |
| 8 | 11,055 | 29,348 | ✓ 27,189 | 419 | 4 | 2 | 11,055 | 11,036 | 362 |
| 9 | 539,237 | 1,223,774 | ✓ 272,201 | 4,068 | 216 | 1,879 | 533,606 | 531,417 | 1,983 |
| 10 | 504,141 | 950,106 | ✓ 288,024 | 829 | 44 | 0 | 504,032 | 504,539 | 874 |
| 11 | 336,769 | 517,416 | ✓ 67,737 | 4 | 0 | 293 | 336,769 | 331,661 | 4 |
| 12 | 2,520 | 1,596 | ✓ 815 | 0 | 0 | 4 | 2,520 | 154 | 0 |
| Total | 1,397,916 | 2,731,915 | ✓ 665,052 | 5,321 | 264 | 2,198 | 1,392,176 | 1,382,912 | 3,224 |
Note: Page counts are for PDF files only. Image counts are images extracted from PDFs.
Files = URLs listed on DOJ site. Metadata = unique files confirmed by scraper (deduplicated). Archive = files preserved in torrent ZIP archives. Errors = files that failed metadata extraction (corrupt or non-PDF). DOJ deletions and modifications tracked separately.
The DOJ deleted EFTA00000468, which featured a photo of Donald Trump. That is why we track deleted files. View deleted files
EFTA IDs range from 1 to 2.7M. Black indicates gaps in the disclosed IDs.
Download efta_page_stamps.json (80 MB) — maps 369K parent documents to their 1.35M child pages across the corpus.
PDF metadata records when a document was digitised. This reveals how the DOJ processed the corpus before releasing it.
| Date | Files | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| No date | 554,991 | Pre-existing native digital files (emails, spreadsheets, born-digital PDFs) — no scan date embedded |
| Apr 2013 – Jan 2014 | 148 | Original early-digitisation documents; oldest files in the corpus |
| December 2025 | 10,173 | DOJ early-stage scanning ~6 weeks before the statutory release deadline |
| Jan 1–14, 2026 | 50 | Smaller processing runs in early January |
| January 29, 2026 | 94,630 | 656,914 files scanned in just two days, immediately before the January 31 public release — the bulk of the corpus digitised in a last-minute sprint |
| January 30, 2026 | 562,284 | |
| Jan 31 – Feb 1, 2026 | 612 | Final cleanup and additions processed after the release date |
| Total with date | 667,897 | All processed by DOJ’s OmniPage CSDK 21.1 OCR pipeline |
Creation dates are from the CreationDate field in PDF metadata. The remaining ~134K files are those for which metadata could not be retrieved (encrypted, corrupted, or download failures).
An NPR investigation and New York Times review found the DOJ withheld over 50 pages of FBI interviews with a woman who accused Trump of sexual assault as a minor in the 1980s. Of four FBI interviews conducted, only one was released — and it omits the Trump accusation. Documents mentioning a second accuser were temporarily removed from the database. Rep. Robert Garcia confirmed the files are also missing from unredacted versions reviewed at DOJ. House oversight Democrats have launched an investigation into whether the DOJ purposely withheld these materials. First reported by journalist Roger Sollenberger.
Ten UN Special Rapporteurs declared the files contain “disturbing and credible evidence” of systematic abuse that may meet the legal threshold of crimes against humanity. They demand prosecution in all competent national and international courts and warn that resignations alone are not adequate accountability.
SurveillanceAG Bondi was photographed holding a printout of Rep. Jayapal's search history from the DOJ reading room. Bipartisan outrage followed, with lawmakers demanding the DOJ cease monitoring which members review which files.
ContemptBipartisan resolution drafted to hold the Attorney General in "inherent contempt" for failing to release all eligible Epstein files by the statutory deadline, proposing daily fines until compliance.
CongressReps. Khanna and Massie called for appointment of a special master to oversee the DOJ's release, alleging the agency violated transparency requirements through missed deadlines and excessive redactions.
FOIA LawsuitFirst-of-its-kind lawsuit challenging the Trump administration's handling of Epstein files through FOIA, seeking records the government has not released expeditiously.
CourtFederal appeals court signaled remand of a FOIA case seeking FBI Epstein investigation documents, ordering reconsideration of disclosure obligations under the new Transparency Act.
PBSRep. Jamie Raskin accused the Justice Department of surveilling members of Congress reviewing Epstein files at DOJ-controlled terminals, calling it an attempt to obstruct and intimidate.
The Department of Justice's official repository for released documents, court records, and FOIA disclosures.
Official SourceOfficial announcement of the Department of Justice's publication of 3.5 million responsive pages in compliance with the Epstein Files Transparency Act.
OverviewA comprehensive overview of the legislation, its history, passage, and implementation details.
OverviewOverview of the released documents, key findings, notable individuals named, and public response.
Legislative TextThe full official text of the Epstein Files Transparency Act as enrolled and signed into law.
Congressional ReportOfficial report including the list of all government officials and politically exposed persons identified in the EFTA releases.
22 parts of FBI investigative files released under FOIA. A separate release channel from the EFTA documents.
FOIAFBI records on Jeffrey Epstein obtained through FOIA, plus Ghislaine Maxwell and Virginia Giuffre unsealed documents.
Court Records2,024 pages of court documents from Giuffre v. Maxwell unsealed Aug 2019. Includes a searchable processed PDF (394 MB).
Primary Source72-page unpublished memoir by Virginia Roberts Giuffre, unsealed from the Giuffre v. Maxwell defamation case in 2019.
FOIAPalm Beach Police Department investigation files from the original 2005 Epstein case. 11 files including probable cause affidavits.
Court RecordsCourt documents from Giuffre v. Maxwell unsealed in January 2024. Depositions, flight logs, and witness testimony.
Court RecordsBrowsable docket: 1,360 entries, 2,991 documents from the civil case that produced the unsealed documents. Sourced from CourtListener / RECAP.
FOIAPublic FOIA requests related to Epstein filed with US Marshals Service, Palm Beach PD, Secret Service, and other agencies.
GovernmentOfficial release page for Epstein records provided by the DOJ to the House Oversight Committee, including estate documents and related files.
Leaked Data~20,900 emails from Epstein's personal Yahoo account (2002–2019), independently obtained by the nonprofit transparency collective Distributed Denial of Secrets. Unredacted originals of emails that appear in the EFTA corpus as redacted PDF printouts.
Search the Department of Justice Epstein Files releases. This includes the more recent releases from the DOJ investigation.
Search ToolSearch the Epstein Estate Documents released by the House Oversight Committee. Contains roughly 20,000 pages of emails, schedules, and other records.
ArchiveCommunity archive with torrent files and mirrors of the DOJ releases for offline access and preservation. Note: Some torrents are incomplete.
ArchiveTracks DOJ modifications and deletions across all 12 datasets by archiving HTTP metadata (ETags, Last-Modified headers). Documents which files were altered or removed after publication.
ExternalA more comprehensive and interactive network visualization with additional features.
AnalyticsReal-time analytics showing the most accessed files and pages on justice.gov, including Epstein documents.
AnalyticsPublic analytics dashboard for this site — visitor traffic, popular pages, and usage trends.
Open SourceOpen-source archive with AI-generated summaries and entity extraction for 8,175 processed documents. MIT licensed.
Search ToolSearch Epstein emails and trace documented connections with degrees-of-separation mapping across FOIA releases and court filings.
Open SourceOpen-source full-text search tool for the Epstein files. Search across all 12 DOJ datasets with instant results.
CommunityCommunity server for collaborative research, document analysis, and discussion of the EFTA releases.
CommunityNon-political collaborative wiki to surface details, connections, and data from officially released Epstein files. Includes per-document pages, people categories, and a public forum.
Open SourceOpen-source indexing of 900K+ DOJ documents with full-text search, relationship mapping across 148+ individuals, and a 2,500+ event timeline. Public domain.
Open Source100+ forensic analysis reports covering financials, named individuals, and evidence analysis. All claims cite specific EFTA documents. AI-assisted, not independently verified.
ExternalInteractive network visualization of connections between individuals in the Epstein documents.
ArchiveBrowsable archive of all 12 DOJ datasets with direct links to original government sources. Organized by release date and data set.
TechnicalPDF Association technical analysis of the Epstein PDF documents, examining metadata, redaction methods, and document structure.
Julie K. Brown's "Perversion of Justice" investigation that broke the Epstein story open in 2018 and led to his arrest.
NewsBreaking news, investigations, and archival coverage regarding Jeffrey Epstein and associated cases.
NewsOngoing reporting and special reports on the Epstein inquiry and global impact.
Raw metadata, URL lists, and OCR-extracted text for researchers and developers.
Video and audio metadata extracted with ffprobe. Includes codec, resolution, duration, bitrate, creation dates, device model, GPS coordinates, and transcripts.
OCR-extracted text from PDFs using pdftotext. Some files are missing due to DOJ deletions.
Thank you to CosmicGoddess777 and BubsyBot on Reddit for identifying the people depicted in Maria Farmer's drawings from the Epstein documents (EFTA01652467, EFTA01652669).
See also: Everyone I Could Identify · The Setiles Pt. 2
Thank you to Broka for lightning-fast help identifying faces in the Epstein documents, and to doodleDee and Vii from the Epstein Files Research Discord for help with photo identifications.
Thank you to Korroni for help with deduplication of JSONL files, EFTA page-stamp mapping, and much more.