Justice Department Reviewing FBI/DOJ Epstein
Records for Possible Release

Judicial Watch filed a “joint
status report” on July 7 in federal court reporting that the Justice
Department and the FBI continue to search for and review records in
response to our FOIA lawsuit for records regarding Jeffrey
Epstein.
The lawsuit requests any records on the identities of
Epstein clients or associates. The Justice Department’s disclosure is at
odds with the leaked,
unsigned and undated Justice
Department/FBI memo that suggests no more Epstein records would be
disclosed to the American public. The memo was first disclosed late on July
6.
Judicial Watch sued
the Justice Department and FBI in April 2025 after they failed to
adequately respond to separate FOIA requests for records filed in February
2025 concerning Epstein, including a specific request for records
“depicting the identities of clients or associates of Epstein.” Epstein
document requests were sent to the Justice Department’s Office of
Information Policy, the Criminal Division, and two separate requests were
sent to the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) (Judicial
Watch Inc. v. U.S. Department of Justice (No.
1:25-cv-01056)).
The joint status report
states:
Plaintiff Judicial Watch, Inc. and Defendant U.S.
Department of Justice, by counsel and pursuant to the Court’s June 12,
2025, order, respectfully submit this joint status report:
***
(2)(3) the anticipated number of documents
responsive to Plaintiff’s FOIA request, and the anticipated date(s) for
release of the documents requested by Plaintiff
Federal
Bureau of Investigation
- For 1662669-0 (any/all Epstein
records), the FBI has run its initial searches and is in the process of
reviewing those search results.
- For 1662711-0 (Communications of
Director Patel’s regarding Epstein client list), the FBI’s search
efforts are ongoing.
- The FBI does not yet have an anticipated
number of documents or anticipated dates for release.
Executive
Office of United States Attorneys
- EOUSA’s initial search
efforts are ongoing.
- EOUSA does not yet have an anticipated number
of documents or anticipated dates for release.
Office of
Information Policy
- OIP issued a final response to
FOIA-2025-02863 on April 15, 2025, informing Plaintiff that no responsive
to its request were located. [Available
here]
The government has yet to turn over one document, nor
has it disclosed when any documents might be released.
Our complaint
references a February 24, 2025, Fox News report,
which states
that President Trump’s “return to the Oval Office came with the
prospect of the public finally being able to see Epstein's long-awaited
‘black book’ amid inquiries into the deceased financier and sex
trafficker.”
Epstein died in federal custody in 2019 while awaiting
trial on sex trafficking charges.
The Justice Department on February
27, 2025, released
a long-awaited trove
of documents related to Epstein. As stated by the New York Post:
“But the much-hyped, roughly 200-page document dump provided no big
revelations, instead listing celebrities and politicians who were already
known to have palled around with the notorious pedophile.”
But the
recent Justice Department memo
suggests there will be no more public disclosures:
To
that end, while we have labored to provide the public with maximum
information regarding Epstein and ensured examination of any evidence in
the government’s possession, it is the determination of the Department of
Justice and the Federal Bureau of Investigation that no further disclosure
would be appropriate or warranted.
The Justice
Department and FBI are sending out contradictory messages: telling the
American people that no more Epstein material will be released, while
telling the federal court in our case that the Epstein FOIA review is
proceeding. But no matter, our FOIA lawsuit for the Epstein material
continues. We will be relentless in demanding transparency under
law.
Judicial Watch Sues for
FBI Records on Biden Scheme to Jail Trump
Judicial Watch is
after the full truth of the Biden administration’s abuse of our judicial
system in its zeal to stop Donald Trump.
Our legal team filed a FOIA
lawsuit
against the U.S. Department of Justice for records about the FBI’s
investigation of Trump codenamed “Arctic Frost,” which was part of an
unprecedented effort by the Biden
administration to prosecute and jail President Trump for disputing
Biden’s controversial election victory (Judicial
Watch, Inc. v. U.S. Department of Justice (No.
1:25-cv-02011)).
Judicial Watch sued in the U.S. District Court for
the District of Columbia after the FBI, a component of the Justice
Department, failed to respond to a January 30, 2025, FOIA request
for:
All reports, notes, summaries, interview
transcripts, or similar records pertaining to the FBI investigation Arctic
Frost.
In January 2025, U.S. Senators Chuck Grassley
(R-IA) and Ron Johnson
(R-WI) publicized records about the targeting
of Trump:
Internal FBI emails and predicating
documents provided to Grassley and released jointly by the two senators
show Timothy Thibault, a former FBI Assistant Special Agent in Charge
(ASAC) who was forced
to retire from the Bureau after Grassley exposed
his public anti-Trump bias, authored the initial language for what
ultimately became Jack Smith’s federal case against Trump regarding the
2020 presidential election. Records show Thibault essentially
opened and approved his own investigation. The FBI titled the ensuing
investigation “Arctic Frost.”
Records
further reveal Richard Pilger, an official in the Justice Department
(DOJ)’s Public Integrity Section, reviewed and approved the FBI’s
Arctic Frost investigation, authorizing DOJ to move forward with a full
field criminal and Grand Jury investigation that ultimately transformed
into the Trump elector case. Grassley published a 2021
report that raised concerns regarding Pilger’s troubling record at
DOJ.
Judicial Watch shouldn’t have to sue to get
these records about how the Biden gang at the FBI and DOJ tried to rig an
election by jailing Trump for disputing the 2020 election. Attorney General
Bondi and FBI Director Patel should focus on transparency under law so the
American people can know the full truth of this law attack on Trump – and
our
constitutional
republic.
Judicial Watch Sues
for FBI Records on Epstein Victim Virginia Giuffre
Our
Epstein investigation is expanding. Judicial Watch just filed a FOIA
lawsuit
against the U.S. Department of Justice for all interviews, conversations
and other records provided to the FIBI by Jeffrey Epstein victim Virginia
Louise Giuffre (Judicial
Watch, Inc. v. U.S. Department of Justice (No.
1:25-cv-02191)).
We sued the FBI after it failed to respond to an
April 26, 2025 FOIA request for all records regarding:
A
deceased individual named Virginia Louise Giuffre, née Virginia Louise
Roberts. For purposes of identification, Ms. Giuffre was born on August 9,
1983, in Sacramento, California and died on April 25, 2025, in Neergabby,
Australia….
This request includes, but is not limited to, all
reports, transcripts, summaries, or similar records documenting any
interviews of or other conversations with Ms. Giuffre, as
well as all records she provided to the FBI. In addition, this request
includes, but is not limited to, all records of communication between any
official or employee of the FBI and any official or employee of any other
federal, state, or local government agency or office regarding or
mentioning Ms. Giuffre.
Giuffre reportedly
committed suicide on April 25, 2025:
Virginia Giuffre,
one of the most prominent survivors of Jeffrey Epstein’s sexual abuse,
has died by suicide, her family said Friday.
Giuffre, 41, died in
Neergabby, Australia, where she had been living for several
years.
Giuffre was one of the earliest and loudest voices calling for
criminal charges against Epstein and his enablers. Other Epstein abuse
survivors later credited her with giving them the courage to speak
out.
In 2015, Giuffre, who held U.S. citizenship at
birth, was among the first Epstein victims to go
public. She was recruited by Ghislaine Maxwell. Giuffre reported years
of sexual abuse and alleged she was trafficked to prominent individuals,
including Prince
Andrew of the United Kingdom. She filed a civil lawsuit
against Prince Andrew, which was settled
out of court in 2022 for an estimated £12 million (approximately $15
million).
Earlier this week, in our FOIA lawsuit
for records regarding Epstein, the Justice Department confirmed to a
federal court that it and the FBI continue
to search for and review records for potential disclosure (Judicial
Watch Inc. v. U.S. Department of Justice (No.
1:25-cv-01056)).
Given the Justice Department and FBI’s decision to
abandon the Epstein investigation, we will step into the gap and provide
leadership. Our FOIA lawsuit for records about Epstein’s most well-known
victim is an important next step for
accountability.
Federal Court
Hearing in Lawsuit for Joe Biden’s Family Business
Records
Judicial Watch’s legal team was in court on July 8
for a
hearing before U.S. District Judge Sparkle L. Sooknanan in our FOIA
lawsuit against the U.S. National Archives and Records Administration
(NARA) for Biden family records and communications regarding travel and
finance transactions, as well as communications between the Bidens and
several known business
associates.
Judicial Watch filed the May 2023 lawsuit
after the National Archives failed to respond to a February 2023 FOIA
request (Judicial
Watch, Inc. v. National Archives (No. 1:23-cv-01432)).
This
lawsuit forced the release of records
revealing emails sent by Joe Biden using alias accounts during his vice
presidency, in which he communicated with family members, including his son
Hunter and brother James. The records also showed that in August
2016, Biden approved ending Secret Service protection for both Hunter
Biden
and Beau Biden’s daughter, Natalie, during a trip to Kosovo.
The
emails included messages to Jim and Hunter Biden regarding the then-vice
president’s schedule and meetings. Some emails showed Joe Biden using the
alias: [email protected].
The emails also showed that Hunter and
Jim Biden accompanied Joe Biden on taxpayer-funded trips; and then-Vice
President Biden in December 2009 emailing an aide after he forgot the
password to his West Wing computer.
The records showed that Hunter
Biden used an email address ([email protected]) from his
now-dissolved firm Rosemont Seneca Partners and that James Biden used an
email address ([email protected]) tied to his consulting firm Lion
Hall, which had been the subject
of an FBI bribery investigation in the 1990s.
The lawsuit also forced
the release of records
showing then-Vice President Joe Biden and his son Hunter received a May 26,
2016, email detailing a scheduled “8:45 am prep for a 9 am phone
call with Pres Poroshenko,” who was the president of Ukraine. (Hunter
Biden was on the board of the controversial Ukrainian firm Burisma at the
time.)
This lawsuit is an opportunity for the Trump team to stop the
Deep State’s slow-walking of the release of Biden family corruption
records.
A Missed Opportunity
to Uphold the First Amendment
The U.S. Supreme Court denied
Judicial Watch’s petition challenging a lower court decision against Kari
MacRae, a Massachusetts high school teacher who was fired in retaliation
for social media posts, which decried woke values such as critical race
theory being taught in schools.
The posts predated her employment at
Hanover High School in Massachusetts. We argued that the Supreme Court
should take up the case as the lower courts misapplied the First Amendment
and Supreme Court precedent.
MacRae was fired because she spoke out
against critical race theory before she was hired. The Supreme Court’s
decision not to take up her case is a missed opportunity to uphold the
First Amendment.
Justice Clarence Thomas in a concurring opinion
raised significant
concerns about what happened to MacRae:
The First
Circuit’s analysis strikes me as deeply flawed. To start, I do not see
how the tone of MacRae’s posts can bear on the weight of her First
Amendment interest. “Speech on matters of public concern is at the heart
of the First Amendment’s protection.” … And, “[t]he inappropriate
or controversial character of a statement is
irrelevant to the question whether it deals with a matter of public
concern.” … “[H]umor, satire, and even personal invective can make a
point about a matter of public concern.”
***
It undermines core First Amendment values to allow
a government employer to adopt an institutional viewpoint on the issues of
the day and then, when faced with a dissenting employee, portray this
disagreement as evidence of disruption. And, the problem is exacerbated in
the case of an employee such as MacRae, who expressed her views only
outside the workplace and before her employment
Judicial
Watch filed
a
lawsuit
for MacRae against Hanover High School Principal Matthew Mattos and Hanover
School Superintendent Matthew Ferron in November 2021, asserting a claim
for First Amendment retaliation (MacRae
v. Matthew Mattos et al.
(No. 21-cv-11917, 23-1817)).
MacRae was hired as a Hanover High
School teacher on August 31, 2021, but was fired on September 29, 2021,
over several TikTok posts that were made months prior to her hiring at the
school. MacRae, who in May of 2021 was elected to the Bourne School
Committee, made the posts in her personal capacity as a citizen and
candidate for public office.
Until next week,
