
THE U.S. Justice Department faces mounting criticism after releasing a trove of documents related to Jeffrey Epstein that failed to adequately protect the identities and personal information of sexual abuse victims.
AP reported on Thursday that the disclosure, part of the department’s effort to comply with a law mandating the public release of Epstein’s investigative files, included names, faces, nude photos, bank account details, and Social Security numbers.
The law was designed to safeguard the privacy of victims, ensuring that names would be blacked out and faces obscured in photographs.
However, reviews by The Associated Press and other media outlets have found numerous examples of incomplete, inconsistent, or entirely absent redactions, exposing sensitive personal data.
One chart of alleged victims included a photo of a girl who had been underage when employed to give sexualised massages to Epstein in Florida. Police reports released without redactions also named several victims who had never publicly identified themselves.
Despite attempts by the Justice Department to rectify these errors, some images, including selfies of a nude female in a bathroom and another topless female, remained visible online with faces fully exposed.
Accusers and their lawyers have called for the removal of the files from public access and the appointment of an independent monitor to prevent further privacy breaches.
A hearing scheduled in New York was cancelled after lawyers cited progress in addressing the issues, but Brittany Henderson, representing some victims, warned that they are still considering “all potential avenues of recourse” to address the “permanent and irreparable” harm caused.
“The failure here is not merely technical,” Henderson said. “It is a failure to safeguard human beings who were promised protection by our government. Until every document is properly redacted, that failure is ongoing.”
Annie Farmer, who was 16 when she was sexually assaulted by Epstein and his associate Ghislaine Maxwell, said that while her name had previously been public, other details such as her date of birth and phone number were wrongly exposed in the documents.
“At this point, I’m feeling really most of all angry about the way that this unfolded,” she told NBC News. “The fact that it’s been done in such a beyond careless way, where people have been endangered because of it, is really horrifying.”
The Justice Department has attributed the errors to technical and human mistakes, stating that many problematic materials have been removed and efforts are underway to republish properly redacted versions.
Staff tasked with reviewing millions of pages were operating under an accelerated 30-day deadline following President Donald Trump’s signing of the disclosure law on 19 November 2025, leading to significant strain on personnel, some of whom were pulled from regular duties overseeing criminal cases.
The released database represents the largest compilation of documents related to Epstein, who died by suicide in a New York jail in 2019 while awaiting trial on federal sex trafficking charges.
Analysis of the files shows multiple examples of victims’ names and personal information revealed, alongside cases of overzealous redaction where irrelevant details, such as a dog’s name or public figures’ names, were obscured.
Some images of women were partially redacted, but still exposed identifiable features or bare skin, including photos of women in dressing rooms and bathing suits.
One series of more than 100 images of a young woman was mostly blacked out, except for the final photo, which revealed her full face.
The incident has prompted renewed scrutiny over the Justice Department’s handling of sensitive material and raised questions about the safeguards in place to protect victims in high-profile cases. - February 5, 2026
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