A stunning revelation in the Epstein files
New documents in the case of convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein have revealed previously undisclosed victims and the involvement of prominent political figures.
Lawmakers disclosed, after reviewing partially redacted files, that Jeffrey Epstein had a victim who was nine years old and maintained ties with a senior official in a foreign government, whose identity has not been revealed.
During a press conference held yesterday, Representatives Thomas Massie (Republican) and Ro Khanna (Democrat) stated that six men may be implicated in these files.
The bipartisan pair has led a campaign since last July to release the Epstein files and pushed for a vote on a transparency bill, which was signed into law by President Donald Trump.
The U.S. Department of Justice released more than three million documents related to Epstein on January 30, but most of them were heavily redacted.
Massie, a congressman from Kentucky, told reporters that the files referenced an individual “holding a senior position in a foreign government,” urging the Justice Department under the Trump administration to “correct its mistakes,” according to reporting by Al-Ain News citing the British Daily Mail.
One of the documents released by Massie contains 18 redactions, four of which pertain to men born before 1970.
Monday marked the first time members of Congress were granted access to unredacted files, following a visit to the Department of Justice building in northeast Washington, where they reviewed the documents in person on the department’s computers.
Democratic Representative Jamie Raskin of Maryland, who also visited the Justice Department, said the files included numerous previously undisclosed underage victims, including one who was nine years old.
He added: “When you read these files, you find information about girls who are fifteen, fourteen, ten years old. Today I saw a reference to a nine-year-old girl. This is absurd and disgraceful.”
These developments come as Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein’s longtime associate, declined to answer questions about him during a closed-door session at the U.S. Capitol, invoking her right not to testify.
Maxwell was questioned as part of a bipartisan congressional investigation into the Justice Department’s handling and prosecution of the Epstein case.









