The New Epstein Files Volume 3: Digital Evidence (The New Epstein Files 2025, Band 3)
The New Epstein Files Volume 3: Digital Evidence
Warning : This material contains sexual content and may not be suitable for all audiences.
On December 19, 2025, the Department of Justice, under the Epstein Files Transparency Act, began releasing some of its Epstein files to the public (although all files were to be released on that date). In total, only 9,675 pages were released, and these pages were heavily redacted. At least 18 pages were omitted as indicated by sequence numbers.
The DOJ did not provide detailed summaries or file-level descriptions for these files. From direct observation, these files include photographs from various Epstein-related investigations or seized from his properties and devices; court records, filings, and some grand jury-related material. Later volumes include FBI complaints and investigative reports, flight logs, contact books, and evidence lists from earlier prosecutions, as well as documents related to Epstein’s properties and associates.
What is the Epstein Files Transparency Act?
The Epstein Files Transparency Act is a 2025 U.S. federal law (House Bill 4405) that requires the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) to publicly release investigative records and materials related to the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein and his network — with some limited exceptions — in order to increase governmental transparency and accountability.
The law was passed by the 119th Congress and signed by President Donald Trump on November 19, 2025. Its main goal is to force the DOJ to make publicly available all unclassified records and documents in its possession that relate to the investigation and prosecution of Jeffrey Epstein, Epstein-associate Ghislaine Maxwell, and others connected to those investigations.
What is in Volume 3
Of the thousands of documents released on December 19, 205 of the most significant were selected from Volume 3. This condensed collection highlights Epstein’s obsession with photography, which appears in nearly every event he attended. Hundreds of labeled CDs were kept at his properties and later seized by the FBI. Almost all of this material was fully or partially redacted to protect the identities of the victims. The volume also includes police lineups and interview notes taken from those victims.