The New Epstein Files Volume 5: The Epstein Victims (The New Epstein Files 2025, Band 5)
Warning : This material contains mature content and may not be suitable for all audiences.
On January 30, 2026, the Department of Justice released roughly 3.5 million documents under the Epstein Files Transparency Act, . This was reported as the largest single tranche of materials released, which included millions of records, videos, and images from investigations into Epstein.
As of February 15, 2026, in a letter to Congress, Attorney General Pam Bondi announced there would be no more releases of the Epstein Files, despite another 3 million still remaining. In her letter, she stated the rationale behind heavily redacted materials, despite clear inconsistencies in the files released. In certain cases, identical images or files have different reactions made. A list of victims was erroneously underacted and released to the public without their consent, only to be taken offline days later after complaints made by the victims and their attorneys.
At the House Judiciary Committee hearing on February 11, Rep. Pramila Jayapal asked the Epstein survivors who were seated behind Attorney General Pam Bondi to raise their hands if they had not yet been able to meet with the U.S. Justice Department since the release of the Epstein files. Every survivor present raised their hand, signaling that none of them had yet been given such a meeting with DOJ officials to discuss their cases or concerns.
Volume 5 includes the following:
A brief summary of six prominent survivors
The July 8, 2019 press release from Southern District of New York concerning abuse and trafficking of minors by Jeffrey Epstein
A redacted version of the list of victims and their contacts
Over 250 never-before-seen images take from photos and videos released under the Epstein Transparency Act.