Congress Forces Epstein Files Release, But New Law Allows DOJ to Withhold Key Information

A key provision in the newly passed Epstein Files Transparency Act is drawing intense scrutiny amid fears it could allow Attorney General Pam Bondi to heavily redact long-anticipated records related to the late financier Jeffrey Epstein and his network of associates.

The bill—overwhelmingly approved this week by both the House and Senate and now awaiting President Donald Trump’s signature—requires the Justice Department to release its full investigative files on Epstein and co-conspirator Ghislaine Maxwell within 30 days of becoming law. Epstein died in a New York jail in 2019 while awaiting trial on sex-trafficking charges.

But despite its sweeping mandate for disclosure, the legislation includes several exceptions permitting Bondi to withhold or obscure certain information. Records may be redacted if they:

Contain personally identifiable information that would invade the privacy of victims,

Include child sexual abuse material or graphic depictions of violence or injury,

Could compromise an active federal investigation or prosecution, or

Contain material deemed sensitive for national defense or foreign policy reasons.

Any such redactions must be accompanied by written explanations to Congress, and Bondi is instructed to declassify as much as possible, even if only through summaries. Still, the exemptions have fueled worries that the final release could arrive with significant omissions—especially after years of public pressure for transparency.

The bill passed the House 427-1, with only Republican Clay Higgins opposing, and was fast-tracked through the Senate without debate. Passage came only after mounting pressure on the Trump administration, which has repeatedly shifted its stance on disclosure.

Trump campaigned strongly in favor of releasing the files, only to backtrack once in office—prompting Kentucky Republican Thomas Massie to force a discharge petition compelling the House to vote. With both chambers now aligned, the bill is set to reach the president’s desk imminently.

While the bill’s passage marks a breakthrough, not all survivors are satisfied—particularly with the political drama that played out along the way.

Survivor Haley Robson, a Republican voter who has supported Trump in the past, told CNN she is “disappointed” not only in the White House’s wavering but also in House Speaker Mike Johnson, who she accuses of delaying the vote for political spectacle.

“The flip-flop in the back and forth has been nothing short of nauseating and embarrassing,” Robson said, urging Trump to sign the bill without any further delay. “If you would like to clear your name once and for all… follow through with what you said you were going to do.”

Robson also blasted Johnson for what she described as political theatrics, noting that survivors sat in the gallery while Johnson suggested the vote risked harming privacy or exposing innocent people.

“The only theatrics I saw was from him,” she said. “This is not a hoax. There is no theater from the survivors. I’m appalled by him and I’ve lost a lot of respect.”

Robson argued Johnson’s stated concerns about protecting unnamed survivors were misplaced, clarifying that those who wish to stay private are already shielded under pseudonyms in legal filings.

The legislative push unfolded as Congress endured a 44-day government shutdown—during which Representative Adelita Grijalva, a crucial vote for the discharge petition, was not sworn in. Robson believes that delay stalled progress and may have given time for behind-the-scenes maneuvering.

“You will never convince me that shutting down the government for 50 days—and in those 50 days was when we needed them the most—was coincidental,” she said.

Social media users have also raised concerns that the redaction authority could be used to soften or limit what the public ultimately sees—a fear amplified by years of speculation about who may be named in the files.

But whether the Epstein files land as a historic data dump—or as pages blacked out “for official reasons”—may be decided in the Attorney General’s office, not in Congress. For many who have waited years, the only test that matters is whether the truth finally emerges in full.