DOJ Must Release More Epstein Files by July 2, Judge Rules

Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche didn’t respond to a court order, prompting the judge to call him out.

Todd Blanche

A federal judge said acting Attorney General Todd Blanche was in violation of the law requiring the public release of all the files on convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. Aaron Schwartz/Sipa USA via AP

A federal judge on Thursday ordered the Justice Department to release more files related to Jeffrey Epstein, concluding that acting Attorney General Todd Blanche is violating the law Congress passed to make Epstein documents public.

U.S. District Judge Emmet Sullivan ruled that Katie Phang, a lawyer and political commentator, has the right to sue Blanche in federal court in Washington, D.C., and is harmed by Blanche’s refusal to follow the law and turn over documents such as logs that weren’t made public.

“Here, the current high level of interest in the Epstein Files combined with the upcoming mid-term elections amounts to a circumstance that itself constitutes irreparable harm, especially where the Attorney General has not disputed that he is in violation of the Epstein Act,” Sullivan, a Clinton appointee, wrote.

On her show on the left-leaning MeidasTouch Network, Phang said she acted in her right as a private citizen to get more of the Epstein files released, stating that Blanche needs to either “put up or shut up.”

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“He either has to bring forth unredacted files or show cause as to why he should not or cannot do so,” Phang said.

Sullivan ordered that the DOJ “produce to the public” a series of files related to the case against the convicted sex offender by July 2. The agency was initially required to respond to his court by 1 p.m. Thursday — which it did not.

“By not responding substantively, the Attorney General has conceded Ms. Phang’s merits arguments in the pending motion,” the judge wrote.

The DOJ did not immediately respond to a request for comment from NOTUS.

The agency was legally required to release the files by Dec. 19 under the Epstein Files Transparency Act, but missed this deadline.

An initial, heavily redacted batch of hundreds of thousands of documents was published in December, and millions more came in January. In March, a follow-up batch was published, along with roughly 50,000 previously removed files that were restored following review.

“Responding to public demands for information, Congress with near unanimity passed the Epstein Files Transparency Act,” Sullivan wrote in the opening line of his order, adding that the act is an “unprecedented disclosure law” that requires “extremely timely compliance.”