Why files were released with heavy redactionspublished at 05:52 GMT 20 December 2025
The latest files released by the US Department of Justice (DOJ) contain a number of redactions - so what's been withheld, and why?
The DOJ says it was extremely cautious not to identify victims, so women's faces were blacked out on photos that were made public.
"Victim privacy interests counsel in favour of redacting the faces of women in photographs with Epstein even where not all the women are known to be victims because it is not practicable for the department to identify every person in a photo,” Jay Clayton, US attorney for the Southern District of New York, has written in a letter to the judges overseeing the Epstein and Maxwell cases.
He adds that "this approach to photographs could be viewed by some as an over-redaction" - but continues that "the department believes it should, in the compressed time frame, err on the side of redacting to protect victims.”
Other redactions are believed to have been made as they might jeopardise an active criminal investigation, or contain images of abuse.











