Trump Photo in Epstein File 468 Removed Then Republished by DOJ Amid Victim Rights Concerns

In a development from the ongoing Epstein files declassification, the U.S. DOJ released a photo of Donald Trump from file 468 on Friday, December 19, removed it hours later after victims' rights complaints, and republished it Sunday following redactions. The image, showing Trump with women in bikinis, has fueled debates on transparency versus protection, echoing broader file removals previously reported.

As part of the Epstein Files Transparency Act's mandated release on December 19—previously covered—the DOJ published nearly 4,000 images from Jeffrey Epstein's files. File 468 featured a desk with framed photos of Epstein and others, including Pope John Paul II. An open drawer revealed a small photo of Donald Trump surrounded by four women in bikinis, adjacent to a known image of Trump with Melania Trump, Epstein, and Ghislaine Maxwell.

The batch cleared review by 200 officials despite Trump's limited mentions. However, hours after posting on the DOJ's microsite, file 468 and 15 others were removed following alerts from victims' rights groups, as confirmed by Deputy AG Todd Blanche on NBC Sunday. He denied political motives, emphasizing legal requirements to redact potential survivors' faces—a step applied before republishing the image that afternoon.

House Oversight Democrats highlighted the removal on X, questioning AG Pam Bondi on hidden content. The incident parallels unredacted photos of Bill Clinton with obscured women in a jacuzzi, raising consistency questions. While the Act balances disclosure post-Epstein's 2019 death with victim safeguards, critics across parties decry delays and redactions in this high-profile transparency effort.

Related Articles

Oval Office scene of President Trump dismissing Attorney General Pam Bondi amid Epstein files and controversies.
Image generated by AI

Trump dismisses Attorney General Pam Bondi amid Epstein files scrutiny, politicized probes, and international controversies

Reported by AI Image generated by AI

President Donald Trump removed Attorney General Pam Bondi from her position at the Department of Justice on Thursday, April 2, ending her 14-month tenure amid bipartisan criticism over Jeffrey Epstein files, failed politicized investigations, mass DOJ firings, and strained relations with Mexico. Trump praised her on Truth Social as a 'great patriot' for crime crackdowns, appointing Deputy AG Todd Blanche as interim leader amid speculation on her permanent replacement.

Republicans on the House Oversight Committee have released videos of depositions from former President Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton as part of an investigation into Jeffrey Epstein's files. The depositions, conducted last week in Chappaqua, New York, followed the Clintons' unsuccessful challenge to subpoenas. Both denied any knowledge of Epstein's crimes before his 2008 guilty plea.

Reported by AI Fact checked

The Republican-led House Oversight Committee approved a subpoena for Attorney General Pam Bondi in a 24-19 vote, after five Republicans joined Democrats to back a motion offered by Rep. Nancy Mace. The panel is seeking Bondi’s testimony on the Justice Department’s handling of records tied to Jeffrey Epstein and on problems that emerged during the government’s staged release of those materials.

This website uses cookies

We use cookies for analytics to improve our site. Read our privacy policy for more information.
Decline