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Headline: AG Bondi Releases 3.5 Million Pages of Epstein Documents; Reports Cite Over 1,100 Mentions of Bill Clinton

Headline: AG Bondi Releases 3.5 Million Pages of Epstein Documents; Reports Cite Over 1,100 Mentions of Bill Clinton aBREAKING

Headline: AG Bondi Releases 3.5 Million Pages of Epstein Documents; Reports Cite Over 1,100 Mentions of Bill Clinton
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Attorney General Pam Bondi has reportedly authorized the massive release of approximately 3.5 million pages of documents related to the Jeffrey Epstein case, a disclosure that dwarfs previous public record dumps. The release, which follows the mandate of the Epstein Files Transparency Act, has immediately drawn attention for its extensive references to former President Bill Clinton. Preliminary reports indicate that Clinton’s name appears more than 1,100 times throughout the cache of documents.
Attorney General Bondi stated that the flight logs contained within the release confirm that Clinton traveled internationally with Epstein on “multiple occasions,” a detail that expands upon previously known domestic travel. The documents are said to encompass a wide range of materials, including flight manifests, internal communications, and witness interview summaries collected during years of federal investigations.
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This release comes weeks after the January 2026 deadline set by the Epstein Files Transparency Act, legislation signed into law by President Donald Trump in November 2025. The Act required the Department of Justice to make all files pertaining to the prosecution of Jeffrey Epstein publicly available in a searchable format. Prior to this “massive release,” the public record had been limited to court-ordered unsealings in civil cases, such as the 2024 release of documents from the Virginia Giuffre v. Ghislaine Maxwell lawsuit, which had already established Clinton’s presence on Epstein’s aircraft. The sheer volume of this new release—3.5 million pages—suggests it includes raw investigative files from the FBI and other agencies that were previously shielded from public view.
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While the number of mentions is high, legal analysts caution that a “mention” in investigative files does not automatically equate to evidence of a crime. Many of the 1,100 references could be administrative, duplicative, or appear in news clippings and email chains included in the evidence files. Representatives for Bill Clinton have consistently denied that the former president knew of Epstein’s crimes, stating in the past that he took a total of four trips on Epstein’s plane in 2002 and 2003 for the Clinton Foundation’s work, accompanied by Secret Service and staff. Critics of the release have also raised concerns about privacy, noting that previous releases failed to properly redact the names of victims. Furthermore, political opponents have accused the DOJ of selectively highlighting Democratic figures while potentially withholding other sensitive files, with some Democratic lawmakers alleging that up to 50% of the relevant documents remain unreleased despite the Transparency Act’s requirements.
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