US President Donald Trump has signed a bill ordering the justice department to release all its files from its investigation into convicted paedophile Jeffrey Epstein.
The legislation, which calls for the release of the files in a searchable and downloadable format within 30 days, was approved overwhelmingly in both chambers of Congress, the House of Representatives and Senate, on Tuesday.
Trump then announced on his Truth Social platform that he had signed it on Wednesday, starting the clock on the release of the files.
Under pressure from Epstein's victims and rank-and-file Republicans, Trump on Sunday made a major reversal in his stance on the files and gave his blessing to passing the legislation. For months, he had resisted unsealing many documents from the federal investigation into the late financier.
Congress' lower chamber began debating the measure on Tuesday morning and voted within hours. Several of Epstein's victims spent the day on Capitol Hill advocating for the bill's passage.
Nearly all House lawmakers voted in favour of the resolution, which passed 427-1. Clay Higgins, a Louisiana Republican, was the only one who voted against the bill. Two Republicans and three Democrats did not vote. The Senate then passed the resolution.
The House Oversight Committee has already made public thousands of documents from the Epstein estate relating to the late financier, but the resolution covers material currently in the possession of the justice department.
Those records could, in theory, include files about imprisoned Epstein co-conspirator Ghislaine Maxwell, as well as figures - including government officials - mentioned in the case. It could also include internal justice department documents.
The justice department now has 30 days to release its materials on Epstein. But there are obstacles to the files being shared.
The House bill said the justice department can hold back any documents that jeopardise an active federal investigation or ongoing prosecution, provided that such withholding is narrowly tailored and temporary.
That could potentially lead to delays, given that Trump has called for investigations into Epstein's links with prominent Democrats, such as Bill Clinton and Larry Summers, to determine what was going on with them, and him.
Clinton has strongly denied he had any knowledge of Epstein's crimes, whereas Summers has apologised for his misguided decision to continue communicating with Epstein until 2019.
For those who have campaigned for the release of the files, anything short of full disclosure is likely to spark further questions and even outrage.
In addition to possible delays, the public is also likely to see lots of redactions in any release of new Epstein documents. In the tranche of files released by the House Oversight Committee last week, names and phone numbers were frequently blacked out to protect privacy.
The latest bill says the attorney general can withhold or redact records that include victims' names, medical files and other personal information that would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy.
One attorney who handles sexual abuse cases supported Congress improving the provision. But she said releasing the files still might impact Epstein survivors.
While the press and others are often invited to witness Trump's bill-signings, this was done out of public view, and the announcement was included in a long post that also blasted Democrats he claimed were tied to Epstein, touted the president's record during this second term, and addressed the two impeachment trials of his first term.




















