Marrakech – The US Justice Department on Friday released what it described as its largest Epstein disclosure to date: more than three million additional pages, alongside about 180,000 images and more than 2,000 videos, tied to the investigations of Jeffrey Epstein and his network.

The department said the publication brought the overall production to nearly 3.5 million pages when combined with earlier releases. Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said the release was intended to satisfy the Justice Department’s obligations under the Epstein Files Transparency Act, which the department says was signed into law on November 19, 2025.

The statute required the government to make Epstein-related records public by December 19, 2025. But the rollout missed that deadline, prompting fresh criticism and scrutiny of what was delayed, what was redacted, and whether the administration’s handling of the files was driven by process, politics, or both.

The extraordinary trove and the scale of the eventual release immediately reignited a digital frenzy that has long surrounded the case.

Social media platforms quickly filled with screenshots of documents, amateur β€œforensics,” half-read excerpts, and speculative threads that blurred fact, inference, and conspiracy. Some material was recycled into partisan warfare; some was weaponized against political opponents or even f

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