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Jeffrey Epstein List Release: Details revealed

Attorney General Pam Bondi said she hoped to publish flight protocols and “many names” regarding Jeffrey Epstein on Thursday.

Newsweek has contacted the Ministry of Justice using an online contact form outside of regular office hours.

Why is it important

Bondi was put under pressure by the Republican legislators to publish information about Epstein, the deceased financier and convicted sex offenders, who socialized with some of the most powerful people in the world.

While hundreds of court documents that named people with connections to Epstein – including President Donald Trump, the former President Bill Clinton and the British Prince Andrew – many of them have not been accused and were already public. This included victims of sex abuse, his employees and others who have only a temporary connection to the scandal.

These names were not the rumored list of the alleged Epstein customers, some of which believed that they would imply top -class numbers in sexual crimes. During the campaign procedure, Trump suggested that he would be open to the publication of the Epstein customer list.

File photo. Geoffrey Berman, then US lawyer of the Southern District of New York, announced on July 8, 2019 in New York City charges against Jeffery Epstein.

Stephanie Keith/Getty Images

What to know?

When asked why the information had not yet been published, Bondi announced with Jesse Watter's Fox News on Wednesday that her department was working on protecting the personal information of more than 250 victims associated with Epstein.

“We have to make sure that your identity is protected and your personal information,” she said. “Otherwise I think tomorrow, Jesse, who is currently breaking news, you will see some Epstein information published by my office.”

When asked whether the Ministry of Justice would publish a list of Epstein customers, Bondi said on Friday, February 21: “It is currently on my desk to check it. That was a guideline by President Trump.”

What did Jeffrey Epstein do for the work?

Between 1973 and 1975, Epstein taught the Dalton School, one of the most renowned preparatory schools in Manhattan, in the early 20s. An administrator told The New York Times His time in school ended in a discharge in 2019.

He then worked on Bear Stearns, an investment bank, and as a consultant for the Towers Financial Corporation.

He founded his own financial management company J. Epstein and Company in the early 1980s new York The magazine reported that the assets of billionaire customers manage.

What happened to Jeffrey Epstein's island?

According to reports, Epstein was reported to many famous guests in Little St. James, one of two tiny islands, which he had on the US virgin islands.

The authorities claim that many of his crimes have taken place there. The lawyers for Epstein's victims said they had flown to the island and forced to deal with mighty men with sexual acts, many of them supposedly customers or employees of Epstein.

How did Jeffrey Epstein die?

Epstein was found dead in a cell in a cell in the New York Metropolitan Correctional Center while waiting for the sex trade procedures.

His death was ruled as a suicide, but has triggered a wave of conspiracy theories due to his well -documented connections to public and powerful figures.

In a report by a General Inspector of the Ministry of Justice published in 2023, there was no evidence of a foul game, and a “combination of negligence, misconduct, misconduct and direct failure of the jobs” by the prison employee allowed Epstein to commit suicide.

What people say

Bondi said Watters on Wednesday: “What you will hopefully see tomorrow are many flight protocols, many names, lots of information, but it's pretty sick what this man did.”

Anna Paulina Luna, representative of Florida, a Republican who heads a task force who focuses on the clarification of the federal secrets. said In response to Bondi's comments: “This is a big victory, not only for our task force and our congress, but I think for the whole country. A great praise of Bondi, Trump and everyone who worked so hard to achieve this.”

Tennessee representative Tim Burchett, a Republican, wrote on x On Monday: “Where are the Epstein files @Pambondi?”

What's next

Bondi said she hoped to publish the information on Thursday.