
"this is absolutely breaking the law. It could be that they that we're only getting about 10% of what the DOJ has, And of that 10%, 5% of that has already been released, and the other 5% is highly redacted. So we're getting very little."
"The only redactions being applied to the documents are those required by law - full stop. Consistent with the statute and applicable laws, we are not redacting the names of individuals or politicians unless they are a victim."
"likely have to take legal action if the Trump administration continues to stonewall."
The Justice Department released a limited subset of records related to Jeffrey Epstein, and House Oversight Chair Rep. Robert Garcia contends those releases represent only a small fraction of DOJ holdings. Garcia estimated roughly 10% of files were provided, with about half of that already public and the remainder heavily redacted, producing minimal usable information. Garcia and Rep. Jamie Raskin indicated they may pursue legal action if records continue to be withheld. The DOJ maintained redactions comply with law and said it is not redacting politicians' names unless they are victims. Additional batches of court documents, photos, and memos were posted, and a previously released photo featuring President Trump appeared to be removed.
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