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Norms Impact

DOJ Abruptly Posts Interviews With Trump Accuser From Epstein Files

The DOJ’s selective posting—after previously removing the same interviews—sets a precedent for discretionary federal disclosure that can be shaped around a sitting president.

Executive

Mar 6, 2026

Sources

Summary

The Justice Department released redacted FBI interview records from 2019 in which an Epstein abuse survivor alleges Donald Trump sexually assaulted and struck her when she was 13 to 15 years old. The release follows prior DOJ removal of the same interview record from its Epstein database and comes amid selective disclosure of a much larger Epstein document cache. The practical consequence is a federal disclosure process that can be perceived as politically curated while leaving most underlying files undisclosed.

Reality Check

When federal transparency becomes discretionary and reversible, our democratic guardrails weaken because the public cannot distinguish principled disclosure from power-protecting curation. Removing records and later reposting them—while retaining the vast majority of the underlying cache—normalizes a government information regime where timing and completeness can be managed to control political damage. Over time, that precedent erodes trust in law enforcement independence and conditions the country to accept a two-tier transparency system for the powerful and everyone else.

Media

Detail

<p>The Department of Justice posted three redacted FBI interview files documenting interviews conducted between August and October 2019 with a woman who said she was abused for years by Jeffrey Epstein and that Epstein introduced her to Donald Trump in a “very tall building with huge rooms” in New York or New Jersey. In the interviews, she alleged Trump sexually assaulted her when she was between 13 and 15 years old and struck her after she bit his penis; she also described other people being present and leaving at Trump’s request.</p><p>The DOJ had previously removed the record of these interviews from its Epstein database. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt called the allegations “completely baseless,” said they were backed by “zero credible evidence,” and argued the prior administration did nothing because Trump “did absolutely nothing wrong.” Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said the DOJ reviewed the files last summer and found no credible evidence warranting further investigation. Separate reporting cited indicates the DOJ has released roughly 300 gigabytes—about 2 percent—of an estimated 50 terabytes of Epstein-related material.</p>