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The letter states that members can review the documents in person, provided they give the DOJ 24 hours’ notice. The option at this point is only available to members of Congress — and not their staff. They may take notes but can’t bring in any electronic devices, the letter said.

The review will only be of the 3 million files currently available to the public, not the extensive trove of more than 6 million documents in total that the DOJ says it has in its possession.

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[-] wewbull@feddit.uk 5 points 1 day ago

I question why is it still a limited set? There's no reason not to make everything available u der these conditions.

[-] kingofras@lemmy.world 1 points 1 day ago

There is no reason to believe the ‘3 million’ unreleased documents is true either.

At the deadline of the 19th, Bondi said something that there were 2 million documents. Now we’re at 6 million. And again, we are just talking about DOJ / FBI. Nobody is mentioning CIA NSA, even though the entire thing reeks of Israeli / Russian intelligence. You’re telling me those organisations weren’t keeping tabs on a guy involved in serial crimes in multiple states with several high ranking justice and police departments in his power.

There are likely millions more documents. Miraculously congress is not interested in them, or if they are, it is all happening behind closed doors.

this post was submitted on 07 Feb 2026
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The Epstein Files

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