The US Department of Justice’s internal watchdog has launched a formal review into how the department handled the , focusing on compliance with legal requirements and concerns over how sensitive material was managed.
What the review is about
The Inspector General’s office announced on Thursday that it will examine how the Justice Department collected, reviewed, and redacted documents before releasing them to the public.
It will also assess how officials responded after publication, particularly after Epstein survivors raised concerns that personal and identifying information had been improperly disclosed.
Focus on handling of sensitive records
According to the announcement, the review will specifically look at:
-The process used to prepare
-The redaction methods used to protect survivor identities
-The after publication
The audit will also revisit what officials described as an uneven release of millions of records tied to the Epstein sex trafficking investigation.
Background to the document release
The under a , which required disclosure of Epstein-related materials within 30 days.
The law mandated the release of investigation records connected to Epstein and his 2019 death in jail, while allowing redactions to protect survivor identities.
However, the process quickly ran into delays, with officials initially releasing only a fraction of the documents within the deadline. The department later said it had discovered a large volume of additional records, extending the timeline.
Redaction failures and backlash
In January, the department released around 3 million records but later withdrew several thousand after reports that sensitive material had been exposed.
Lawyers told a court that nearly 100 survivors had their lives “turned upside down” due to improper redactions.
The exposed material reportedly included:
-Nude photographs with visible faces
-Names and email addresses
-Other identifying personal information
Officials later attributed the
Political scrutiny and allegations
The handling of the Epstein files also drew political scrutiny, with accusations that the Justice Department may have attempted to shield political figures, including President Trump, who had previously been socially acquainted with Epstein decades ago.
The watchdog review marks the first major internal scrutiny of the department under Trump’s second term.
Why it matters
The Epstein case remains one of the most sensitive federal investigations in recent years due to:
-The scale of the abuse network
-The involvement of high-profile individuals
-Ongoing concerns about victim privacy
The new review is expected to assess whether the Justice Department followed legal requirements and whether systemic failures contributed to the disclosure errors.
