A sweeping release of more than three million investigation files by the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) has reignited public scrutiny of Jeffrey Epstein's global network.
The documents, released between 30 January and 2 February 2026, include internal emails, flight logs, and over 180,000 images. While the records do not necessarily imply criminal activity by those mentioned, they highlight the enduring social and professional ties Epstein maintained with heads of state, tech titans, and business moguls years after his initial 2008 sex-crime conviction.
The 2026 document dump has already led to significant political upheaval in Europe and the United Kingdom, as specific correspondence suggested deeper involvement than previously admitted.
Peter Mandelson, a prominent figure in the British Labour Party and former EU Trade Commissioner, resigned from the House of Lords on 3 February 2026. The move came after leaked emails revealed he had sent market-sensitive government briefings to Epstein during the 2008 global financial crisis.
・The Allegation: Documents suggest Epstein paid approximately $ 75,000 into accounts linked to Mandelson in 2003 and 2004.
・The Fallout: Prime Minister Keir Starmer has handed a dossier to the police and initiated legislation to strip Mandelson of his peerage.
Slovakia's national security adviser and former President of the UN General Assembly, Miroslav Lajčák, resigned on 31 January 2026.
・The Revelation: Emails from 2018 showed Lajčák discussing 'gorgeous girls' in Kyiv with Epstein and accepting dinner invitations.
・The Response: While Lajčák denied any wrongdoing, Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico accepted the resignation amid an opposition outcry.
The files contain references to some of the world's most influential men, often contradicting previous denials of contact with the disgraced financier.
The release has created a rare moment of bipartisan pressure in the U.S. Congress. On 2 February 2026, Bill and Hillary Clinton reached a deal with the House Oversight Committee to provide testimony regarding their past relationship with Epstein. This agreement was struck just days before a scheduled vote to hold the couple in contempt of Congress.
Meanwhile, President Trump has claimed the documents 'absolve' him, despite the DOJ warning that the cache includes thousands of pages of unsubstantiated tips submitted to the FBI years ago.
On 3 February 2026, a federal judge ordered the Justice Department to temporarily take down parts of the database after thousands of names of sexual abuse victims were inadvertently released without redaction.
The documents also surfaced in an unlikely context: investigations into the Trump Accounts Summit and the newly established Trump Gold Card residency programme. Investigators are reviewing whether any past Epstein associates have attempted to utilise these new fast-track immigration routes to secure residency under the current administration.
Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche signalled on Sunday that no additional prosecutions are expected. 'We need to separate those two ideas,' he told CNN. 'There's a lot of correspondence. There's a lot of emails. The American people need to understand that it isn't a crime to party with Mr Epstein.'
Legally, that may be true. But for victims who endured years of abuse, the sight of powerful men insisting they knew nothing strains belief. Epstein is gone. The scrutiny is not.
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2026-02-04T14:15:58Z