Attorney General Pam Bondi has confirmed that “all” documents tied to disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein have now been made public.
The 60-year-old said the complete release was carried out in accordance with Section 3 of the Epstein Files Transparency Act, following staggered disclosures by the Trump administration.
Millions of emails, photographs, court filings, flight logs, and investigative records were made public in batches across December and January after federal workers spent extensive hours reviewing the material.
The final release includes the names of more than 300 high-profile individuals who appear in files published by the Department of Justice, further fueling intense public scrutiny while officials stress that inclusion does not imply criminal wrongdoing.
Over 300 high-profile figures named in wide-ranging contexts
Among the names listed in the Department of Justice files are President Donald Trump, Microsoft founder Bill Gates, Margaret Thatcher, Barack and Michelle Obama, Benjamin Netanyahu, Princess Diana, and Bill and Hillary Clinton.
Entertainment and cultural figures also appear, including Barbara Streisand, Amy Schumer, Bruce Springsteen, Kim Kardashian, Bill Cosby, and Robert De Niro.
Bondi’s February 14 letter included a separate compilation of individuals who “are or were a government official or politically exposed person” and were also named “in the files released under the Act at least once," per Daily Mail.
Bondi and her deputy, Todd Blanche, stated that the individuals’ names appear in a “wide variety of contexts,” emphasizing that references span everything from media coverage and third-party emails to flight records and investigative material.
Officials have underscored that being named in the documents does not presume any guilt or connection to Epstein’s crimes.
Earlier in the disclosure process, on November 12, the US House Oversight Committee released more than 20,000 pages related to Epstein’s sex trafficking case.
The material included flight logs, court documents, and private emails, with further releases mandated after a Senate vote on November 18 required the Justice Department to publish additional investigative files by December 19.
Still-sealed materials at the time reportedly included 40 computers, 26 storage drives, 70 CDs, and six recording devices, totaling nearly 300 gigabytes of potential evidence.
Authorities also cataloged 60 physical items, including visitor records to Epstein’s private island, a site linked to his abuse of underage girls.
Royalty, politicians and global leaders among the most frequently mentioned
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, formerly Prince Andrew, is the most frequently referenced individual in the released documents, with his name appearing 173 times.
He has “ceaselessly denied allegations of abuse,” including Virginia Giuffre’s claims that he had sex with her on three occasions when she was underage.
Following the public accusations, his royal titles were removed, and he faced significant public fallout in the weeks after the files were made public.
His ex-wife, Sarah Ferguson, is mentioned nine times, including in emails in which she referred to Epstein as a “dear friend.” As a result, she lost her Duchess of York title.
Queen Camilla is also named nine times, though officials have said this does not indicate a personal relationship with Epstein. Princess Diana appears 14 times, again with no suggestion of direct involvement.
Nigel Farage is cited 18 times in email exchanges between Epstein and Steve Bannon, but no confirmed link between Farage and Epstein has been established.
Three former UK prime ministers, Tony Blair, Gordon Brown, and David Cameron, are also listed, though references place them in broader political discussions rather than direct association.
Across the Atlantic, former President Bill Clinton appears in the documents, along with Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers.
Donald Trump is mentioned around 1,500 times, largely in media coverage beginning with his 2016 presidential campaign.
Trump has denied wrongdoing and has said he severed ties with Epstein in the early 2000s. His ex-wife Marla Maples and daughter Tiffany are listed in flight records.
Celebrities from music, film and science also appear
The files also reference a range of prominent names from entertainment, fashion, and academia.
Sir Elton John appears eight times, with mentions tied to articles shared by Epstein rather than documented personal interaction. Mick Jagger is listed nine times, and Michael Jackson’s name appears in Epstein’s personal book.
Courtney Love, Adele, and Chris Tucker are also mentioned, while British actor Colin Firth is cited 10 times in connection with a press article sent to Epstein.
Television host Piers Morgan and model Naomi Campbell each appear 10 times, with no confirmed link to Epstein’s criminal conduct.
Stephen Hawking is referenced 17 times, and Richard Dawkins 29 times, though there is no evidence either had a relationship with Epstein.
Frédéric Fekkai, a celebrity hairstylist, appears in flight logs alongside his son, Alexandra.
Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein’s convicted accomplice, is listed 135 times in the files, while her father, Robert Maxwell, is mentioned 47 times.
What Bondi’s letter says about withheld records
In her February 14 letter, Bondi addressed lingering questions about whether any records were kept from the public.
“The only category of records withheld were those records where permitted withholdings under Section 2(c) and privileged materials were not segregable from material responsive under Section 2(a),” the letter stated.
“As discussed in the Department's December 19, 2025, and January 29, 2026, letters to Congress (the Prior EFTA Letters), the privileges that applied to the withheld records were deliberative-process privilege, work-product privilege, and attorney-client privilege.”
Bondi also made clear that reputational concerns were not a factor in redactions or omissions.
“No records were withheld or redacted ‘on the basis of embarrassment, reputational harm, or political sensitivity, including to any government official, public figure, or foreign dignitary,’” she added.
With the final batch now released, the disclosure process mandated under the Epstein Files Transparency Act has officially concluded.
Epstein died by suicide in a New York prison cell on August 10 2019, while awaiting trial without bail.
