Tom Geoghegan and
James FitzGerald
Getty ImagesThe words “Epstein files” have been haunting the Trump administration for months as it grappled with a growing crisis over the crimes of late convicted sex offender and financier Jeffrey Epstein.
Pressure was building from President Donald Trump’s own supporters and from voices within his own Republican Party for more transparency on what the federal investigations into Epstein uncovered.
After weeks of resisting release, Trump has now reversed course and urged Republicans in the House of Representatives to vote to open the Epstein files to public scrutiny.
The House, or lower chamber, is expected on 18 November to approve a measure on releasing the files.
It will then be the turn of the Senate, or upper chamber, to consider doing the same. If that happens, it will end up on the president’s desk.
What are the Epstein files?
In 2008, Epstein reached a plea deal with prosecutors after the parents of a 14-year-old girl told police in Florida that Epstein had molested their daughter at his Palm Beach home.
Photos of girls were found throughout the house, and he was convicted of soliciting prostitution from a minor, for which he was registered as a sex offender and escaped a heavy jail sentence as a result of the deal.
Eleven years later, he was charged with running a network of underage girls for sex. He died in prison while awaiting trial, and his death was ruled a suicide.
These two criminal investigations amassed a vast trove of documents including transcripts of interviews with victims and witnesses, and items confiscated from raids of his various properties.
There was also a separate investigation into his British co-conspirator and ex-girlfriend Ghislaine Maxwell, who was convicted in 2021 of conspiring with Epstein to traffic girls for sex.
Both Epstein and Maxwell were also the subject of civil cases.
What has already been released on Epstein?
At various stages over the years, some materials have been put into the public domain.
Last week, thousands of documents belonging to the Epstein estate were released by the House Oversight Committee, mostly emails.
That was not the first tranche released by the House Oversight Committee since it subpoenaed Epstein’s estate earlier in the year.
An earlier release, in September, included a birthday book containing a note to Epstein bearing Trump’s name, which he has denied writing.
In February, weeks after Trump took office, the Department of Justice and the FBI released what they described at the time as the “first phase of the declassified Epstein files”.
A group of right-wing influencers were invited to the White House, but they were left disappointed when they realised that the 341 pages handed to them were mostly material that was already out there.
It included flight logs from Epstein’s plane and a redacted version of his contacts book containing the names of famous people he knew.
In July, the Department of Justice and FBI said in a memo that no more material would be released.
That could now all change.
Who is named in the Epstein files?
The contents of the unreleased documents remain unknown.
According to The Wall Street Journal, Trump was told by Attorney General Pam Bondi in May that his name appears in FBI documents.
He used to be friends with Epstein and the paper noted that being named in the files was not evidence of wrongdoing.
A White House spokesman called the story “fake”, although an unnamed official speaking to Reuters said the administration did not dispute that Trump’s name was included.
Existing materials in the public domain mention a number of high-profile figures who were connected to Epstein.
Again, this does not imply any wrongdoing by those individuals.
Dozens of names came up in a release of court documents in 2024, including Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, the former prince and brother of King Charles, former US President Bill Clinton and Michael Jackson.
Both Clinton and the British royal deny any knowledge of Epstein’s crimes. Jackson died in 2009.
The release of those documents related to the case of Epstein’s former girlfriend Ghislaine Maxwell, who is serving 20 years in prison for child sex trafficking.
Billionaire Elon Musk and Mountbatten-Windsor were named in flight logs released in September.
Mountbatten-Windsor has previously strenuously denied any wrongdoing. Musk has been quoted as saying that Epstein had invited him to the island but he had declined.
The latest batch of emails belonging to the Epstein estate and released on 12 November also featured Clinton’s former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers and Trump’s former aide Steve Bannon.
Summers has not issued fresh comment but has previously said he deeply regrets being in touch with Epstein after his conviction.
Bannon, who is not accused of any wrongdoing, did not reply to the BBC’s request for comment.
Trump’s name was also mentioned several times in that latest release. He has always denied any wrongdoing.
What happens now with the House vote?
The vote in the House of Representatives was forced by a discharge petition getting its critical 218th signature to trigger action on the floor.
Four Republicans and all 214 Democrats in the House signed the petition.
That vote is expectedto take place on 18 November.
If the bill passes the House, it will move to the Senate. Republican senators haven’t said much yet on where they stand and it requires 60 votes to pass the upper chamber – a high threshold.
Then it goes to the president’s desk, to be approved or denied.
Getty ImagesWhat do we know about Trump/Epstein relationship?
Trump and Epstein appear to have been friends for a number of years, keeping a similar social circle.
Previously released files show that Trump’s details were in Epstein’s so-called black book of contacts. Flight logs also showed Trump flying on Epstein’s plane on several occasions.
They were pictured together at elite events in the 1990s, and photos published by CNN purport to show Epstein in attendance at Trump’s wedding to then-wife Marla Maples.
In 2002, Trump described Epstein as a “terrific guy”. Epstein would later remark: “I was Donald’s closest friend for 10 years.”
According to Trump, they fell out in the early 2000s, two years before Epstein was first arrested. By 2008, Trump was saying that he had not been “a fan of his”.
The White House has suggested that their fallout was connected to Epstein’s behaviour, and that “the president kicked him out of his club for being a creep”.
The Washington Post, meanwhile, has suggested that the breakdown in their relationship was due to their rivalry over some real estate in Florida.
Why are people so interested in Epstein?
Die-hard members of Trump’s MAGA movement have long believed officials are hiding key truths about Epstein’s life and death.
Some of them have theorised that a child-molesting cabal has been operating at the highest levels of US society, protected by the state. The theory spread through cryptic messages posted by a pseudonymous character called Q.
In one of the conspiracy theories pushed by some MAGA influencers, Epstein was an agent of the Israeli government.
Some Trump allies have tried to quell the backlash. Last month, Republican House announced an early recess for the chamber, stalling efforts to force the release of Epstein-related documents within 30 days.
There are several unanswered questions about Epstein shared by the wider population too – particularly why he was given such a lenient sentence in Florida, whether he and Maxwell were really acting alone and how he was allowed to take his own life in prison.












































































































































