Epstein Survivors Sue DOJ Over Leaked Personal Data in Massive File Release
A group of Jeffrey Epstein survivors is suing the U.S. Department of Justice, alleging the government exposed their private information during a massive document release.
The lawsuit centers on claims that improperly redacted files revealed names, contact details, and other identifying data, escalating outrage among victims already pushing for accountability.
According to ABC News and other outlets, the DOJ released more than 3 million pages of Epstein-related records under a federal transparency law, but survivors say the rollout caused new harm instead of delivering justice .
Some reports indicate the breach affected around 100 victims, prompting emergency legal action and document removals after the fact .
The DOJ has acknowledged possible “technical or human error,” while also facing criticism for withholding other records tied to Epstein’s network .
The case now raises a deeper question: whether transparency efforts exposed victims while still protecting powerful figures.
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