The United States Attorney General, Pam Bondi, promised to declassify this Thursday, February 27 Jeffrey Epstein’s archiveswhich supposedly contain the names of their accomplices.
“Tomorrow they will see information about Epstein published by my department,” Bondi said in an interview on Wednesday with Fox News.
Among the documents that the Attorney General intends to publish, there will be “many flight records, many names, a lot of information.”
“What man did with his accomplices was quite sick,” he added.
Bondi already announced last week that he was in possession of Epstein files And he is receiving pressures from Republicans and Democrats to publish his “customer list.”
The delay, he said, is because the Prosecutor’s Office works to protect the identities of some 250 victims that appear in those documents.
“We must ensure that your identity and personal information are protected,” he said.
Epstein committed suicide in August 2019 in a New York prison weeks after being arrested by federal agents accused of sexual trafficking.
The billionaire, with contacts in the high political and economic spheres of the United States and other countries, had already been convicted of sexual crimes with minors, of which he declared himself guilty in 2008.
Having avoided the trial with his suicide, part of American society claimed to the Department of Justice to make public the list of complicit and customers of Epstein.
Also that he published the registration of flights from the private plane of Epstein to the private island he had in the Virgin Islands, where some of the abuses would have occurred.
Epstein’s greatest accomplice was the British heiress Ghislaine Maxwell, currently sentenced to 20 years in prison for facilitating minors to billionaire Jeffrey Epstein to sexually abuse them for a decade.
Epstein was close to important names such as former United States President Bill Clinton or Prince Andrés of England, who in 2022 reached a millionaire agreement with one of the victims of the case that accuses him of sexual crimes when he was less.
