Three Million Pages Released—and Millions Still Withheld (6/19/26) episode artwork

EPISODE · Jun 19, 2026 · 27 MIN

Three Million Pages Released—and Millions Still Withheld (6/19/26)

from The Vault: The Epstein Files · host Bobby Capucci

CBS News found that the Justice Department’s massive Epstein-file release still leaves major holes in the public record. Although the DOJ said it collected more than six million pages, it released only about three million, claiming the remainder consisted of duplicates, unrelated material or legally protected records. The files that were published also contain questionable redactions, including the names and images of prominent Epstein contacts even though the disclosure law specifically barred officials from withholding information merely to prevent political embarrassment or reputational damage. Some redactions were quietly removed only after CBS News questioned the department, while thousands of older emails, email attachments, internal FBI communications and records from Epstein’s earliest accounts remain absent or difficult to trace.The missing material extends into some of the most important unresolved areas of the Epstein investigation. CBS News could not locate substantial records connected to a DEA money-laundering investigation, earlier federal inquiries, massage scheduling, encrypted Signal messages, suspicious financial transactions and missing FBI interview reports. More than 70 percent of the documents listed in an index used during Ghislaine Maxwell’s criminal case could not be found under their original identification numbers, and prison footage from 147 cameras—along with video from the night of Epstein’s first reported jail incident—was not released. The continuing gaps have prompted a Government Accountability Office investigation, congressional scrutiny and litigation seeking clearer explanations for the redactions and the release of additional documentsto contact me:[email protected]:What's missing from the Epstein files? Questions persist about unexplained redactions, missing documents, email gaps - CBS News

CBS News found that the Justice Department’s massive Epstein-file release still leaves major holes in the public record. Although the DOJ said it collected more than six million pages, it released only about three million, claiming the remainder consisted of duplicates, unrelated material or legally protected records. The files that were published also contain questionable redactions, including the names and images of prominent Epstein contacts even though the disclosure law specifically barred officials from withholding information merely to prevent political embarrassment or reputational damage. Some redactions were quietly removed only after CBS News questioned the department, while thousands of older emails, email attachments, internal FBI communications and records from Epstein’s earliest accounts remain absent or difficult to trace.The missing material extends into some of the most important unresolved areas of the Epstein investigation. CBS News could not locate substantial records connected to a DEA money-laundering investigation, earlier federal inquiries, massage scheduling, encrypted Signal messages, suspicious financial transactions and missing FBI interview reports. More than 70 percent of the documents listed in an index used during Ghislaine Maxwell’s criminal case could not be found under their original identification numbers, and prison footage from 147 cameras—along with video from the night of Epstein’s first reported jail incident—was not released. The continuing gaps have prompted a Government Accountability Office investigation, congressional scrutiny and litigation seeking clearer explanations for the redactions and the release of additional documentsto contact me:[email protected]:What's missing from the Epstein files? Questions persist about unexplained redactions, missing documents, email gaps - CBS News

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Three Million Pages Released—and Millions Still Withheld (6/19/26)

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This episode is 27 minutes long.

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This episode was published on June 19, 2026.

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CBS News found that the Justice Department’s massive Epstein-file release still leaves major holes in the public record. Although the DOJ said it collected more than six million pages, it released only about three million, claiming the remainder...

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