Sign up for our daily newsletter to get the best of The New Yorker in your inbox. If the Jeffrey Epstein case has a leading reporter on the national scene, her name ...
Matthew Schmitz is the editor of Compact. The scourge of rising antisemitism in recent years has found its latest manifestation in the government’s release of millions of files about sex offender ...
“I started thinking about ways to get rougher cuts of information to reporters more quickly, for breaking news,” says Dylan Freedman, an editor on the Times’ AI team. “With the help of AI, I wrote a ...
Attorney General Pam Bondi at a House Judiciary Committee hearing seemed to have a printout of Rep. Pramila Jayapal's history of searches of the Department of Justice's database of documents related ...
Questions continue to emerge over the Department of Justice’s handling of the Jeffrey Epstein files. One Democratic congressman went to the House floor to read the names of six "wealthy, powerful men" ...
Representative Ro Khanna read the names of six powerful men in the Epstein files, whose names were previously hidden by the Justice Department, aloud on the House floor on Tuesday. “Yesterday, ...
Members of Congress have been granted uncensored access to a selection of the Justice Department’s files relating to Jeffrey Epstein, and the lawmakers say these have shed additional light on the late ...
The Department of Justice will allow members of Congress to review unredacted files on the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein starting on Monday, according to a letter that was sent to lawmakers.
Members of Congress will be able to begin reviewing the unredacted version of the Justice Department’s files on Jeffrey Epstein on Monday morning, according to two sources familiar with the DOJ’s ...
Members of Congress will be able to review unredacted versions of the more than 3 million pages of Epstein files released by the Justice Department starting Feb. 9, according to a letter obtained by ...
Save this article to read it later. Find this story in your account’s ‘Saved for Later’ section. The tranches of files — the largest of which was released on January 30, comprising more than 3 million ...
My name is in the Epstein files. How could that be? When the FBI received its first tip about the businessman molesting teenage girls, I hadn't even been born yet. The first time I heard the name ...