The more than 20,000 pages of Jeffrey Epstein emails released earlier this month by the House Oversight Committee are enough to prompt further investigations into convicted child sex offenders and those around them, such as former Harvard president and OpenAI board member Larry Summers. Now, Luke Eagle and Riley Walls have copied the Gmail inbox onto a website called “JMail” and converted the source documents into a more familiar form for anyone looking for them.
In the weeks since the files were released, the president signed the Epstein Files Transparency Act, which states that the attorney general must “make publicly available in a searchable and downloadable format all unsolicited records, documents, communications and investigative materials in the possession of the Justice Department within 30 days.”
That doesn’t mean all the remaining files will be released, as CNN reported. The language of the law allows information that “could jeopardize an active federal investigation or ongoing prosecution” to be temporarily exempted, but anything that is released can be sorted very quickly into this easily scanned version.
