



Tens of thousands of pages of the "Epstein files" have been released by the US House Oversight Committee.
In a more than 33,000-page-strong data dump, documents from the US Department of Justice (DoJ) have finally been made public after months of mounting pressure.
A statement on the Committee's website released shortly after 11pm in the UK reads: "On August 5, Chairman [Congressman James] Comer issued a subpoena for records related to Mr Jeffrey Epstein, and the Department of Justice has indicated it will continue producing those records while ensuring the redaction of victim identities and any child sexual abuse material."
In total, 33,295 pages have been shared to a public Google Drive folder.
However, it remains unclear just how much previously unknown information the records contain - with each page uploaded as an individual image.
A total of 33,295 pages have been shared to a public Google Drive folder, sparking accusations of 'stonewalling'
|Democrats on the Committee had previously complained at how much of the material turned over by the DoJ had already been made public.
California Congressman Ro Khanna said that just three per cent of the material was new as he accused the department of "stonewalling".
"The rest are already in the public domain," Mr Khanna blasted. "Less than one per cent of files have been released. DoJ is stonewalling."