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Dozens of FBI Interview Records Missing, Including Trump Files

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Dozens of FBI Interview Records Missing Including Trump Files

Epstien.jpg

Over 90 Witness Interviews Absent From DOJ Website

More than 90 FBI witness interview records appear to be missing from the Justice Department’s public release of files tied to Jeffrey Epstein, according to a CNN review of evidence logs provided during the prosecution of Ghislaine Maxwell.

An evidence log lists roughly 325 FBI “302” interview summaries, but over a quarter of those entries do not appear on the DOJ’s website. The 302 forms are key investigative documents that summarize what witnesses told agents.

The Justice Department denies deleting any records, saying all responsive documents were produced and that omissions involve duplicates, privileged material, or documents tied to ongoing investigations.

Missing Files Include Trump Accuser Interviews

Among the apparently absent records are three interviews linked to a woman who accused President Donald Trump of sexually assaulting her decades ago.

According to case files already released, the woman contacted the FBI hotline in July 2019 shortly after Epstein’s arrest. She alleged Epstein began abusing her when she was around 13 years old in South Carolina and said Epstein later introduced her to Trump.

An FBI presentation from 2025 referencing “prominent names” reportedly included her allegation that Trump forced her to perform oral sex and struck her sometime between 1983 and 1985. Trump has consistently denied wrongdoing, and the White House has called the claims “false and sensationalist.”

Additional 302 summaries dated August and October 2019, along with related interview notes listed in Maxwell’s evidence log, do not appear in the DOJ’s online archive.

Lawmakers Question Compliance With Transparency Law

Rep. Robert Garcia, the ranking Democrat on the House Oversight Committee, said the missing records raise questions about whether the Trump administration complied with the law requiring full publication of Epstein-related files.

“We have a survivor that made serious allegations against the president,” Garcia told CNN, arguing that apparent gaps in the record undermine transparency.

The DOJ maintains that no records were deleted and noted that some files have been temporarily removed and restored for victim redactions. One evidence log was briefly offline before being reposted.

Victims Say Key Statements Are Absent

Several Epstein victims have publicly said they searched the DOJ’s database for their own interview statements and could not find them.

Jess Michaels, who reported being assaulted by Epstein at age 22, said heavily redacted and missing interview summaries suggest a lack of transparency. Another survivor, Haley Robson, wrote to a federal judge arguing that failure to publish interview reports — even with names redacted — perpetuates secrecy.

Unclear Status of Investigation

It remains uncertain what became of the FBI’s investigation into the Trump-related allegation. An internal FBI email included in the released files states that one identified victim “claimed abuse by Trump but ultimately refused to cooperate,” though it does not specify whether that refers to the same accuser.

The woman later filed a lawsuit against Epstein’s estate as “Jane Doe 4,” alleging abuse in South Carolina and sexual assault by unnamed prominent men. Court records show she was deemed ineligible for compensation through the Epstein Victims’ Compensation Program and later dismissed her lawsuit after reportedly reaching a settlement.

Experts say missing 302 reports are significant because they form the backbone of federal investigations. Former FBI deputy director Andrew McCabe described them as “the most basic and important brick in the wall that becomes the investigation.”

With victims demanding fuller disclosure and lawmakers raising compliance concerns, questions about the completeness of the Epstein file release continue to intensify.

SOURCE: CNN

 

Of course.

And more predictably, Trump’s supporters, foreign and domestic, will be absolutely fine with the cover up.

Trump could do far worse things than shoot someone on fifth avenue and still not lose their fawning support.

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