WASHINGTON, 6 March 2026 (The Capital Post)— The United States Justice Department has released previously missing FBI interview records connected to the investigation into convicted financier Jeffrey Epstein, including documents involving a woman who made allegations against former president Donald Trump.
The newly disclosed files contain summaries of FBI interviews conducted in 2019 with an unidentified woman who claimed she had been sexually abused by Epstein when she was a teenager. In later interviews with investigators, the woman also alleged that Trump assaulted her after Epstein introduced them during the 1980s.
According to the documents, the FBI conducted multiple interviews with the woman in 2019 as part of the broader probe into Epstein’s activities. Some of those interview summaries, known as “302 memos,” were not initially included in the large batch of Epstein-related records released earlier, but were later posted online after being identified as missing.
Officials said the documents had been incorrectly labelled as duplicates in earlier releases, which caused them to be omitted from the publicly available archive.
The Justice Department cautioned that the files may contain unverified or sensational claims submitted to investigators and noted that the allegations included in the documents have not been substantiated.
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The White House has rejected the accusations, with a spokesperson describing them as baseless and lacking credible evidence. Trump has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing related to Epstein.
The release forms part of a broader effort by US authorities to publish millions of documents linked to Epstein following legislation requiring greater transparency surrounding the case.
Epstein, a financier who had connections with numerous high-profile figures, was arrested in 2019 on federal sex trafficking charges and died in prison the same year while awaiting trial. The ongoing document disclosures have continued to attract political scrutiny and public interest as investigators review thousands of pages of records tied to the case.-The Capital Post