BREAKING: Epstein Files Vanish After DOJ Releases Records Mentioning Trump
(Update: 3 PM ET - The DOJ has just put these files back after outcry online. You guys helped make a difference)
Today, additional records connected to Jeffrey Epstein became publicly available.
People began pointing to a trove of allegations against Donald Trump. Those documents are now gone.
Visitors attempting to access them are met with a blunt message “Page not found.”
And the common thread tying the missing records together is simple. They referenced Donald Trump.
The documents in question were not court rulings or findings of guilt. They were law enforcement intake records and tip summaries. Logs of allegations reported to authorities. The kind of records that exist to preserve information.
They contained disturbing claims related to Jeffrey Epstein and Donald Trump. They also contained multiple allegations naming Trump, sometimes directly, sometimes as a participant at events, sometimes as a figure present in environments described by complainants.
They reported on allegations that Trump forced a 14-year-old girl to give him oral sex, as well as allegations that he partook in disturbing sex orgies. Below you can see some of the documents that are no longer active on the DOJ’s website.
And that is precisely why their disappearance matters.
Among the allegations described in the removed documents were claims that Trump attended gatherings where young women were trafficked, that he was present at events connected to Epstein, and that complainants believed he participated in or witnessed criminal conduct. Some entries referenced Mar a Lago. Others referenced Epstein properties. Several described Trump being named alongside Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell in accounts provided by callers to federal tip lines.
The Department of Justice is not supposed to disappear records because they are politically inconvenient. Tip logs are not endorsements. Allegations are not verdicts. Transparency demands that uncomfortable information remain accessible, especially when it involves powerful people.
The timing is what raises alarms.
New Epstein related material becomes public. Public scrutiny spikes. Journalists and researchers begin cross referencing older DOJ records. Suddenly, documents that mention Trump vanish from the site entirely.
Not redacted. Not annotated. Not archived with explanation.
Gone.
The DOJ message suggests files were moved due to administrative changes between presidencies. But these records were accessible until now. And their removal coincides exactly with renewed public focus on Epstein and renewed scrutiny of Trump’s past associations.
Donald Trump has repeatedly claimed he has nothing to hide. If that is true, then why should the public be shielded from seeing allegations that were reported and logged years ago?
Transparency is not optional. It is foundational.
When official records quietly vanish, trust evaporates. When those records involve one of the most powerful and polarizing figures in the country, the silence becomes deafening.






I’m sure someone has downloaded them.