The House Oversight and Government Reform Committee has received a new set of materials from the estate of the late convicted s*x offender Jeffrey Epstein.
The delivery follows a recent letter from congressional investigators requesting access to cash ledgers, message logs, calendars, and flight records held by the estate.
“[T]he Epstein estate has produced unredacted calendars, call logs, and cash ledgers to the Oversight Committee,” said an Oversight committee aide, speaking anonymously about the ongoing investigation. “We intend to make records public once victims’ names are redacted.”
This latest release marks the third tranche of documents from Epstein’s estate. Previously, it provided the so-called birthday book, which reportedly contained a message for Epstein written by President Donald Trump.
Trump has denied any connection to the message, which includes an outline of a woman’s body, and has filed a lawsuit against the Wall Street Journal, which first reported on it.
In addition, the estate has handed over Epstein’s last will and testament, pages resembling a contact book, and other related materials.
The estate has generally complied with the panel’s requests, even as House GOP leadership faces growing pressure from lawmakers pushing for a full release of Epstein-related files held by the Justice Department.
The effort, known as a discharge petition, is spearheaded by Reps. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) and Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) and is expected to reach the required 218 signatures in the coming days. Rep.-elect Adelita Grijalva (D-Ariz.) is also expected to sign once officially sworn in.
In recent months, House GOP leaders have emphasized the Oversight probe as a preferable path to the Massie-Khanna bill. Oversight Chair James Comer (R-Ky.) has argued that his committee’s investigation covers more ground than what would be required for DOJ disclosure, highlighting the documents already produced by Epstein’s estate.