The clock is now ticking for the Justice Department after President Donald Trump signed the Epstein Files Transparency Act, a sweeping law that forces federal officials to publish nearly all unclassified material tied to Jeffrey Epstein and his network. One of the most controversial items now on the table: old federal grand jury transcripts from Palm Beach.
Attorney General Pam Bondi, speaking Wednesday, said the department will follow the law “with maximum transparency,” stressing that victim protection remains a priority. Bondi’s remarks came as DOJ lawyers rushed to file a new motion in the Southern District of Florida seeking permission to release the once-sealed testimony.
Federal prosecutors are now asking Judge Robin L. Rosenberg to lift every existing restriction that has kept the grand jury proceedings from 2005 and 2007 hidden for nearly two decades. Their position is that the newly enacted law leaves them no choice. The department told the court that the Act’s 30-day deadline requires an expedited ruling, especially given the enormous volume of records that must be released.
The push marks a dramatic shift from earlier this year, when Rosenberg rejected a similar request. At the time, she said grand jury secrecy rules prevented her from authorizing any disclosure, and the DOJ failed to prove that the public interest outweighed those restrictions. Judges in New York reached the same conclusion while considering transcripts from Epstein-related investigations conducted in 2019 and 2020.
This latest effort arises against a backdrop of renewed public scrutiny toward anyone remotely connected to Epstein. Trump, who previously described Epstein as a “creep” and said he severed ties long before the scandal erupted, has faced media attention because his name appears in old contact lists and flight manifests — along with many other public figures. No evidence has ever linked Trump to criminal conduct.
What remains a mystery is how much testimony was actually presented to the federal grand jury in the mid-2000s. Epstein’s highly controversial non-prosecution agreement shielded him from federal charges and funneled the case into a lenient state plea, making the grand jury’s role unusually limited for a case of this scale.
Epstein’s story reignited in 2019 when federal agents arrested him again following investigative reporting by the local liberal newspaper The Herald. He died in a Manhattan jail cell before trial. Ghislaine Maxwell was later convicted for sex-trafficking crimes connected to the same operation and is now serving a 20-year sentence.
Adding another layer of intrigue, newly unsealed emails from Epstein’s estate show that his associates frequently discussed Trump and other high-profile figures. These documents, along with flight logs, internal DOJ communications, and detention records, are all subject to disclosure under the Transparency Act — with only narrow redactions permitted.
For now, all eyes are on Judge Rosenberg. If she authorizes the release, the public could soon see documents that have remained sealed since the earliest days of the Epstein case, and the Justice Department will be forced to move quickly to comply with federal law.

