On November 19, 2025, President Trump signed the Epstein Files Transparency Act (Public Law 119-38), requiring the U.S. Department of Justice to publicly release all unclassified records related to Jeffrey Epstein. The DOJ published approximately 3.5 million pages of documents at justice.gov/epstein.
This tool uses artificial intelligence to search those publicly released documents in real time, allowing anyone to check whether a name appears anywhere in the official record. This site does not host, store, or reproduce any government documents.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the Epstein Files?
The Epstein Files are approximately 3.5 million pages of documents, emails, flight logs, court records, and FBI investigation files related to Jeffrey Epstein, released by the DOJ under the Epstein Files Transparency Act of 2025.
How does the search work?
When you enter a name, our AI searches the official DOJ Epstein Library at justice.gov/epstein in real time across court records, FBI files, flight logs, FOIA records, and DOJ disclosures.
What does it mean if a name is found?
A name appearing in the files does not indicate wrongdoing. Names appear for many reasons — as witnesses, investigators, journalists, or individuals mentioned in passing.
Are the results accurate?
Results are AI-generated and may be incomplete. Some documents are image-based PDFs not fully text-searchable. For definitive research, consult justice.gov/epstein directly.
Is this site affiliated with the government?
No. This is an independent research tool not affiliated with the DOJ, FBI, or any government agency.
Will it update with new documents?
Yes. This tool searches the web in real time and automatically picks up newly released and indexed government documents.