Follow the sequence. On November 19, 2025, President Trump signed the Epstein Files Transparency Act into law. It was the fulfillment of a campaign promise that had electrified a certain constituency — the millions of Americans who believed, with considerable justification, that the government had been concealing the full truth about Jeffrey Epstein’s network for years. The message was clear: the cover-up ends now.
The Department of Justice then began publishing files. The numbers were staggering: 3.5 million pages of documents, over 2,000 videos, and 180,000 images. By sheer volume, it was one of the largest document releases in federal history. The scale alone seemed to validate the promise. Transparency, at last.
And then someone started counting the pages that were missing.
What NPR Found
An NPR investigation revealed that dozens of pages had been withheld from the release. Among them: 16 pages covering FBI interview summaries with a woman who had accused Donald Trump of sexual abuse when she was a minor. These were not pages about some distant, unnamed associate. They were pages about the president who had signed the transparency act and who had told the American public that he wanted everything released.
As NPR reported in January 2026, “With few Epstein files released, conspiracy theories flourish and questions remain.” The conspiracy theorists who had championed Trump’s promise to open the files were now confronting an uncomfortable possibility: that transparency, when it arrives, is sometimes curated.
The Sixth Release
After NPR’s investigation became public, something notable happened. In the sixth release of Epstein files on March 5, 2026, the DOJ restored approximately 50,000 previously removed files. Fifty thousand. The restoration raises a question that the Department of Justice has not adequately answered: if these files were appropriate for release in March, why were they removed in the first place? Who made that decision, and under what authority?
Al Jazeera reported on “Epstein files with claims against Trump released by US Justice Department” — a headline that would have been unthinkable during the campaign, when the file release was framed exclusively as a weapon against Trump’s political opponents.
Then Came the Firing
In April 2026, President Trump fired Attorney General Pam Bondi. The reported reason: her handling of the Epstein files. The woman who had been entrusted with overseeing the transparency that Trump had promised was removed from her position after that transparency began producing information that pointed back toward the president himself.
Was Bondi fired for releasing too much? For not suppressing enough? For failing to manage a process that was always going to be politically explosive? The administration has not provided a clear answer, and the ambiguity is itself revealing. In Washington, when an attorney general is fired and the explanation is vague, the explanation is usually the one that the administration does not want to state publicly.
The Managed Transparency
During the 2024 campaign, the Epstein files served a specific narrative purpose. They were proof that the deep state concealed the truth. They were evidence that the establishment protected its own. Trump positioned himself as the outsider who would tear down the walls of secrecy. And for many who voted for him, that promise was not peripheral — it was central.
What has actually unfolded is something more familiar and far less heroic. The files were released — but selectively. The missing pages were discovered — but only through independent journalism. The removed documents were restored — but only after public pressure. And the attorney general was fired — but without a transparent explanation.
The conspiracy theorists who demanded that the Epstein files see the light of day were right about one thing: powerful people did not want these documents released. What some of them may not have anticipated is that the person most invested in controlling what came out might be the same person who promised to let everything out.
There is no shortage of questions that the 3.5 million pages will eventually help answer. But the question that matters most right now is not what is in the files. It is who decided what would be left out — and whether the firing of an attorney general was the cost of that decision becoming public.





