Biggest release of files yet details investigations into Epstein's crimespublished at 23:06 GMT 23 December 2025
Adam Goldsmith
Live reporter
Image source, Getty ImagesThe Justice Department's eighth batch of Epstein files offers detail on the investigations into the sex offender
Four days after the 19 December deadline for the US Department of Justice (DOJ) to release the Epstein files in their entirety, we continue to get a drip feed of new documents, pictures and videos from the investigations into late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
Today's batch is the eighth we've seen. It contains more than 11,000 files - the most released by the DOJ in a single batch so far.
Much of the tranche consists of investigative documents and correspondence - including emails exchanged between "A" from "Balmoral" and Epstein associate Ghislaine Maxwell, which asks for "inappropriate friends".
There's a full rundown on some of today's key takeaways in an earlier post, with more on "The Invisible Man" alias that crops up in email chains with Maxwell, and the debunking of a fake video of Epstein in his prison cell.
Today's release also shows that US President Donald Trump was a passenger on Epstein's private jet on eight flights between 1993 and 1996. Trump has consistently denied any wrongdoing in relation to Epstein and his presence on the flights does not indicate wrongdoing.
On both sides of the US political spectrum, lawmakers say the release raises more questions than answers, and we're no clearer when, or if, we'll see another tranche of documents.
We're closing our live coverage now. For further reading, you can check out:
- Our article on how prosecutors say Trump travelled on Epstein's plane more than previously thought
- Our story with more detail on the 'inappropriate friends' email from 'Balmoral' that was among today's Epstein release

















