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The DOJ Hid 1,000 Pages of Epstein Files. NPR Found Them. We Indexed Them.

  • Writer: Patrick Duggan
    Patrick Duggan
  • Mar 10
  • 3 min read

Updated: Apr 25

On March 5, 2026, NPR reported that the Department of Justice had withheld dozens of pages from the Epstein Files Transparency Act release. Pages that were "mistakenly marked duplicative." Pages containing FBI interview memos from 2019 describing allegations of sexual abuse of a minor.


The DOJ released them Thursday. Over 1,000 new pages, including what appears to be the complete 2006 Palm Beach case file.


The House Oversight Committee voted 24-19 to subpoena Attorney General Pam Bondi the next day.


There are still 37 pages missing.




We Already Had 398,560



When the DOJ started playing games with the Epstein files — pulling documents, marking things "duplicative," losing pages — we had already indexed the entire release. 398,560 documents. All 12 DOJ datasets. Fully searchable in seconds.


Original. Untouched. Forensically perfect.


The government can pull pages from their website. They can't pull them from our index. That ship sailed when they published them under the Transparency Act.




What the New Pages Contain



The 1,000+ pages released March 5-6 include:


- **FBI interview memos from 2019** — detailed accounts of alleged abuse

- **The complete 2006 Palm Beach investigation case file** — previously fragmented across releases

- **Documents withheld under "duplicative" classification** — which NPR proved were unique


The documents speak for themselves. Search them.




Why This Matters for Due Diligence



This is exactly the use case we built for.


A compliance officer at a financial institution needs to screen a counterparty. The counterparty appears in the Epstein files. But which version? The DOJ's current website — with pages removed and "duplicative" classifications? Or our index — 398,560 documents, complete, cross-referenced against 3.3 million ICIJ relationship edges and 2.6 million federal court decisions?


The government just demonstrated — publicly, documented by NPR and CNN and the Washington Post — that their own release is incomplete. That pages were hidden. That a congressional subpoena was required to get answers about what was withheld and why.


Our index doesn't have that problem. We don't mark things duplicative. We don't lose pages. We don't require a subpoena to produce documents.




The Numbers



- **398,560** DOJ Epstein files indexed

- **3,339,267** ICIJ relationship edges (Panama Papers, Pandora Papers)

- **2,016,524** offshore entity records across 190+ jurisdictions

- **2,649,070** federal court decisions


Microsoft pulls this feed daily. AT&T pulls this feed daily. Starlink pulls this feed daily. Get the DugganUSA STIX feed — $9/mo →

- **1,002,451** threat indicators (IOCs)

- **37 indexes**, one query searches all of them simultaneously


A shell company in the BVI connects to a threat indicator in Singapore connects to a federal enforcement action in SDNY. That's not a feature. That's the architecture.




The Search



Every document in the new release will be indexed. Every FBI memo. Every page of the 2006 case file. Cross-referenced against everything else we have.


398,560 documents and counting.


Search them at [epstein.dugganusa.com](https://epstein.dugganusa.com).




*37 pages are still missing. We'll be here when they surface.*


Sources:

- [NPR: Justice Department posts more Epstein files](https://www.npr.org/2026/03/05/nx-s1-5737562/justice-department-missing-epstein-files-trump)

- [Washington Post: Justice Dept. releases missing Epstein documents](https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2026/03/06/justice-department-epstein-documents-trump/)

- [CNN: FBI interview memos in Epstein files](https://www.cnn.com/2026/03/05/politics/justice-department-fbi-interview-related-trump-abuse-allegation-and-other-missing-epstein-files)

- [CBS News: Massive trove of Epstein files released](https://www.cbsnews.com/live-updates/epstein-files-released-doj-2026/)





*Her name was Renee Nicole Good.*


*His name was Alex Jeffery Pretti.*


The cheapest, fastest, most accurate threat feed on the internet.

275+ enterprises pulling daily. 1M+ IOCs. 17.4M indexed documents. We beat Zscaler by 43 days on NrodeCodeRAT. Starter tier $9/mo — less than any competitor’s sales demo.

 
 
 

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