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by Visionary (28.8k points)
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BREAKING: The DOJ is now 146 days overdue in releasing the Epstein files.

4 Answers

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by Apprentice (1.6k points)
selected ago by

The claim that “the DOJ is now 146 days overdue in releasing the Epstein files” is partly true but lacks important context. Congress passed the Epstein Files Transparency Act, which required the United States Department of Justice to release Jeffrey Epstein-related records by December 2025. Multiple credible news outlets report that the DOJ missed that deadline and still has unreleased documents. However, the Bluesky post exaggerates the situation by implying that nothing has been released. In reality, the DOJ has already published millions of pages through its official DOJ Epstein Library and continues releasing additional records in phases. 

Evidence supporting the claim includes reporting from CBS News and PBS NewsHour showing the DOJ acknowledged it would miss the original release deadline because of the large number of documents requiring review and redaction to protect victims’ identities. Critics, lawmakers, and survivors have also argued that the DOJ has not fully complied with the law.

At the same time, evidence undermining the post is that the DOJ has not refused to release files altogether. Millions of pages have already been published, and delays appear tied partly to legal review, redactions, and privacy concerns after some victim information was accidentally exposed. The post also provides no source explaining how the “146 days overdue” number was calculated.

Overall, the claim is best described as partly accurate but misleading, because while the DOJ did miss the legal deadline, substantial portions of the Epstein files have already been released and the situation is more complicated than the post suggests.

Exaggerated/ Misleading
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by Novice (680 points)
Think of this as your investigation log. Answer each question to explain what you discovered and how you got there.

1. Write a brief overall summary of your findings.

This claim that the DOJ missed its legal deadline, December 19, 2025, is true. It is slightly misleading, because the framing implies that they're still witholding the files, when in reality they called its final major release on January 30, 2026.
2. What primary sources did you find (e.g., transcripts, videos of politician speeches, tweets from public figures, scientific studies)? For each source, write at least one or two sentences explaining what you learned. Include all links.

- https://www.congress.gov/bill/119th-congress/house-bill/4405: Epstein Files Transparency Act; states the law required the DOJ to publlish all unclassified records related to Epstein

- https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/department-justice-publishes-35-million-responsive-pages-compliance-epstein-files: DOJ Press Release; On January 30, the DOJ published almost 3.5 million pages

- https://www.justice.gov/opa/media/1426091/dl: DOJ Letter to Congress; states that what they released on January 30 marks the Department's compliance with its production obligations under the Act

- https://oversightdemocrats.house.gov/news/press-releases/ranking-member-robert-garcia-statement-as-epstein-white-house-cover-up-continues-doj-releases-only-half-of-epstein-files-after-months-of-defying-oversight-committee-subpoena-and-epstein-files-transparency-act: Robert Garcia Statement; alleged the DOJ collected over 6 million pages, but only released 3 million, accusing them of being in violation of the law
3. What secondary sources did you find (e.g., newspapers, magazines)? Only use secondary sources if sufficient primary sources are not available. For each source, write at least one or two sentences explaining what you learned. Include all links.

- https://www.cnbc.com/2025/12/24/epstein-files-senators-call-for-audit-into-dojs-release.html: CNBC; senators called for an investigation into the DOJ's handling of the files

- https://www.npr.org/2025/12/25/g-s1-103685/doj-says-few-more-weeks-epstein-files: NPR; Rep. Thomas Massie stated the DOJ did break the law by making illegal redactions and missing the deadline
4. What potential biases or interests might each of your sources have?

- DOJ/Trump Administration: has a clear interest in declaring compliance; political motivations to withold certain files

- Democratic members of Congress: in political opposition to the current administration
True
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by Newbie (340 points)
Claim: "The DOJ is now 146 days overdue in releasing the Epstein files."

Verdict: Mostly true but missing context.

Using the SIFT method, I first checked the source. The claim comes from a Bluesky post, but it doesn't explain how it got "146 days". The original source to check is the Epstein Files Transparency Act. The law required the DOJ to release Epstein-related records within a certain number of days. The claim is mostly true because the DOJ has faced criticism for failing to release all the Epstein-related records by the deadline, but it also omits context. The DOJ has released millions of pages of Epstein-related documents, so the post makes it sound as if nothing has been released, which is misleading. Overall, the claim is mostly true but incomplete. The number 146 days is not clearly explained.
Exaggerated/ Misleading
ago by Innovator (64.1k points)
0 0
Source? Strong fact-checks should include citing sources and providing URLs to those sources. Thanks!
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by Newbie (360 points)

Investigating the Source:  

The claim that “The DOJ is now 146 days overdue in releasing the Epstein files” was posted on the social media network, Bluesky, by an account named Hopeful in AZ.  The account has over 20k followers and shares various opinion based statements. The “146 days overdue” claim lacks supporting evidence. The post appears to be commentary rather than an official government source.

Summary:

I investigated the claim and, through my research, found that there have been ongoing disputes over whether the DOJ has fully complied with the requirements for the Epstein files/records. However, the claim doesn't provide any evidence to support the specific “146 days overdue” claim. The DOJ argues that millions of pages worth of Epstein documents have been released. The post's claim has some truth to it, given that the DOJ is facing backlash and there are delays in releasing documents, but it doesn't specifically cite any evidence to support that exact claim.

Several news reports indicate that critics, lawmakers, and transparency advocates believe the DOJ has not fully released all Epstein related records. There have been ongoing complaints that promised disclosures have been delayed or incomplete. 

Sources:

Office of Public Affairs | Department of Justice Publishes 3.5 Million Responsive Pages in Compliance with the Epstein Files Transparency Act | United States Department of Justice 

“Department of Justice Publishes 3.5 Million Responsive Pages in Compliance with the Epstein Files Transparency Act”

 The DOJ states that it released approximately 3.5 million pages of responsive records related to Jeffrey Epstein. The agency argues that it has complied with its legal obligations regarding document disclosure. 

What’s Going on With the Epstein Files? 

“What’s Going on With the Epstein Files? A Month After Deadline, the Vast Majority of Materials Remain Unreleased”

Time reported on criticism of the DOJ's handling of Epstein related files and discussed concerns raised by lawmakers and advocacy groups about whether all records had been released. 

Exaggerated/ Misleading

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