The US Department of Justice has released millions of documents from the extensive Epstein investigation. However, according to public service broadcaster NPR, there are gaps in the files, specifically regarding a 2019 complaint alleging sexual assault by US President Donald Trump in the 1980s.
Index and serial numbers attached to the investigative materials into Jeffrey Epstein's sex trafficking network indicate that FBI agents conducted four interviews with the woman who accused Trump. Summaries and notes were reportedly taken after each interview, according to NPR.
However, the public database only contains a summary, largely about the woman's separate allegations against Epstein. In total, more than 50 pages of interviews and notes about the woman are missing from the Justice Department's website, according to the media company's review of the document numbering.
The New York Times, CNN and the news channel MS NOW have also reported similar findings.
Trump, for his part, has repeatedly denied all allegations and claimed that the release of the files linked to notorious sex offender Jeffrey Epstein rather exonerates him.
Representatives for Democrats on the House Oversight Committee are calling the missing documents the “largest government cover-up in modern history.” The group, led by Rep. Robert Garcia, wrote in a post on X that they “demand answers.”





