Justice Department asks court to unseal Jeffrey Epstein grand jury records

By ALANNA DURKIN RICHER WASHINGTON AP The Justice Department appealed a federal court on Friday to unseal grand jury transcripts in Jeffrey Epstein s incident amid a firestorm over the Trump administration s handling of records related to the wealthy financier Related Articles Jon Stewart says he could be next after Stephen Colbert s show is canceled Venezuela releases jailed Americans in deal that frees settlers deported to El Salvador by US Trump administration seeks release of Epstein grand jury records but not Justice Department files Trump signs new stablecoin regulations into law a major milestone for crypto industry Tears and frustration at California immigration court where a lawyer fears for his clients safety Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche filed motions urging the court to release the Epstein transcripts as well as those in the episode against convicted British socialite Ghislaine Maxwell a day after President Donald Trump directed the Justice Department to do so The Trump administration has been embroiled in conflict since the Justice Department last week revealed that it would not be releasing any more evidence in its possession from Epstein s scrutiny Trump s demand to release the grand jury transcripts came after The Wall Street Journal revealed on a sexually suggestive letter that the newspaper says bore Trump s name and was included in a album for Epstein s th birthday Trump denied writing the letter calling it false malicious and defamatory The Justice Department noted it will work with with prosecutors in New York to make appropriate redactions of victim-related information and other personally identifying information before transcripts are disclosed Grand jury transcripts which could show the testimony of spectators and other evidence presented by prosecutors are rarely distributed by courts unless they need to be disclosed in connection with a judicial proceeding Even with the Justice Department endorsement it could take weeks or months of legal wrangling to decide what can be issued and how to protect onlookers and other sensitive victim information