WASHINGTON — House Democrats released a selection of photos from the estate of Jeffrey Epstein on Friday, including some of Donald Trump, Bill Clinton and the former Prince Andrew.
The 19 photos released by Democratic lawmakers on the House Oversight Committee were a small part of more than 95,000 they received from the estate of Epstein, who died in a New York jail cell in 2019 while awaiting sex trafficking charges. The photos released Friday were separate from the case files that the Department of Justice is now compelled to release, but anticipation is growing as the Trump administration faces a deadline next week to produce the highly anticipated Epstein files.
The photos were released without captions or context and included a black-and-white image of Trump alongside six women whose faces were blacked out.
Rep. Robert Garcia, the top Democrat on the House Oversight Committee, did not say whether any of the women in the photos was a victim of abuse, but he added, ''Our commitment from day one has been to redact any photo, any information that could lead to any sort of harm to any of the victims.''
A spokesperson for the Republican-controlled House Oversight Committee accused Garcia and Democratic lawmakers of ''cherry-picking photos and making targeted redactions to create a false narrative about President Trump,'' adding that nothing in the documents the committee has received shows ''any wrongdoing'' by the president.
Many of the photos have already circulated in the public. Democrats pledged to continue to release photos in the days and weeks ahead, as they look to pressure Trump over his Republican administration's earlier refusal to release documents in the Epstein probe. Garcia said that his staff had looked through about a quarter of the images it had received from Epstein's estate, which included photos that were sent to him or that he had in his possession.
''Donald Trump right now needs to release the files to the American public so that the truth can come out and we can actually get some sense of justice for the survivors,'' Garcia added.
The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment about the photos.