NEW YORK — Secret grand jury transcripts from Jeffrey Epstein's 2019 sex trafficking case can be made public, a judge ruled on Wednesday, joining two other judges in granting the Justice Department's requests to unseal material from investigations into the late financier's sexual abuse.
U.S. District Judge Richard M. Berman reversed his earlier decision to keep the material under wraps, citing a new law that requires the government to open its files on Epstein and his longtime confidant Ghislaine Maxwell. The judge previously cautioned that the 70 or so pages of grand jury materials slated for release are hardly revelatory and ''merely a hearsay snippet'' of Epstein's conduct.
On Tuesday, another Manhattan federal judge ordered the release of records from Maxwell's 2021 sex trafficking case. Last week, a judge in Florida approved the unsealing of transcripts from an abandoned Epstein federal grand jury investigation in the 2000s.
The Justice Department asked the judges to lift secrecy orders in the cases after the Epstein Files Transparency Act, passed by Congress and signed into law by President Donald Trump last month, created a narrow exception to rules that normally keep grand jury proceedings confidential. The law requires that the Justice Department disclose Epstein-related material to the public by Dec. 19.
The court records cleared for release are just a sliver of the government's trove — a collection of potentially tens of thousands of pages of documents, including FBI notes and reports; transcripts of witness interviews, photographs, videos and other evidence; Epstein's autopsy report; flight logs and travel records.
While lawyers for Epstein's estate told Berman in a letter last week that the estate took no position on the Justice Department's unsealing request, some Epstein victims backed it.
''For far too long, the Epstein survivors and the public have been kept in the dark about the inner-workings of Epstein's decades-long sex trafficking operation,'' said Sigrid McCawley, a lawyer for some victims. ''This week's court rulings are an important step toward accountability to close the vast gap between what is known and unknown.''
Another lawyer, Brad Edwards, said unsealing the records ''is good, so long as the victims are protected in the process.'' But, he added, ''the grand jury receives only the most basic information, so, relatively speaking, these particular materials are insignificant.''