NEW YORK — Congressional cosponsors of a law forcing the Justice Department to release its files on Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell can file a lawsuit seeking a court-appointed observer to ensure compliance, but they lack the legal right to append their demand to her criminal case, a judge ruled Wednesday.
Judge Paul A. Engelmayer blocked U.S. Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., and Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky. from intervening in Maxwell's sex trafficking case. The lawmakers, whose Epstein Files Transparency Act was signed into law by President Donald Trump in November, petitioned the judge last week in a bid to speed the public disclosure of files related to investigations into the late financier and Maxwell, his longtime confidant.
Engelmayer largely agreed with the Justice Department's insistence that he, as the judge overseeing Maxwell's case, had no authority to grant Khanna and Massie's request for an independent monitor to ensure the immediate release of more than 2 million documents that the government has identified as investigative materials.
Khanna and Massie said the slow disclosure of the documents violated the law and had caused ''serious trauma to survivors.''
Aside from the possibility of filing a lawsuit, the lawmakers are at liberty to use their legislative tools to improve oversight of the Justice Department, Engelmayer wrote. The Epstein law, passed after months of public and political pressure, contains no mechanisms or penalties to ensure compliance.
''We appreciate Judge Engelmayer's timely response and attention to our request, and we respect his decision," Khanna said in a statement. "He said that we raised ‘legitimate concerns' about whether DOJ is complying with the law. We will continue to use every legal option to ensure the files are released and the survivors see justice.''
After missing a Dec. 19 deadline set by Congress to release all of the files, the Justice Department said it has had hundreds of lawyers reviewing yet-to-be-disclosed records to determine what needs to be redacted, or blacked out, to protect the identities of hundreds of sex abuse victims. So far, only about 12,000 documents have been made public.
Engelmayer said questions raised by Khanna and Massie raised about whether the department was complying with the law were ''undeniably important and timely.'' But, he said, the way in which the members of Congress were trying to intervene was not permitted.