NEW YORK — A huge new tranche of files on millionaire financier and sex offender Jeffrey Epstein has revealed details of his communications with the wealthy and powerful, some not long before he died by suicide in 2019.
The Justice Department said it was disclosing more than 3 million pages of documents, as well as thousands of videos and photos, as required by a law passed by Congress. By Friday evening, more than 600,000 documents had been published online. Millions of files that prosecutors had identified as potentially subject to release under the law remain under wraps, however, and House Democrats called on Attorney General Pam Bondi to share unredacted versions with Congress.
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Slovakia's national security adviser resigns after Epstein links resurface
Robert Fico, Slovakia's prime minister, said Saturday that he had accepted the resignation of his national security adviser, Miroslav Lajcak.
Lajcak's resignation comes a day after Lajcak's past communications with Jeffrey Epstein appeared in newly released U.S. documents.
Lajcak, a former Slovak foreign minister and a onetime president of the U.N. General Assembly, denied any wrongdoing. He said his contacts were part of his diplomatic duties and occurred before U.S. authorities opened their investigation into Epstein.
Pressure mounted for his ouster from opposition parties and a nationalist partner in Fico's governing coalition.