The Department of Justice is trying to reveal the exhibitions shown to the great federal jurors in New York who accused Jeffrey Epstein and his former partner Ghislaine Maxwell, in addition to the transcripts of testimony, according to a judicial presentation on Friday.
Officials of the Department of Justice have admitted that much of what is in transcripts is already known publicly, but the exhibitions contain names that did not appear in the transcripts, according to the presentation.
The Government is now trying to notify these people “to the extent that their names appear in Grand Jury exhibitions that were not publicly admitted to Maxwell’s trial,” the presentation said.
The Department of Justice asked the Court to give it until August 14 to make the necessary notifications. The presentation did not say how many people should be contacted.
The Trump Administration has been looking to publish materials related to Epstein research, the rich financial and criminal criminal who died for suicide in jail in 2019, after the setback he received from Maga supporters after he announced last month that additional files would not be published.

This photo provided by the Registry of Sexual Criminals of the State of New York shows Jeffrey Epstein, March 28, 2017.
Record of sexual criminals of the state of New York
The lawyers of the victims of Epstein and Maxwell have criticized the approach to the administration of transparency, saying in a letter to the court that “reinforces the perception that the victims are, in the best of cases, an idea of the current administration.”
The victims say that they generally support transparency, but that they want the opportunity to review the records and propose additional writings.
Maxwell, an Epstein associate for a long time, currently meets a 20 -year prison sentence for sexual trafficking and other crimes in relation to Epstein.