Moneycontrol

House Epstein probe amps up amid document reviews, depositions

The Justice Department has released about 3.5 million pages of emails, flight logs, photographs, videos and other documents in response to a law enacted last year.

February 10, 2026 / 08:29 IST
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Ghislaine Maxwell in New York in 2013. Maxwell appeared virtually for a scheduled deposition before the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform but then invoked her Fifth Amendment constitutional right not to incriminate herself in testimony.
Snapshot AI
  • House lawmakers push for more info on Epstein probe, hint at new prosecutions
  • Six unnamed men may face criminal charges, say Massie and Khanna
  • Maxwell invoked her Fifth Amendment rights, refusing to answer questions.

Key House lawmakers on Monday pushed for more information on the sex-trafficking probe of disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein and raised the prospect of new criminal prosecutions.

Speaking outside a Justice Department office after reviewing unredacted files in the Epstein inquiry, Republican Thomas Massie and Democrat Ro Khanna said they believed there are six men whose names have not been revealed who could face criminal charges.

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Massie said he’s willing to give Attorney General Pam Bondi more time to make their names public but signaled that he would list the names on the House floor if necessary.

“We want those things published,” Massie said.