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The U.S. House of Representatives has taken a dramatic step in one of the most controversial cases of the last decade, voting to force the Justice Department to publicly release a massive collection of documents tied to Jeffrey Epstein, his associates, and the network that operated around him for years. After years of speculation, incomplete disclosures, and fragmented leaks, Congress is now compelling full transparency — and the public is bracing for impact.
Earlier in November, a congressional committee already dropped an enormous first batch: 20,000 pages of records. That alone reignited debates, accusations, and renewed calls for accountability. But lawmakers made it clear that this initial release was only the beginning. With the House vote finalized, far more documents — some of the most sensitive — will begin rolling out in the coming weeks.
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