- The Department of Justice (DOJ) is refusing to release certain redacted information from Jeffrey Epstein investigative files, despite a federal judge's order to either disclose the documents or explain the redactions.
- Associate U.S. Attorney General Stanley Woodward requested a two-month delay or dissolution of the order, stating the government 'strongly disagrees' with the judge's directive and believes it has not violated the Epstein Files Transparency Act.
- U.S. District Judge Emmet Sullivan's order followed a lawsuit by journalist Katie Phang, who accused the government of obstructing public access to Epstein-related materials mandated for release by the Epstein Files Transparency Act, signed by Trump.
- The DOJ justified its redactions by citing duplicative interview notes, the need to protect victims' personally identifiable information, and the inability to locate an unredacted 2007 draft indictment.
- The judge's order did not demand the release of survivors' names but required justification for redactions and publication of a redaction log, amidst a class-action lawsuit accusing Trump's administration of 'outing' survivors.
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