'Every hour matters.' Judge orders DOJ to protect Epstein survivor IDs

WASHINGTON – A federal judge has given the Justice Department until Feb. 5 to explain how much "victim identifying information" it failed to redact from therecently released Epstein filesafter accusers of the disgraced late financier Jeffrey Epstein said they were getting death threats as a result.

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United States District Judge Paul Engelmayer also instructed DOJ to address whether "all such materials" have since been blacked out in the 3.5 million Epstein-related emails, photos, videos and other data from its investigative files that it made public Jan. 30.

Engelmayer's Feb. 3 order came in response to a legal filing by two lawyers representing Epstein survivors "regarding an unfolding emergency that requires immediate judicial intervention" – including an immediate takedown of the Justice Department website hosting the Epstein files until they can be purged of everything identifying his accusers.

A painting of former U.S. President Bill Clinton wearing a dress is displayed inside the Manhattan home of Jeffrey Epstein in this image from the estate of late financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, released by the Department of Justice in Washington, D.C., U.S., on December 19, 2025. What appears to be a stuffed tiger is shown in Jeffrey Epstein's Manhattan home in this image released by the Department of Justice in Washington, DC on Dec. 19, 2025 as part of a new trove of documents from its investigations into the late financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. <p style=What appears to be outdoor furniture is seen in a photo released by US Department of Justice from one of Jeffrey Epstein's properties.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> Photograph featuring a dental chair in a room with wooden floors and walls, adorned with carved faces, a window, and woven baskets nearby. The image shows a wooden nightstand in a bedroom with an open lower cabinet door. Inside the open cabinet, several items, including watches, are visible. On top of the table sits a lamp with a square, world-map-patterned shade and a blue water bottle. A room with fire fighter gear is seen on Epstein's private island. A statue of a female wearing a white dress and veil, hanging onto a rope in a stairwell in the interior of the home of Jeffrey Epstein is shown. What appears to be a stuffed dog in seen in Jeffrey Epstein's Manhattan home.

Inside Epstein homes: See odd items that raise more questions than answers

Lawyers Bradley Edwards and Brittany Henderson, who said they represent dozens of Epstein accusers, also asked the court to appoint an independent special master to oversee redaction and republication of the DOJ files, and to keep open the chance for judicial sanctions, "including contempt and monetary relief."

"For the victims of Jeffrey Epstein, every hour matters. The harm is ongoing and irreversible," the lawyers wrote in a detail-filled seven page filing. "This Court is the last line of defense for victims who were promised protection and instead were exposed. Judicial intervention is not merely appropriate – it is essential."

Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said in announcing the new release Jan. 30 that images of all women in the files – with the exception of convicted Epstein associateGhislaine Maxwell– would be redacted in an effort to ensure that no personal details would be made public.

But in the first 48 hours since the files' Jan. 30 release, Edwards and Henderson said they reported to DOJ "thousands of redaction failures on behalf of nearly 100 individual survivors whose lives have been turned upside down by DOJ's latest release."

Besides receiving death threats, some Epstein accusers overseas who had wanted to remain anonymous have had to contend with media reports publishing their identities and photos, the lawyers said.

Other victims have also gone public with similar accusations about how DOJ made their identities public after promising not to, while keeping secret the identities of potential Epstein accomplices.

"There is no conceivable degree of institutional incompetence sufficient to explain the scale, consistency, and persistence of the failures that occurred," Edwards and Henderson wrote, "particularly where the sole task ordered by the Court and repeatedly emphasized by DOJ was simple: redact known victim names before publication."

All the Justice Department needed to do, they told Engelmayer, was to type each victim's name into its own search function and then redact it before making the files public in itsonline "Epstein Library"database.

"Had DOJ done that," they said, "the harm would have been avoided."

Instead, the DOJ on Jan. 30 "committed what may be the single most egregious violation of victim privacy in one day in United States history," Edwards and Henderson wrote.

DOJ acknowledges failures. Survivors say that's not enough.

A department spokesman did not immediately respond to USA TODAY's request for comment Feb. 5 on whether DOJ would meet the judge's deadline.

In a statement to USA TODAY, the Justice Department said it "takes victim protection very seriously and has redacted thousands of victim names in the millions of published pages to protect the innocent."

"When a victim's name is alleged to be unredacted," DOJ said, "our team is working around the clock to fix the issue and republish appropriately redacted pages as soon as possible."

'Immediate judicial intervention' needed to protect accusers

The seven-page filing by Edwards and Henderson is full of examples of what they say are DOJ's failure to redact information pertaining to women dating to back to an earlier release of files released Dec. 19, 2025, as required under the Epstein Files Transparency Act that went into effect a month earlier.

The next day, Dec. 20, they said, they immediately notified DOJ of "hundreds of redaction failures" that required urgent attention, including unredacted names and dates of birth.

One document alone identified more than 30 victims according to their motion for "immediate judicial intervention."

That failure, the lawyers said, forced the Epstein survivors to stay up "all night using DOJ's search bar to identify and read every single document that was posted publicly identifying them despite being promised by your office that this would never happen."

In all, Epstein is believed to have victimized girls and young women over potentially several decades, forcing them into sex acts at his estates in New York, Florida, New Mexico and on his private Caribbean island.

Many of Epstein's estimated 1,000 to 1,200 victims cooperated with FBI agents and federal prosecutors over the years, and have insisted that their identities − and their involvement in investigations − remain anonymous. Some of the Epstein survivors were minors at the time of the alleged abuse.

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But when some Epstein survivors or their lawyers contacted DOJ to request redactions, DOJ often blacked out some identifying information while leaving other data in the files, the lawyers said.

Many victims' concerns were compounded dramatically by the Jan. 30 release of exponentially more DOJ files – and more sensitive information about them and the nature of their allegations. Democratic lawmakers and other critics have called on the Justice Department to act immediately to protect them from further harm.

Maxwell was convicted of related crimes and sentenced to 20 years in prison that she is currently serving. Epstein died by suicide in 2019 after his arrest on similar charges while in a New York jail awaiting prosecution.

One DOJ document listing the names of 32 minor child victims

In their legal filing, the lawyers ticked off a litany of alleged DOJ failures, including one minor victim who had her name revealed 20 times in a single document.

"After reporting the violation," the lawyers said, "DOJ redacted her name three additional times—leaving 17 instances still unredacted as of this filing."

Another email listed 32 minor child victims, with only one name redacted and 31 left visible—despite DOJ's possession of those names, the lawyers said.

Their demand for immediate injunctive relief also contends that:

  • FBI victim statements known as "302 reports" contained the full and unredacted first and last names of minor victims.

  • Handwritten FBI interview notes included minor victims' full names unredacted at the top and throughout.

  • Documents containing victims' names alongside dates of birth, bank information, driver's license numbers, email addresses or home addresses.

  • Documents where victims' names are redacted in some places but not others within the same document.

  • Documents where redactions are "pencil-thin," revealing the complete name and email address beneath.

  • Documents where photographs are properly redacted in one instance and appear fully unredacted nearby.

  • Hundreds of documents exposing the names of four women who have been in "near-constant communication with DOJ since December requesting protection."

As a result of those redaction failures, 20 clients who say they are Epstein survivors agreed to issue statements as part of the emergency appeal to the judge, the lawyers said.

'My life is in imminent danger,' one survivor tells DOJ

"It is so wrong on so many levels," said one, identified as Jane Doe 3. "Not only it (sic) exposes victims to potential abuse or blackmail, but it can ruin families or damage our careers. I am horrified."

Some said they are overseas, where newspapers and websites are publishing all of the details that were not supposed to be linked to them, including photos.

"How is this possible?" asked Jane Doe 4. "In [my home country], as in the entire EU, there is a strict privacy law. I'm shocked, I didn't expect such violation of our privacy."

Some noted that while dozens of Epstein accusers went public with their allegations, they had insisted on anonymity to protect their privacy – and said that has now been shattered and placed them and their families at risk.

"Please, I'm begging you to delete my name!!!" said Jane Doe 5. "I can only imagine the devastation your errors are causing to so many other victims of Jeffrey Epstein."

Jane Doe 7 said the release of her name and photo have resulted in unwanted publicity and threats in her home country where she currently lives.

"The press makes up crazy stories and shows me as a legitimate target for others to attack me physically and in the press," Jane Doe 7 said. "My life is in imminent danger as long as you keep on releasing more files and info about me and not remove and redact the ones already released."

She added: "This is a life-threatening situation for me. Please take my plea seriously."

Jane Doe 8 said she also received death threats in the 24 hours following the Jan. 30 DOJ release, which she said included 51 entries mentioning her.

"You even had the audacity to release my private banking info and [I] am now trying to shut down cards and accounts," Jane Doe 8 said. "This kind of vicious attack on a victim at the hands of the 'Department of Justice' is an abomination."

In their filing, the lawyers said the Justice Department needs to do more to ensure that all names and identifying information are redacted immediately to prevent further harm.

Besides an immediate takedown of the files, they asked the court to appoint an independent special master to oversee redaction and republication, and to keep open the chance for judicial sanctions, "including contempt and monetary relief."

"For the victims of Jeffrey Epstein, every hour matters. The harm is ongoing and irreversible," the lawyers said. "This Court is the last line of defense for victims who were promised protection and instead were exposed. Judicial intervention is not merely appropriate – it is essential."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:'Every hour matters.' Judge orders DOJ to protect Epstein survivor IDs

'Every hour matters.' Judge orders DOJ to protect Epstein survivor IDs

WASHINGTON – A federal judge has given the Justice Department until Feb. 5 to explain how much "victim identifying i...
3 killed, 7 injured after elderly driver crashes into Westwood grocery store

At least three people are dead and seven are injured after a vehicle crashed into a grocery store in Westwood on Thursday afternoon, officials say.

The Los Angeles Fire Department reported the crash at 12:11 p.m. at Rochester Avenue and Westwood Boulevard, located by a 99 Ranch Market.

LAFD reported that a bicyclist and other people were possibly struck before the structure collision. Officials did not immediately identify any of the victims.

In a later update just before 2 p.m., LAFD said two patients were in serious condition, two had minor injuries and another two signed out against medical advice at the scene.

"The driver of the silver sedan has preliminarily been identified as an elderly female," stated the LAFD update. "A bicyclist was confirmed struck approximately one block away from the incident address before the vehicle collided with the structure; upon fire department arrival, the vehicle was moved to access multiple patients who were trapped."

  1. Sky5 was overhead after a vehicle crashed into a grocery store in Westwood. February 2026. (KTLA)
    Sky5 was overhead after a vehicle crashed into a grocery store in Westwood. February 2026. (KTLA)
  2. Sky5 was overhead after a vehicle crashed into a grocery store in Westwood. February 2026. (KTLA)
    Sky5 was overhead after a vehicle crashed into a grocery store in Westwood. February 2026. (KTLA)
  3. Sky5 was overhead after a vehicle crashed into a grocery store in Westwood. February 2026. (KTLA)
    Sky5 was overhead after a vehicle crashed into a grocery store in Westwood. February 2026. (KTLA)
  4. Sky5 was overhead after a vehicle crashed into a grocery store in Westwood. February 2026. (KTLA)
    Sky5 was overhead after a vehicle crashed into a grocery store in Westwood. February 2026. (KTLA)
  5. Sky5 was overhead after a vehicle crashed into a grocery store in Westwood. February 2026. (KTLA)
    Sky5 was overhead after a vehicle crashed into a grocery store in Westwood. February 2026. (KTLA)

A massive fire and law enforcement response were seen in the area when Sky5 arrived overhead, and an investigation is underway.

LAFD spokesperson Lindsey Lantz joined KTLA live on air after 1:35 p.m Thursday and said early reports suggest the crash was not intentional.

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"We're still working on the cause," said Lantz. "We do not have confirmation yet if this was a mechanical issue, a medical issue, but LAPD is telling us they don't suspect any terrorist intent."

Lantz said the bicyclist who was struck survived and decided not to go to the hospital via ambulance. She also said road closures can be expected for hours.

In addition, Lantz said she could not yet confirm whether the victims were inside or outside the store at the time of the crash.

Councilwoman Yaroslavsky, who represents the Westwood neighborhood, issued the following statement after the deadly crash: "I spoke with LAFD Chief Moore earlier regarding the incident at the 99 Ranch Market in Westwood this afternoon, and my team is closely monitoring the situation. My heart is with those injured and with the families of those who lost their lives. Thank you to the first responders on scene for their swift action."

This is a developing story; check back and refresh this page for updates.

Copyright 2026 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to KTLA.

3 killed, 7 injured after elderly driver crashes into Westwood grocery store

At least three people are dead and seven are injured after a vehicle crashed into a grocery store in Westwood on Thursday...
'Disruptive customer' forces American Airlines flight to turn around

An unruly passenger forced anAmerican Airlinesflight from Miami to Ecuador to turn around mid-trip.

USA TODAY

Flight 2259 to Quito "returned to MIA and was met by law enforcement upon arrival due to a disruptive customer," on Jan. 31, the airline told USA TODAY.

"We thank our team members for their professionalism and our customers for their assistance in managing a difficult situation," the emailed statement continued. The 8:12 p.m. flight turned around as it was passing over Cuba, according toflight-tracking site FlightAware, landing back in Miami shortly before 10 p.m.

American did not share specifics about the passenger's behavior. The Miami-Dade Sheriff's Office "responded to reports of a passenger in mental crisis," police said in an emailed statement to USA TODAY.

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"Upon arrival, the aircraft was safely deplaned and the individual, an adult male, was taken into custody," the statement said. Miami-Dade Fire Rescue transported the flyer to a local hospital where he was detained for mental health evaluation.

The Federal Aviation Administration has received 126 unruly passenger reports so far this year, according toits website. The agency received 1,621 in 2025, and 2,096 the year before.

"The rate of unruly passenger incidents steadily dropped by over 80 percent since record highs in early 2021, but recent increases show there remains more work to do," the FAA said.

Nathan Diller is a consumer travel reporter for USA TODAY based in Nashville. You can reach him at ndiller@usatoday.com.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:American flight turns around after takeoff due to unruly passenger

'Disruptive customer' forces American Airlines flight to turn around

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CFP releases 2026 & 2027 schedule + SEC quarterbacks' fight for another year

In the new world of college football there may be just as much action in the courtroom as there is on the field. The latest trend is if you want another season in college, after your eligibility is up, take it to the courtroom! The two most recent cases of that are Trinidad Chambliss and Joey Aguilar. Both of whom are waiting to see if they get an injunction that will allow them to play in the 2026 season. Andy Staples, Ross Dellenger and Steven Godfrey explain both of these cases and update everyone with where the cases are in the process. They also take a look at the schools these quarterbacks are looking to go back to. Both schools have 5-star QBs waiting in the wings, which leads to the question: in the transfer portal era, are 5-star QBs better off going to a smaller school where to play right away and transferring later?

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Then, the guys get into some more College Football Playoff conversation. The CFP released the 2026 & 2027 schedule for the quarterfinals, semifinals and championship game. In 2026, the playoff spans over 39 days. Andy, Ross and Godfrey discuss the ludicrous schedule. They also talk about a potential savior being the NFL. With the NFL now owning a stake in ESPN, will they help out college football's scheduling to make it a better product?

Later, Andy shares the results of his homework assignment. Last episode, the guys discussed how weak Week 1 is to start the 2026 season. Andy shares his plan of how to move Oklahoma and Michigan to Week 1 to inject some energy into the opening weekend slate of games. The guys also close the show by discussing the Washington Post shutting down their sports division.

All of this and more on College Football Enquirer.

Tennessee's Joey Aguilar Photo by Johnnie Izquierdo/Getty Images

0:00:00 - SEC QB's suing for eligibility

6:18 - Trinidad Chambliss' case update

8:32 - Joey Aguilar case update

16:08 - What does the future of 5-star QB's in college look like?

28:24 - CFP releases 2026 schedule

40:22 - Andy tries to improve Week 1's schedule

51:55 - Reflecting on The Washington Post news

🖥️Watchthis full episode on YouTube

Check out all the episodes of theCollege Football Enquirerand the rest of the Yahoo Sports podcast family athttps://apple.co/3zEuTQjoratyahoosports.tv

CFP releases 2026 & 2027 schedule + SEC quarterbacks' fight for another year

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NFL MVP and other top awards to be announced at NFL Honors

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — The league MVP and the winners of the otherseven AP NFL awardswill be announced at NFL Honors on Thursday night, just days ahead of Super Bowl 60.

Christian McCaffrey is only the second player to be a finalist for three AP NFL awards in the same year. He joins Josh Allen, Trevor Lawrence, Drake Maye and Matthew Stafford in the running for The Associated Press 2025 NFL Most Valuable Player.

Maye, who will lead the New England Patriots into theSuper Bowlagainst the Seattle Seahawks, and McCaffrey are also finalists for Offensive Player of the Year. McCaffrey and Lawrence are among the finalists for Comeback Player of the Year.

Anationwide panelof 50 media members who regularly cover the league completed voting before the playoffs began. Votes were tabulated by the accounting firm Lutz and Carr.

Voters selected a top 5 for the eight AP NFL awards. First-place votes were worth 10 points. Second- through fifth-place votes were worth 5, 3, 2 and 1 points.

The other awards being presented Thursday in San Francisco include Coach of the Year, Assistant Coach of the Year, Comeback Player of the Year, Defensive Player of the Year, Offensive Player of the Year, Defensive Rookie of the Year and Offensive Rookie of the Year.

AP NFL:https://apnews.com/hub/nfl

NFL MVP and other top awards to be announced at NFL Honors

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — The league MVP and the winners of the otherseven AP NFL awardswill be announced at NFL Honors on Thu...

 

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