The US Department of Justice has clarified that it will not release all the documents related to the high-profile sex offender Jeffrey Epstein at once. Under the recent law, the US Department of Justice is required to make a large number of documents related to Epstein’s cases public. However, this law also allows for the redaction of sensitive information that could harm the privacy of the victims or impede ongoing investigations. According to the US Department of Justice, millions of documents will be released next Friday, but they will not all be confidential files. US Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche stated that initially, hundreds of thousands of documents will be made public, followed by additional files in the coming weeks. A bill to release more Epstein documents has been sent to the Senate after being passed in the House of Representatives. Blanche emphasized that the release of documents will be carried out with the utmost care to ensure the full protection of every affected individual. He added that the department is being cautious due to the intense public interest in these files. It is worth noting that if the department fails to release all the required documents, the government may face legal pressure, although the possible consequences are still unclear.
In a separate development, the investigative files of the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, released by the US Department of Justice, have disappeared from the website after a few hours. Israeli ground forces have established checkpoints in the Quneitra region following the Israeli airstrikes. A British judge has praised a Pakistani teenager who saved an 11-year-old girl’s life. The first Chief of Air Staff of Bangladesh, A K Khandaker, has passed away at the age of 95. The head of the Turkish intelligence agency, Ibrahim Kalin, has met with a Hamas delegation in Istanbul. It has been revealed that a company linked to Israel secretly evacuated its citizens from Gaza. The British newspaper The Telegraph has described this move as “breaking the shackles of slavery.” Residents in Silverdale, a coastal village in Lancashire, have reported feeling tremors for the second time in two weeks, prompting complaints about creaking doors, rattling radiators, and shaking windows. The funeral prayers of the leading figure of the student movement in Bangladesh, Sharif Uddin Hossain, have been offered. An Indian Air India Express pilot has been accused of physical abuse after allegedly attacking a passenger who cut in line at the Indira Gandhi International Airport in Delhi. The US military has carried out 10 operations with coalition forces in Syria and Iraq since the Palmira attack. The US Central Command has reported that a migrant vessel, the Geodis, was found approximately 30 kilometers from the US-Mexico border. A Greek coast guard has reported a collision between a train and an elephant reserve in the Indian state of Assam, resulting in the death of at least eight elephants and injuring one elephant calf. US President Trump has stated that those who attack America will face an even harsher response, and that the Syrian government is fully supporting American operations against ISIS. The US Department of Justice has begun releasing the investigative records of the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. Nepal has announced a new policy for net metering, which has been named “Nepal Solar Consumer Laws 2025.” All participants in the baraat wore the same attire. According to the document, 50 Beretta sniper rifles, 100 sniper rifles, and 1250 new automatic firearms “TWS” will be purchased. New Zealand’s Tom Latham and Devon Conway have set a record in the history of test cricket. The flight departed on Saturday morning from the Blue Origin launch pad in Van Horn, Texas. Australia has secured a decisive 3-0 lead in the five-match Ashes series, having already won three tests.

