US: The Department of Justice calls the letter from Larry Nassar “fake” and provides 30,000 pages of information related to Epstein
US: 30,000 more pages of records pertaining to Jeffrey Epstein were made public by the US Department of Justice on Tuesday (local time), but it was noted that some of the materials included “untrue” allegations about President Donald Trump.

According to the DOJ, the materials against Donald Trump are “false” and would have been “weaponized” against him, according to an X post.
Nearly 30,000 more pages of Jeffrey Epstein-related records have been formally disclosed by the Department of Justice. Some of these materials, which were given to the FBI just before to the 2020 election, include false and sensationalist accusations made against President Trump. To be clear, the accusations are baseless and untrue, and they would have already been used as a weapon against President Trump if they had any merit. However, the DOJ is making these materials available with the legally mandated safeguards for Epstein’s victims because of our dedication to the law and openness,” the DOJ said on X.
According to CNN, the records also include a 2021 subpoena to the Mar-a-Lago Club, which Trump established in 1995. The subpoena concerns an investigation into Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein’s ex-girlfriend and convicted accomplice.
A letter written by “J Epstein,” which was delivered to convicted sexual offender Larry Nassar in the same month that Epstein committed himself in 2019, is also included in the papers.
According to CNN, the letter mentions Trump but does not specifically name him. One line in the letter is “our president.”
That being said, the DOJ said that the FBI has verified that the letter is fraudulent. The letter was dated three days after Epstein’s death, according to DOJ, and the writing in it does not seem to match Epstein’s.
“The FBI has confirmed that this alleged letter from Jeffrey Epstein to Larry Nassar is FAKE,” the DOJ said on X. When the prison got the phony letter, it was reported to the FBI. The following information served as the basis for the FBI’s conclusion: It doesn’t seem like Jeffrey Epstein’s writing. Three days after Epstein’s death, the letter was postmarked from Northern Virginia, where he was imprisoned in New York. Epstein’s prisoner number, which is necessary for outgoing letters, and the jail where he was detained were not included in the return address.
“This fictitious letter serves as a reminder that the mere fact that the Department of Justice releases a document does not prove that the accusations or assertions made inside are true. However, DOJ will continue to make available all legally needed data,” the agency said.
The Epstein Files are a collection of records that include the names, photos, correspondence, and other activities of Jeffrey Epstein, who was accused of trafficking young children for sex.