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DOJ’s Epstein disclosure draws fire for website glitches, missing documents, redactions

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The Department of Justice’s efforts to release all of its files related to Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell’s sex trafficking cases by the legal deadline fell short of expectations on Friday, resulting in complaints ranging from technological glitches to excessive redactions and missing documents.
Just after 3 p.m., the highly anticipated website containing the documents went live with a message informing visitors they were «in line.» The page never advanced and would occasionally crash. Once the files became visible, some people were reporting that they still could not access the website.
«Got me waiting in line for these Epstein files like it’s a 2019 Yeezy drop,» one user wrote on X.
SCHUMER ACCUSES TRUMP ADMIN OF EPSTEIN FILES ‘COVER-UP’ AMID DOCUMENT DISPUTE
The law required that the files be searchable, but New York University law professor Ryan Goodman was among those who observed that the search bar feature on the website was also not reliably capturing content.
Some on the left pointed out that President Donald Trump’s name was initially not showing up in any of the documents. Trump was one of many of Epstein’s affluent friends before Epstein faced charges. The search bar appeared to be working as of Friday night.
The Department of Justice released a trove of Epstein documents Dec. 19 after President Donald Trump signed the Epstein Files Transparency Act in November. (Joe Schildhorn/Patrick McMullan via Getty Images)
The most common criticism, however, focused on what critics described as an incomplete release and extensive redactions. The DOJ has said it was required to redact information that could identify victims or minors.
In a letter to Congress, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche touted the DOJ’s effort to fulfill its obligations under the Epstein Files Transparency Act as «historic.»
Blanche said the documents underwent a rigorous review and redaction process involving more than 200 lawyers and that certain DOJ components produced tranches of files this week that required more time to review. He said he expected the rest of the files to be uploaded to the website within two weeks.

Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., speaks alongside Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., and Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., during a news conference on the Epstein Files Transparency Act outside the U.S. Capitol Nov. 18, 2025, in Washington, D.C. (Heather Diehl/Getty Images)
Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., highlighted the statutory language of the Epstein Files Transparency Act on X.
«Unfortunately, today’s document release by @AGPamBondi and @DAGToddBlanche grossly fails to comply with both the spirit and the letter of the law that @realDonaldTrump signed just 30 days ago,» Massie wrote.
Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., a co-sponsor of the legislation, said he and Massie were «exploring all options,» including potential contempt proceedings or other actions against DOJ officials.
«It is an incomplete release with too many redactions,» Khanna said.
DOJ PUBLISHES TROVE OF EPSTEIN FILES, SAYS MORE TO COME AFTER FRIDAY DEADLINE

Attorney General Pam Bondi speaks alongside President Donald Trump on recent Supreme Court rulings in the briefing room at the White House June 27, 2025, in Washington, D.C. (Joe Raedle/Getty Images)
Tim Young, a media fellow with the conservative Heritage Foundation, panned the redactions in a post on X and took a jab at Attorney General Pam Bondi over the DOJ’s botched rollout of already public files earlier this year.
Bondi had given right-wing social media influencers binders of files in February, but the records were a dud and enraged a faction of Trump’s base.
Rep. Robert Garcia, D-Calif., appeared on MS NOW Friday evening and accused the administration of «breaking the law.»
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Still, the DOJ has stood by its work as exemplary, saying in a statement online that «President Trump’s DOJ is delivering historic transparency while protecting victims.»
Fox News Digital reached out to the DOJ for comment.
justice department,jeffrey epstein,pam bondi,congress
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Modi recibió a Lula, Macron y líderes tecnológicos en India para una cumbre mundial sobre inteligencia artificial

El primer ministro de India, Narendra Modi, y destacados líderes del sector tecnológico, entre ellos Sam Altman (OpenAI), debatieron este jueves en Nueva Delhi sobre los desafíos y oportunidades de la inteligencia artificial (IA) en el marco de una cumbre mundial.
El evento contará además con la participación del presidente de Brasil, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, así como una veintena de jefes de Estado. Se prevé que, a finales de la semana, se firme una declaración orientada a regular el uso de la IA. Entre los empresarios presentes de la industria figura también Demis Hassabis (Google DeepMind).
“La IA tiene que democratizarse para que los humanos no se conviertan simplemente en un punto de datos para la IA o sigan siendo una materia prima para la IA. Debemos democratizar la IA. Debe convertirse en un medio de inclusión y empoderamiento, especialmente para el Sur Global”, sostuvo el jefe de Gobierno indio en su presentación.
El evento se desarrolla en un contexto marcado por el impacto bursátil de las empresas tecnológicas y el avance acelerado de la IA. La expansión de esta tecnología genera inquietudes acerca de su impacto en el medioambiente, el empleo, la educación, la creatividad y la información.
El mercado laboral es uno de los principales focos de preocupación, especialmente en India, donde millones trabajan en centros de atención telefónica y servicios técnicos. “Creamos sistemas capaces de imitar a los humanos. Y, por supuesto, la aplicación natural de este tipo de sistemas es sustituir a los humanos”, sostuvo el investigador Stuart Russell.
Con mil millones de internautas, India es el primer país en desarrollo en organizar una cumbre de este tipo, la cuarta dedicada a la IA. El ministro indio de Tecnologías de la Información, Ashwini Vaishnaw, anunció que el país aspira a atraer USD 200.000 millones en inversiones tecnológicas en dos años, incluidos 90.000 millones ya comprometidos para la construcción de centros de datos por parte de empresas como Google y Microsoft.
Sundar Pichai, director general de Alphabet y oriundo de India, destacó la transformación del país y anunció la construcción de cables submarinos para potenciar la capacidad en inteligencia artificial.
Este proyecto se enmarca en una inversión de USD 15.000 millones en cinco años anunciada en octubre por Google, que incluye la apertura de su mayor centro de datos fuera de Estados Unidos en Visakhapatnam.
Nvidia, líder global en semiconductores para inteligencia artificial, presentó una alianza con la empresa india L&T para crear “la mayor fábrica de IA de India”. En 2023, India ocupó el tercer lugar en la clasificación mundial de competitividad en IA elaborada por la Universidad de Stanford.
El secretario general de la ONU, Antonio Guterres, instó a los principales empresarios del sector a respaldar la creación de un fondo global de USD 3.000 millones para garantizar que la inteligencia artificial sea accesible para todos.
Durante la cumbre, el titular de Naciones Unidas advirtió a los líderes del sector sobre los riesgos asociados a esta tecnología y subrayó que su futuro no debe quedar “al capricho de unos pocos multimillonarios”.

“El futuro de la IA no puede ser decidido por un puñado de países ni dejarse en manos de los caprichos de unos pocos multimillonarios”, añadió.
Macron remarcó la importancia de colocar un trazado de normas al avance de la IA: “Estamos decididos a seguir dando forma a las reglas del juego… con nuestros aliados como la India”. “Europa no se centra ciegamente en la regulación: Europa es un espacio para la innovación y la inversión, pero es un espacio seguro”, sostuvo.
En particular, el presidente galo remarcó que Francia está “duplicando el número de científicos e ingenieros de IA capacitados”, y que nuevas empresas en el sector están creando “docenas de miles” de empleos.
En su presentación, Demis Hassabis, CEO de Google Deep Mind, expresó el miércoles que bajo su mirada “en los próximos 10 años probablemente entraremos en una nueva era dorada para el descubrimiento científico, casi un nuevo renacimiento utilizando estas herramientas, herramientas increíbles como AlphaFold».
Y señaló: “Espero que sea la primera de muchas que puedan acelerar enormemente nuestra investigación y acelerar el descubrimiento científico en casi cualquier área temática”.
Hassabis utilizó su espacio en la cumbre para remarcar que el mundo está “a punto de una transformación absolutamente increíble que traerá beneficios en la ciencia y la medicina específicamente”.
Por otra parte, el asesor de IA de la Casa Blanca, Sriram Krishnan, mencionó que Estados Unidos recibirá una inversión mínima de USD 600.000 millones en hiperescaladores el próximo año. “Esto impulsará el entrenamiento de IA, los centros de datos y la computación. Creemos que todos nuestros aliados, e India es un aliado clave, deberían aprovechar esta infraestructura y desarrollarla”, sumó.
(Con información de AFP y Reuters)
Business,Domestic Politics,Asia / Pacific,Corporate Events,Government / Politics
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Philanthropy group ripped for bankrolling ‘radical’ defund the police, anti-ICE groups: ‘Less safe’

Former progressive makes STUNNING admission on BLM
Former progressive Xaviaer DuRousseau said his shift to conservatism began after he questioned the finances of Black Lives Matter and grew frustrated with what he viewed as a lack of transparency and support for victims’ families.
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A philanthropic organization known as Coefficient Giving, which is mainly funded by liberal billionaire Dustin Moskovitz and his wife Cari Tuna, is being knocked for quietly funding a slate of «radical projects» and donating millions to defund the police groups, anti-ICE initiatives and other progressive causes over the course of several years.
Before changing its name from Open Philanthropy to Coefficient Giving and divesting from its «criminal justice reform» initiatives to a split-off group called «Just Impact,» Open Philanthropy awarded hundreds of grants to primarily far-left groups in that category over six years.
Among the groups that Open Philanthropy donated to were JustLeadershipUSA, a group that compares the criminal justice system to slavery, Color of Change, a staunch defund the police advocate, People’s Action, which has claimed law enforcement was waging a «war against Black people,» and Fair and Just Prosecution, an advocate for eliminating cash bail.
CCP-CONNECTED MILLIONAIRE ALLEGEDLY BANKROLLS MINNEAPOLIS AGITATOR GROUPS THROUGH DARK MONEY NETWORK
Coefficient Giving is being knocked for funding a slate of «radical projects» by donating millions to defund the police groups, anti-ICE initiatives and other progressive causes over the course of several years. (Getty)
The group also made donations to the Free Migration Project, which has called for the abolition of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and the National Bail Fund Network, a coalition of groups that helped bail participants of the 2020 Black Lives Matter protests. After Minnesota activist Renee Good was killed by an ICE agent earlier this year, Free Migration Project posted on their Instagram that «ICE and Border Patrol cannot be reformed. They must be abolished.»
Remarking on the donations, Curtis Schube, director of research and policy at the Center to Advance Security in America, slammed Open Philanthropy, saying the group «quietly funds all kinds of radical projects, including those that eliminate bail demands for criminals and that seek to defund the police.»
«These aims are the opposite of social welfare,» said Schube. «They make society less safe and harm the very communities they claim to be concerned about.»
The group that Open Philanthropy awarded the highest amount of money to was the Alliance for Safety and Justice, a progressive organization that advocates for replacing incarceration with community-led safety strategies and trauma recovery services. The group received a total of $11,750,000.00 from Open Philanthropy through just three donations between 2016 and 2018.
Open Philanthropy gave $4,440,000.00 to JustLeadershipUSA, whose president, DeAnna Hoskins, previously emphasized the need to defund the police, framing it as a «divestment from law and order to an investment in protection in thriving communities.»
A spokesperson for Coefficient Giving clarified that the group’s donations «supported a variety of projects designed to improve public safety, reduce government spending, and keep families together.» The spokesperson said the group ceased these types of donations in 2021.
The group’s website states that the criminal legal system is «part of a much larger system of oppression that disproportionately plagues Black, Brown, and poor communities.» Further, JustLeadershipUSA’s website states that the carceral system «is in fact a dumping ground for the country’s other failed systems» and «contains strong remnants of slavery.»
FOREIGN BILLIONAIRES FUNNEL $2.6B TO US ADVOCACY GROUPS TO INFLUENCE POLICY, WATCHDOG REPORT CLAIMS

A rally to defund police in Chicago, July 24, 2020. (E. Jason Wambsgans/Chicago Tribune/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)
The website states the group is committed to «disrupting» the carceral system that it says, «like slavery, is based on the subjugation of those under its control.»
Open Philanthropy gave $3,259,100 to Color of Change and its affiliated entities. In 2021, a Color of Change campaign director advocated for «no more police and no more mass incarceration,» and pressed New York City to cut $1 billion from the police. The group has advocated to «defund the police,» also supporting diverting police funds in Minneapolis. In 2021, the Color of Change also released a statement urging Facebook to «permanently ban» President Donald Trump from the platform and to «take action against his enablers.»
People’s Action, meanwhile, received $1,927,640 from Open Philanthropy. In 2020, People’s Action declared its endorsement of the Movement for Black Lives, a self-proclaimed «anti-capitalist» group. In its statement announcing the endorsement, People’s Action called for «an end to the war against Black people» and demanded schools, colleges, universities and «all public institutions cut ties with the police.»
The group wrote that «police do not keep us safe, and incremental reforms cannot change a pervasive culture of police violence against Black people.»
In Jan. 2026, the People’s Action sent out a press release urging «immediate action to defund ICE & border patrol and get ICE & border patrol out of Minnesota, Maine, and communities across the country.»
Open Philanthropy donated $3 million to Fair And Just Prosecution, a criminal justice reform group that in 2018 co-developed a training model geared towards the offices of newly elected prosecutors that is said was «committed to a justice system that moves away from past incarceration-driven practices and towards principles of equity, fairness, and compassion.»
The group has praised state legislation ending cash bail. In 2021, the group lauded an Illinois bill ending cash bail as a «necessary and long overdue» change.
A spokesperson for Fair and Just Prosecution told Fox News Digital that the group «supports a peer-driven community of local elected prosecutors working toward a justice system that prioritizes public safety grounded in fairness, equity, fiscal responsibility, and humanity.»
Open Philanthropy also seeded the National Bail Fund Network with a $404,800 grant. The network went on to raise millions after the 2020 Black Lives Matter protests. The Chronicle of Philanthropy reported in 2023 that some of the defendants helped by bail funds from the group went on to commit violent crimes.
FAR-LEFT AGITATOR WHO ORGANIZED MN CHURCH STORMING RAKED IN OVER $1 MILLION FROM ANTI-POVERTY NONPROFIT

Signage hangs during the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in National Harbor, Maryland, U.S., on Thursday, Feb. 27, 2020. (Getty Images)
Open Philanthropy donated $24,000 to the Free Migration Project, a group whose executive director, David Bennion, has previously stated that «ICE should not only be abolished, but its core function of imprisoning and deporting non-citizens must also be eliminated.»
Bennion has argued that deportation is «not just cruel and economically counterproductive,» but also claimed it is «inconsistent with basic justice and has no place in a legal system predicated on coherent moral principles.»
Though the $130 million donated by Open Philanthropy for criminal justice reform was primarily awarded to progressive groups, the amount includes several donations to conservative groups as well, including the American Conservative Union, which received a total of $612,000.00.
In 2021, Open Philanthropy divested its criminal justice reform program into a split-off group called Just Impact. Open Philanthropy gave Just Impact a seed funding of $50 million spread over three and a half years.
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A spokesperson for Coefficient Giving told Fox News Digital that «until late 2021, Open Philanthropy supported a variety of projects designed to improve public safety, reduce government spending, and keep families together, including funding the American Conservative Union, host of CPAC, to run its Center for Criminal Justice Reform, headed by Pat Nolan.»
The spokesperson said that «among the reforms enacted while Open Philanthropy was funding this work was 2018’s First Step Act, first introduced by then-Congressman and current Secretary of Veterans Affairs Doug Collins, passed with bipartisan support, and signed into law by President Trump.»
police and law enforcement,enforcement,immigration,woke
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Abren el caso Epstein en Francia: un lujoso piso en París y tres nenas francesas de 12 años «de regalo»

La procuradora Beccau
La modelo sueca
Un departamento de 740 metros
Un diplomático francés
En Gran Bretaña investigan 90 vuelos
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