Former President Bill Clinton is calling on the Trump administration to fully release all remaining materials connected to Jeffrey Epstein, arguing that partial disclosures have only fueled suspicion rather than delivered transparency.
In a statement released by his spokesperson, Angel Ureña, Clinton urged President Donald Trump to direct the Department of Justice to make public the complete record required under the Epstein Files Transparency Act, a law enacted in November 2025 that mandates the disclosure of documents tied to the disgraced financier.
“The Epstein Files Transparency Act imposes a clear legal duty on the U.S. Department of Justice to produce the full and complete record the public demands and deserves,” the statement reads. “However, what the Department of Justice has released so far, and the manner in which it did so, makes one thing clear: someone or something is being protected.”
— Angel Ureña (@angelurena) December 22, 2025
Clinton’s team emphasized that they are not seeking protection from scrutiny. Instead, they are asking for more of it.
“We need no such protection,” the statement continued, calling on Trump to order Attorney General Pam Bondi to immediately release any remaining materials that reference, mention, or include photographs of Clinton. The request specifically names documents that may still exist under the law, including grand jury transcripts, interview notes, photographs, and findings from the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York.
According to Ureña, refusing to release those records would only reinforce a growing belief that the DOJ’s actions are not about transparency, but about implication.
“Refusal to do so will confirm the widespread suspicion the Department of Justice’s actions to date are not about transparency, but about insinuation,” the statement said, accusing the department of selectively releasing information in ways that imply wrongdoing without evidence.
Clinton’s camp stressed that he has already been “repeatedly cleared” by the DOJ over many years, under presidents and attorneys general from both political parties.
The renewed call comes amid ongoing public debate over how Epstein-related documents are being handled across administrations. While Trump has publicly supported transparency around the Epstein files, critics argue that releases so far have been incomplete and inconsistently framed, leaving room for speculation and political weaponization.
“The public deserves the full record,” the statement concluded, “not selective disclosures that raise questions while withholding answers.”
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