At a glance
Multiple Epstein survivors told CNN that his former assistant Lesley Groff lied during congressional testimony about meeting victims. Reps. Khanna and Massie are pressing the DOJ to comply with the Epstein Files Transparency Act after botched redactions.
Multiple Epstein survivors told CNN that Lesley Groff, a former assistant to Jeffrey Epstein, lied under oath during congressional testimony about whether she met victims. At the same time, Reps. Khanna and Massie are pressuring the DOJ to actually comply with the Epstein Files Transparency Act after the department botched document redactions, suggesting it's not moving quickly to release the full archive.
This is a layered accountability failure. First, there's the allegation that Groff misled Congress—a separate crime, potentially, depending on what she said and what prosecutors believe they can prove. Second, there's the DOJ itself dragging its feet on transparency. The redactions weren't minor cleanup; they were described as "botched," implying either incompetence or deliberate obstruction. The survivors pushing back on Groff's testimony show they're still engaged and fact-checking official accounts. The question is whether these pressure points—survivors pushing back, representatives demanding compliance, evidence of redaction failures—actually move the needle on the full release, or whether the DOJ continues to stall.
Citation trail
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