Mark Epstein, brother of the late Jeffrey Epstein, has dropped a jaw-dropping claim that the FBI is playing fast and loose with government files tied to his notorious sibling.
The Daily Mail reported that, according to Mark, federal authorities are actively sanitizing documents to erase Republican names before their release, while he continues to challenge the official narrative around Jeffrey’s 2019 death and hints at compromising information on high-profile figures like Donald Trump.
Jeffrey Epstein, the disgraced financier with ties to powerful elites, died in 2019 while awaiting trial on serious charges at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in New York City.
The FBI and Justice Department issued a joint statement concluding that Jeffrey took his own life in his cell, a finding that Mark Epstein has fiercely disputed from the get-go.
Mark has accused FBI Director Kash Patel of orchestrating a cover-up regarding the true circumstances of his brother’s passing, insisting there’s more to the story than the public has been told.
Now, Mark is taking things a step further, alleging that the FBI is scrubbing Republican names from Jeffrey’s files at a facility in Winchester, Virginia, where the agency’s Central Records Complex is located.
“There’s a facility in Winchester, Virginia, where they’re scrubbing the files to take Republican names out of it,” Mark Epstein claimed, citing what he called a “pretty good source.”
While the FBI declined to comment on these accusations, one has to wonder if this alleged cleanup is a convenient way to shield certain political players from scrutiny—hardly a reassuring thought for those seeking transparency.
Adding fuel to the fire, Mark insists that Jeffrey held damaging information on President Donald Trump, even claiming it’s “provable” that Trump visited Jeffrey’s home despite the former president’s denials.
“Jeffrey definitely had dirt on Trump,” Mark Epstein stated, hinting at revelations that could shake up political narratives if ever fully disclosed.
If true, this raises serious questions about what’s being hidden and why—though Trump has dismissed the Epstein saga as a “Democratic hoax” while pointing fingers at liberal figures like Bill Clinton and Bill Gates.
Interestingly, Trump recently shifted his stance over the weekend, throwing his support behind Republican lawmakers pushing to release the Epstein files after months of downplaying the controversy.
The U.S. House of Representatives passed a bill on Tuesday with overwhelming support to make additional FBI and Justice Department documents public, with only Congressman Clay Higgins voting against it.
Trump has promised to sign the bill if it reaches his desk, though his order to Attorney General Pam Bondi to reopen an investigation into Epstein might complicate the timing of any file releases.
As the bill heads to the Senate, where it’s expected to gain broad backing, the debate over transparency versus privacy rages on, with Higgins warning of harm to innocent parties caught in the crossfire.