Days after releasing millions of pages of documents related to its investigation into Jeffrey Epstein, the Justice Department has been forced to take down several thousand that “may have inadvertently included victim-identifying information.”
That move came after attorneys for several survivors of Epstein’s abuse asked a judge to order the department to take down the website due to redaction failures.
On Monday’s “Deadline: White House,” Nicolle Wallace described the department’s actions as a “slap in the face,” adding, “to call the release sloppy and haphazard is about the nicest thing we can say about it.”
An initial review from MS NOW found that more than 40 known or suspected survivors’ identities were revealed in the files produced on Friday.
Danielle Bensky, an Epstein survivor, sat down with Wallace to discuss the Justice Department’s botched rollout, which she called “just absolutely egregious and appalling.”
“On Saturday, I just felt so broken,” Bensky told Wallace. “I felt like I couldn’t get out of bed. I really had a moment where it’s like, ‘What is this fight for if we’re just exposing people?’”
Bensky said that while she and other survivors urged lawmakers to make the documents public, they also wanted to ensure their identities and privacy would be respected.
“So many of us worked so hard to speak to congressional leaders, to talk to senators, to talk to anybody we possibly knew had any power, to say, ‘We want this done the right way,’” she said.
Bensky recalled a meeting the survivors held with House Speaker Mike Johnson in which she said the Republican “looked us dead in the eye” and promised to protect the disgraced financier’s victims.








