EDA

About the Epstein Document Archive

The Epstein Document Archive is a free, open-access platform providing searchable access to 207,251 documents from the Jeffrey Epstein investigation, released by the U.S. Department of Justice and other government agencies. Our mission is to make these public records accessible, searchable, and understandable.

Our Mission

Government transparency is a cornerstone of democratic accountability. When the U.S. Department of Justice releases investigation documents, these records belong to the public. However, raw document dumps -- often consisting of thousands of unindexed PDF files -- are effectively inaccessible to most people.

The Epstein Document Archive was created to solve this problem. We process, index, and organize government-released documents so that journalists, researchers, legal professionals, and the general public can actually search and explore them. We do not alter, editorialize, or fabricate any content.

Our Principles

Accuracy

Documents are presented exactly as released by government agencies. OCR text is verified for accuracy, and AI-generated summaries are clearly labeled.

Open Access

The archive is completely free. No account, subscription, or registration is required. Public records should be publicly accessible.

Non-partisan

We do not take political positions. The archive presents facts from government documents without editorial commentary or bias.

Privacy

We respect privacy. We do not track users, sell data, or require registration. Court-ordered redactions are preserved as released.

What We Provide

207,251 Searchable Documents

Court records, FBI files, depositions, correspondence, and other investigation materials, all full-text searchable with AI-powered summaries.

AI-Powered Search & Q&A

Hybrid search combining traditional keyword search with semantic AI search. Ask questions and get cited answers from the documents.

23,540 Identified Entities

People, organizations, locations, and other entities extracted from documents with relationship mapping and cross-referencing.

Complete Transparency

Our data sources, methodology, and processing pipeline are documented. Original PDF files are linked from every document page.

Important Disclaimer

This archive contains sensitive material from government investigations. The presence of a name in these documents does not imply guilt, wrongdoing, or criminal activity. Many individuals are mentioned as witnesses, victims, or peripheral contacts.

All documents are presented as released by government agencies. This platform does not produce, alter, or editorialize any content. Users should refer to original source documents and official court proceedings for authoritative information.

Start Exploring

Frequently Asked Questions

Who maintains the Epstein Document Archive?
The Epstein Document Archive is maintained by a team of volunteers committed to public transparency and government accountability. The platform is non-partisan and does not editorialize or alter any government-released documents.
Is this an official government website?
No, this is not a government website. The Epstein Document Archive is an independent platform that aggregates publicly available government records. All documents are sourced from official releases by the DOJ, FBI, and other agencies.
How is the platform funded?
The platform is funded through community donations and volunteer work. It does not display advertising or sell user data. Server costs are covered through charitable contributions.
Can I contribute to the project?
Yes, the project welcomes contributions from developers, researchers, and volunteers. You can contribute by helping with data processing, improving search accuracy, or supporting the project financially.