Wyden claims DOJ hides 4,725 Epstein wire transfers totaling $1.1 bn. Senate pushes for release under public transparency bill.

Sen. Ron Wyden alleged the Justice Department is concealing detailed Epstein records.

“Somewhere in the Treasury Department, Mr. President, locked away in a cabinet drawer, is a big Epstein file that’s full of actionable information”
https://www.nypost.com/2025/07/17/us-news/big-epstein-file-full-of-actionable-intel-is-locked-in-treasury-drawer-dem-senator-says/

The file reportedly contains 4,725 wire transfers totaling about $1.1 billion tied to Epstein’s JP Morgan Chase account, including transactions with Russian banks.
“Follow the money [and] details about his financing and operations that await investigation”
https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/35900956/wyden-epstein-file-treasury/

YouTube footage shows a senator highlighting the sums during a public address.

Few reports emphasize that Wyden’s count differs sharply from the DOJ’s claim of no client list and no broader prosecution. Bank SARs flagged $1.5 billion in suspect activity across major banks, yet no further legal action followed. Internal memos obtained by the senator suggest DOJ and Treasury have not compiled a full referral to investigators. Massie and Khanna have filed legislation proposing redacted release to protect victims while allowing public transparency. Wyden’s letter lays out seven lines of inquiry, opening pathways that the DOJ has ignored. The absence of any formal release plan leaves congressional trust frayed. A broader implication: accountability hinges on pressure rather than institutional will.

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