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Just in: 30 Minutes Ago: Trump Is Being Sued to Release the FBI Training Videos on How to Find, Flag, and Redact Trump’s Name in the Epstein Files Dive into leaked evidence that FBI agents were trained explicitly to find and redact mentions of Donald Trump in the Jeffrey Epstein files — a dramatic cover-up that could change everything. Click to see what’s inside the lawsuit and decide for yourself: justice or a blackout?
30 Minutes Ago: Trump Is Being Sued to Release the FBI Training Videos on How to Find, Flag, and Redact Trump’s Name in the Epstein Files Dive into leaked evidence that FBI agents were trained explicitly to find and redact mentions of Donald Trump in the Jeffrey Epstein files — a dramatic cover-up that could change everything.
Click to see what’s inside the lawsuit and decide for yourself: justice or a blackout?
**30 Minutes Ago: New Lawsuit Pushes for Release of FBI “Epstein Files” Training Videos**
A freshly filed lawsuit claims that the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) created training materials instructing agents on how to locate, flag — and ultimately redact — references to Donald J. Trump in the files connected to Jeffrey Epstein. According to the complaint, the videos were made available on the FBI’s internal networks and guided employees on what counts as sensitive or disclosable.
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### 🔎 What the lawsuit says
* The lawsuit was filed by an outside group under a Freedom of Information request. It argues the FBI and U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) improperly withheld — or failed to disclose — internal records related to how the Epstein materials were reviewed.
* Among the records sought are “training videos” that reportedly directed agents on how to flag mentions of high-profile individuals — including Trump — as part of a broader redaction and review process.
* The lawsuit contends that this operation amounts to a politically motivated system of suppression rather than a routine redaction effort — adding fuel to criticism that the review was rigged to sweep under the rug any potentially embarrassing mentions rather than protect victims.
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### 📜 Why the documents are now expected to be public
In November 2025, Congress passed — and Trump signed — the Epstein Files Transparency Act, which requires the DOJ to release all unclassified documents related to the Epstein investigation by December 19, 2025.
Under the law:
* The DOJ must publish files in a searchable/downloadable format. ([WKMG][4])
* Only material containing victims’ personal information, or graphic content such as images of abuse, may be redacted. Embarrassment or reputational harm — even to powerful people — is *not* a valid reason for redaction.
Because of this, redactions justified solely to protect reputations would not be allowed — raising questions about whether the redaction training videos conflict with the spirit (or letter) of the new law.
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### ⚠️ What remains uncertain
* It’s not yet clear if the training videos are considered “unclassified” and therefore subject to release under the transparency law.
* Even if some materials are released, the DOJ may still attempt to withhold or redact parts citing ongoing federal investigations or to protect victim privacy. ([The Washington Post][5])
* The lawsuit and media reports largely reference unnamed sources for claims about the redaction instructions. At least one legal motion reportedly argues that releasing the videos is not in the “public interest.”
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### 🧩 What it could mean — if the videos are released
* A full accounting of whether the FBI’s review was impartial, or deliberately tailored to protect certain individuals.
* Greater public transparency about how decisions were made regarding what material — from a high-profile and sensitive case — was made public or kept hidden.
* Potential political fallout if the videos show systematic redactions aimed at protecting powerful people, which would feed accusations of a cover-up.
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### 📰 Where things stand now
The plaintiffs are pushing for the DOJ and FBI to disclose the requested videos — the crux of the lawsuit. Meanwhile, the broader push for full — or at least partial — release of the files related to Epstein is already underway under the new law. Public expectation is mounting: legal deadlines loom, and many hope that the coming disclosures will finally shed light on a decades-long mystery.