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  1. WorldClockTools
  2. Countdowns
  3. United States
  4. DOJ OIG Epstein Files Transparency Act Audit

Countdown

DOJ OIG Epstein Files Transparency Act Audit

Tuesday, December 15, 2026 · 235 days away

United StatesDeclassificationexpected

Countdown

DOJ OIG Epstein Files Transparency Act Audit

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Event overview

Inspector General audit of DOJ's redaction and withholding of ~6M Epstein files.

Date
2026-12-15
Country / jurisdiction
US
Region
United States
Category
Declassification
Status
expected

What this countdown tracks

The Department of Justice Office of Inspector General's audit of roughly 6 million Jeffrey Epstein–related federal files is expected to be delivered on December 15, 2026, under the Epstein Files Transparency Act. The audit report will document what the DOJ holds, what has been released, and what remains withheld across FBI, US Attorney, and Bureau of Prisons record sets.

Background

The Epstein Files Transparency Act, signed into law in late 2025, directed the DOJ OIG to conduct a comprehensive audit of all federal records relating to Jeffrey Epstein, including files tied to his 2008 non-prosecution agreement in the Southern District of Florida, the 2019 Southern District of New York indictment, his August 10, 2019 jail-cell death at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in Manhattan, and the 2021–2022 prosecution of Ghislaine Maxwell in SDNY. CNBC reported in April 2026 that the OIG estimated the total responsive file volume at approximately 6 million pages and indexed items across FBI 302s, grand-jury-adjacent (non-grand-jury) investigative memoranda, victim statements collected by SDNY and SDFL, and BOP records from MCC New York. Attorney General Pam Bondi's DOJ had previously released several tranches of Epstein files on Justice.gov in 2025, drawing criticism from congressional Republicans including Rep. Anna Paulina Luna and Rep. Thomas Massie, and from survivors' counsel Bradley Edwards. Maxwell was convicted on five of six counts in December 2021 and sentenced to 20 years in June 2022; her federal appeals were exhausted in 2024. The December 15, 2026 date was written into the statute as the audit's delivery deadline to the House and Senate Judiciary Committees. IG Michael Horowitz (or his successor) leads the review.

Why the date matters

December 15, 2026 is a statutory deadline set by the Epstein Files Transparency Act itself. The OIG is required to transmit the audit to Congress on that date regardless of the status of underlying record-by-record declassification or privacy review. The date matters because the audit, not individual record releases, determines the public scope of what remains withheld and why — the report's categorization of files by exemption basis (grand-jury secrecy under Rule 6(e), victim privacy, ongoing investigation) will dictate the next phase of disclosure litigation. Statutory audit deadlines of this kind, similar to the 1992 JFK Records Act and the 2002 Intelligence Reform Act's reporting provisions, typically drive a narrow window of press coverage followed by a multi-year cycle of FOIA follow-through.

What to watch for

  • Total page and file counts broken out by agency (FBI, SDNY, SDFL, BOP, ODAG).
  • Which record categories remain under Rule 6(e) grand-jury secrecy.
  • Treatment of victim statements and survivor-identifying material.
  • BOP internal-investigation files on the August 10, 2019 death at MCC New York.
  • Cross-references to the Maxwell SDNY trial record.
  • Any referenced records tied to named third parties with prior civil suits filed.
  • Congressional response timeline from House and Senate Judiciary Committees.
  • Chain-of-custody documentation for evidence seized in the 2019 Little Saint James search.
  • OIG recommendations on declassification-review workflow changes at DOJ.

Legal stakes

The audit's findings will frame three distinct litigation tracks. First, grand-jury material shielded by Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 6(e) can only be unsealed by a federal judge on a showing of "particularized need," and the audit will define the universe of such records. Second, victim-privacy protections under the Crime Victims' Rights Act and 18 U.S.C. § 3509 impose statutory non-disclosure obligations that persist after prosecution ends. Third, any material referenced in ongoing federal or foreign investigations remains exempt under FOIA Exemption 7(A). Plaintiffs' counsel, congressional investigators, and press organizations will use the audit's categorization as a roadmap for targeted unsealing motions in SDNY and SDFL in 2027 and beyond.

Related events to track

The audit sits in a December 2026 window alongside the NARA 25-year auto-declass of 2001 records and precedes the Trump 45 records FOIA eligibility opening the following January. For related transparency programs, readers also follow the FBI MLK surveillance files consent-decree expiry.

FAQ

When exactly is the Epstein OIG audit due? Tuesday, December 15, 2026, per the Epstein Files Transparency Act deadline, with transmittal required to both the House and Senate Judiciary Committees on that date.

Is the December 15, 2026 delivery confirmed or expected? Confirmed as a statutory deadline; delivery itself is mandatory under the enacting law, although the depth of public-version content depends on OIG's redaction decisions.

Who is responsible for the audit? The Department of Justice Office of the Inspector General, operating under 5 U.S.C. App. 3 and coordinating with component inspectors general at FBI and BOP.

Where can I read the background reporting? CNBC has a summary of the audit scope at https://www.cnbc.com/amp/2026/04/23/epstein-files-audit.html, and the statutory text is available on congress.gov.

Source

https://www.cnbc.com/amp/2026/04/23/epstein-files-audit.html

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