The 302 Files: Missing Records and the Shadow of the Epstein Investigation
The gilded halls of the American justice system are currently echoing with a familiar yet increasingly urgent name: Jeffrey Epstein. But as the 2026 calendar unfolds, the focus has shifted from the crimes of the late financier to a burgeoning scandal involving the very documents meant to catalog his downfall. At the center of this firestorm are the FBI’s “302 reports”—formal summaries of witness interviews—and a growing list of missing records that some claim may hold the key to understanding the full extent of the Epstein network, including alleged ties to President Donald Trump.

The Maria Farmer Testimony
The current wave of scrutiny was largely ignited by Maria Farmer, a visual artist and one of the earliest known Epstein accusers. Farmer has long maintained that she reported the abuse of herself and her sister, Annie, to the FBI as early as 1996 and again in 2006. In a series of recent public statements and legal filings, Farmer alleged that the FBI systematically ignored her warnings for decades.
Crucially, Farmer has also recounted an unsettling encounter at Epstein’s New York office in the mid-1990s involving Donald Trump. While Farmer notes she witnessed no direct sexual misconduct by Trump, she claims he “ogled” her and made comments regarding her age. The White House has consistently dismissed these stories as “tired and pathetic attempts” to distract from the administration’s successes, maintaining that Trump ended his association with Epstein in the mid-2000s after discovering the financier’s “creep” behavior.
The Mystery of the Missing 302s
The controversy reached a fever pitch this month following an investigation into the “Epstein Files” database, which was mandated for public release under the Epstein Files Transparency Act. Of the approximately 325 listed FBI 302 reports, nearly 90 were initially missing from the public portal.
Following intense pressure from the House Oversight Committee and investigative journalists, the Department of Justice (DOJ) recently uploaded a “missing” tranche of records. The department characterized the omission as a procedural error, claiming 15 documents had been “incorrectly coded as duplicative.” However, critics—led by Representative Robert Garcia (D-CA) and Representative Dan Goldman (D-NY)—argue that the withheld files include some of the most sensitive allegations, including 16 pages detailing 2019 FBI interviews with a woman who accused Trump of sexual abuse in the 1980s.

“No More Games”: The Subpoena Storm
The DOJ’s explanation has done little to soothe a Washington already on edge. The House Oversight Committee recently voted to subpoena Attorney General Pam Bondi to answer for the discrepancies in the document release. Democrats on the committee have signaled that if the DOJ does not provide a “full accounting” of why these specific files were withheld, they will push for a parallel investigation into potential obstruction.
The political stakes are magnified by the current administration’s stance. While Attorney General Bondi insists that no records were redacted for “political sensitivity,” the fact that allegations against the sitting President were among the “incorrectly coded” files has fueled a narrative of a modern-day cover-up.
Accountability and the Survivor’s Burden
At its core, the 2026 Epstein scandal has transcended simple partisan bickering. It has become a referendum on the integrity of the federal investigative process. For survivors like Maria Farmer, the release of these long-buried reports is both a “triumph and a tragedy”—a confirmation that they were heard decades ago, but also a haunting reminder that their testimony was filed away while the abuse continued.
As the “subpoena storm” gathers over the Department of Justice, the question is no longer just about the validity of the allegations, but about the preservation of the truth. If 302 reports were generated and then “lost” or “miscoded” within the system, it raises a chilling possibility: that for the most powerful men in America, the rules of evidence may have been a matter of choice rather than law.

Would you like me to provide a deeper dive into the specific legal requirements of the Epstein Files Transparency Act or the current status of the House Oversight subpoenas?