
Alan Dershowitz, Jeffrey Epsteinâs former lawyer, claims two courts in New York are withholding information on the notorious financier and convicted sex offenderâs case, not the Trump administration.
His comments come as President Donald Trump and his Justice Department (DOJ) have faced criticism for how they handled the caseâs materials. Dershowitz, who helped obtain Epstein a plea agreement in 2008, stated that there is no Epstein âclient list,â only a redacted FBI affidavit from accusations.
During an interview on NewsNation with Chris Cuomo, the former lawyer said that none of the individuals in the document are now holding public office.
Dershowitz maintained that he is unable to divulge further material due to judicial orders but that Attorney General Pam Bondi and President Trump are ânot responsibleâ for the missing information.
âIs the government hiding a client list or anything that the Trump Administration could release tonight?â Cuomo asked.
âNo, thereâs no client list and never has been a client list. A client list suggests that Jeffrey Epstein made a list of people to whom he trafficked women. What there is, is a redacted FBI affidavit from accusers. There are several of them from accusers that accuse Jeffrey â that accuse various people of having improper sex, and that has been redacted, the names of the people accuse have been blacked out,â Dershowitz began.
âNow, of course, because I was lawyer and I did all the investigations, I know who all these people are. I could figure out, based on everything that I saw, who Mr.X is, Mr. Y is, and Mr. Z. I can tell you right now: None of them are public figures who are currently in office. Some of them were previously in office. Some of them are dead. But there is no client list. And the redactions could be undone if you go to court,â Dershowitz added.
âSo, many of the things that are being suppressed are being suppressed by two judges in Manhattan, and theyâre doing it largely to protect the alleged accusers who are, in the view of the judges, victims, even though. But the judges have issued orders, which is why I canât disclose things Iâd love to disclose, saying that you canât disclose this information. But Pam Bondi and the Justice Department and Donald Trump are not responsible for that. I donât know of any information that they could disclose that they havenât disclosed,â he continued.
âNow maybe there is some, but Iâm simply not aware of it. And so I think itâs important to place the blame where the blame deserves to be placed. The vast majority of people who are in the files â and I I know them all, Iâve seen all the names â the vast, vast majority of them have already been disclosed. Theyâre in articles all over the world. Theyâre in books that have been written,â Dershowitz declared.
âSo if we got everything, everything, you would be shocked how few names are there that havenât already been disclosed. The media hasnât, by the way, done a good enough job in finding the people who have been disclosed in the public record. So thatâs that list,â he concluded.
WATCH:
Earlier this week, a federal judge in Florida rejected a Trump administration request to release grand jury transcripts from the Jeffrey Epstein case.
U.S. District Judge Robin Rosenberg said she could not authorize the release.
âEleventh Circuit [federal appeals court] law does not permit this Court to grant the Governmentâs request; the Courtâs hands are tiedâa point the Government concedes,â she wrote in a 12-page opinion.
The Trump administration had pushed for the transcripts to be unsealed from Florida grand jury proceedings tied to the original federal investigation into Epstein.
The effort was part of a broader call for transparency around Epsteinâs sex trafficking network. The grand juries in question were held in 2005 and 2007.
That investigation ultimately ended with Epstein pleading guilty to state charges and serving 13 months in jail, after federal prosecutors agreed not to pursue federal sex trafficking charges.
In a separate courtroom on Wednesday, a second judge denied a similar request from Epsteinâs convicted associate Ghislaine Maxwell.
