Treasury Department to share Epstein financial records with House Oversight committee

Comer said his committee has received a letter from the Treasury Department, promising to cooperate with the probe and release the necessary documents. It is not clear when the information will be turned over.

Published: September 12, 2025 8:52pm

House Oversight Chairman James Comer on Friday announced that the Treasury Department has agreed to turn over Jeffrey Epstein's financial information and documents, including suspicious activity reports.

The information is part of his committee's investigation into Epstein, and the committee has subpoenaed documents from the disgraced, late-financier's estate, including his will, call and visitor logs, alleged client list and information on his 2008 non-prosecution agreement.

Comer said his committee has received a letter from the Treasury Department, promising to cooperate with the probe and release the necessary documents. It is not clear when the information will be turned over.

“The Trump Treasury Department is fully cooperating with our investigation into Epstein’s crimes,” Comer told Politico. “We will follow Epstein’s money trail to ensure transparency and accountability for the survivors and the American people.”

Epstein's estate and the Justice Department have already released some documents related to Epstein — who was facing federal sex-trafficking charges when he died in prison — including a controversial birthday book that was created for Epstein by his former associate Ghislaine Maxwell in 2003.

The administration has also sought to get grand jury testimony related to Epstein unsealed, but the attempts to do so have so far been futile.

Misty Severi is a news reporter for Just The News. You can follow her on X for more coverage. 

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