INVESTIGATINGLegal & JusticeAfter concerns about government-hosted Epstein files being selectively removed, independent researchers created their own servers hosting the complete archive: approximately 3,200 videos and 597,000 PDF documents, freely accessible to the public.
“After concerns about government-hosted Epstein files being selectively removed, independent researchers created their own servers hosting the complete archive: approximately 3,200 videos and 597,000 PDF documents, freely accessible to the public.”
After the DOJ took 47,635 Epstein files offline for "review," independent researchers took matters into their own hands. They now host the complete archive on their own servers — 3,200 videos and 597,000 PDFs — beyond the reach of any government takedown.
When the government demonstrated it could selectively remove files from public access, the community response was swift: mirror everything. The effort, announced on r/Epstein (which garnered over 24,000 upvotes), represents one of the largest independent archival projects of government documents.
The archive includes court filings, depositions, flight logs, communications, photographs, and video evidence spanning years of the Epstein investigation. Researchers have built search and navigation tools to make the massive archive accessible.
When official channels prove unreliable, decentralized archiving becomes essential. This is the digital equivalent of the Pentagon Papers — citizens ensuring that evidence of elite wrongdoing cannot be quietly disappeared.
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