‘Jmail’ is like Gmail, but with Jeffrey Epstein’s emails

The more than 20,000 pages of Jeffrey Epstein emails released earlier this month by the House Oversight Committee were enough to spark more investigations into the convicted sex offender and those around him, such as former Harvard president and OpenAI board member Larry Summers. Now, Luke Igel and Riley Walz have reformatted the source documents into a format more familiar to anyone viewing them by copying the Gmail inbox to a website called “Jmail.”
In the weeks following the release of these files, the president signed the Epstein Files Transparency Act, which states that the attorney general must “make public, in a searchable and downloadable format, all unclassified records, documents, communications, and investigative materials in the possession of the Department of Justice” within 30 days.
This does not mean that all remaining files will be released, as CNN points out. The language of the law allows that information that could “jeopardize an active federal investigation or pending prosecution” could be temporarily exempted, but anything disclosed could fairly quickly end up being sorted into this easier-to-analyze version.



