Nude photos. The names and faces of sexual abuse victims. Bank account and Social Security numbers in full view.

All of these things appeared in the mountain of documents released Friday by the US Justice Department as part of its effort to comply with a law requiring it to open its investigative files on Jeffrey Epstein.

That law was intended to preserve important privacy protections for Epstein’s victims. Their names were supposed to have been blacked out in documents. Their faces and bodies were supposed to be obscured in photos.

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Mistakes, though, have been rampant. A review by news organisations has found countless examples of sloppy, inconsistent or nonexistent redactions that have revealed sensitive private information.

A document that was included in the US Department of Justice release of the Jeffrey Epstein files, shows a diagram prepared by the FBI attempting to chart the network of victims and the timeline of their alleged abuse. Photo: AP
A document that was included in the US Department of Justice release of the Jeffrey Epstein files, shows a diagram prepared by the FBI attempting to chart the network of victims and the timeline of their alleged abuse. Photo: AP

A photo of one girl who was underage when she was hired to give sexualised massages to Epstein in Florida appeared in a chart of his alleged victims. Police reports with the names of several of his victims, including some who have never stepped forward to identify themselves publicly, were released with no redactions at all.

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