The law was clear: Donald Trump's Department of Justice must disclose all investigative files on Jeffrey Epstein by December 19, 2025. One month past this deadline, the DOJ has released less than 1% of the files. Out of more than 2 million documents identified, they've disclosed approximately 12,285. This isn't compliance. This is defiance. The DOJ missed the mandatory deadline, withheld the required accountability report, and applied prohibited redactions to protect "politically exposed persons"—exactly what the law forbids. Representatives Ro Khanna and Thomas Massie, the bipartisan sponsors of this law, say it plainly: "The DOJ cannot be trusted with making mandatory disclosures under the Act." For survivors of Epstein's abuse, this delay isn't procedural—it's personal. These files are evidence of how institutions failed children. Congress created a legal obligation, not a suggestion. We demand immediate action: support the appointment of a special master to compel full DOJ compliance and ensure complete disclosure as the law requires.