
Here & Now Anytime Survivors' lawyer on DOJ's 'misguided approach' to Epstein files
Feb 10, 2026
Spencer Kuvin, an attorney who has represented Epstein survivors, critiques the DOJ's redaction choices and privacy harms. Jacqueline Charles, Miami Herald Caribbean correspondent, reports on Haiti's dissolved council, gang violence, and humanitarian fallout. Andrew Athias, Philadelphia content creator, shares behind-the-scenes stories of performing as the Super Bowl halftime grass prop.
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DOJ Redaction Process Criticized
- Spencer Kuvin says DOJ's approach to redacting Epstein files is misguided and unreliable.
- He argues a neutral third party should review documents because DOJ and FBI can't be trusted to follow the law.
Large Unreleased Evidence Pool Remains
- Millions of pages, photos and videos remain unreleased, creating ongoing uncertainty for survivors.
- Kuvin uses this to argue for oversight to ensure complete, lawful disclosure.
Survivors' Names Were Accidentally Exposed
- Kuvin found two of his clients' names left unredacted, including the 14-year-old who started the 2006 investigation.
- He alerted DOJ and one document was pulled, but the names may have already been downloaded and exposed.
