
Photo: SPI
Websites have collated DOJ releases.
EPSTEIN FILES: WHERE TO VIEW
The Epstein Files have become one of the most talked about news stories in recent memory, with the world still coming to grips with contents of the latest batch of 3 million documents.
For those wishing to explore these documents, resources are available that lets one easily navigate the massive trove of information – including specifically for emails and videos.
In late-2025, a set of tools known as the Jmail Suite emerged on the internet with the aim of making the massive amount of public records easier to explore.
Two components of this suite that have drawn particular attention are Jmail, a browser-based email archive, and JeffTube, a video interface styled like modern streaming platforms.
These sites are built on publicly released materials, and can be viewed below.
Jmail
Jmail is an online archive that presents the publicly released emails from Epstein’s various accounts, including personal inboxes, in an interface resembling Gmail.
The project was created by internet developer Riley Walz and developer Luke Igel, not by government authorities, and lets users explore the inbox as they would their own.

The goal is to take email content released under the Epstein Files Transparency Act and make it searchable, navigable, and visually familiar to users.
Where official government sites often publish thousands of pages of PDFs or raw documents that are slow to sift through, Jmail restructures these into a clean inbox layout with familiar elements: folders, labels, search bars, and conversation threads.
Users can click through emails, sort them by contact, and see conversations tied to historical events and relationships.

At present, Jmail is reportedly attracting millions of visitors due to its user-friendly access to tens of thousands of released emails – which include exchanges with public figures, associates, and other contacts.
The project has since added other modules that structure Epstein-related materials in different ways: photos (JPhotos), flight records (JFlights), Amazon orders (Jamazon), and an AI-generated encyclopaedia called Jwiki.

JeffTube
JeffTube is the Jmail Suite’s answer to video archival: a web tool that organises the publicly released video files from the DOJ’s Epstein document releases into a YouTube-like interface.
According to reporting on the project, JeffTube hosts over 1,100 video files with familiar playback features – like thumbnails, recommendations, and a feed.

Not all video content is made equally accessible – developers say they kept certain files unlisted due to disturbing or sensitive content, including explicit material that was identified in the official release.
The videos in JeffTube include dozens of short clips from Epstein’s collection – some recorded by him, others sourced through investigators – as well as some surveillance footage related to his detention before his death.

With each passing day, more revelations are uncovered – and searching has been made that much easier with the launch of such platforms for the world to access.
Traditional Route
The Epstein Files Transparency Act compelled the U.S Department of Justice to declassify and distribute a massive volume of documents, images, and videos tied to Epstein’s case.
Official government portals can be difficult for journalists and the public to navigate: often scanned PDFs, non-searchable formats, or simple dumps of files that are hard to organise.
But if you do want to access these files the traditional way, you can on the official website.


Projects like Jmail and JeffTube stem from a desire for accessibility: making archives easier to read and explore, especially for researchers who seek to understand patterns, relationships, and historical context without manually opening thousands of PDF documents.
For some, these interfaces democratise access and shine light on the broader scope of the public record. For others, they raise questions about the presentation of highly sensitive material – particularly when the content was never designed for public consumption.
Whatever way you choose to view, these are not secret repositories of stolen data – they are tools built on publicly released materials intended to make the information accessible.
Anyone exploring the Epstein Files should do so with an understanding of where the data comes from, and why these platforms were created in the first place.
What are some of your biggest takeaways from the Epstein releases?
Be sure to leave your thoughts in the comment section below!

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“The Big O” ‘s soundtrack to “A selfie with Jeff”:
https://substack.com/@thegoodcitizen/note/c-209837780