爱泼斯坦案幸存者起诉特朗普政府和谷歌,因其泄露个人信息


2026年3月27日 / 美国东部时间上午10:02 / 哥伦比亚广播公司新闻

华盛顿电 — 一群被定罪的恋童癖者杰弗里·爱泼斯坦(Jeffrey Epstein)性虐待案件的幸存者,因美国司法部公开的大量文件中泄露了他们的个人信息,正在起诉特朗普政府和谷歌。

这些幸存者于周四在加州联邦法院提起集体诉讼,指控美国司法部披露他们的个人身份信息违反了联邦隐私法。他们要求政府为每位集体成员至少赔偿1000美元,并要求谷歌赔偿不确定数额的损失。

在诉讼中,幸存者们表示,尽管司法部在2025年底和今年年初公布这些信息后已将其删除,但谷歌等在线实体仍继续重新发布这些信息,并且拒绝了删除请求。

“幸存者现在面临新的创伤,”他们在诉状中表示,”陌生人致电、发邮件给他们,威胁他们的人身安全,并指责他们与爱泼斯坦合谋,而实际上他们是爱泼斯坦的受害者。”

国会通过《爱泼斯坦档案透明法案》后,特朗普总统签署成为法律,要求司法部披露所有未分类材料,随后司法部公布了超过300万页与爱泼斯坦调查相关的记录。这些文件在2025年12月底至2026年1月底分批次公开,内容包括视频、法庭记录、联邦调查局和司法部文件、电子邮件、短信以及新闻剪辑。部分材料中提及了特朗普总统、前总统比尔·克林顿、安德鲁·蒙巴顿-温莎(Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor,即安德鲁王子)以及亿万富翁埃隆·马斯克和比尔·盖茨等知名人士。

但这些文件最初包含近100名幸存者的个人信息,包括姓名、电话号码和照片。得知信息泄露后,司法部已将包含这些信息的文件下架,其中包括一份未编辑的21名幸存者照片和大部分出生日期的文件。

司法部副部长托德·布兰奇(Todd Blanche)表示,司法部共审查了600万页文件,公布了其中约一半。他称,部分记录因各种原因被扣留,包括其中包含幸存者的个人信息。

幸存者在诉讼中称,尽管司法部已从其网站上移除了这些文件,但该部门明知未编辑的文件仍可在包括谷歌维护的网站在内的其他网站上公开获取。他们表示,政府”未采取任何行动要求删除这些文件”。

幸存者们表示,布兰奇的公开声明”结合司法部随后的文件泄露,表明美国故意优先考虑公开披露的数量和速度,而非爱泼斯坦幸存者的安全和隐私,采取了’先发布、后撤回’的做法,这使得对受害者(个人身份信息)的非法披露不仅是可预见的,而且是不可避免的”。

2005年,佛罗里达州的州当局对爱泼斯坦展开调查。他同意就两项州级卖淫指控认罪,并在与联邦检察官达成的协议中服刑18个月,从而避免了联邦起诉。

2019年,爱泼斯坦被起诉联邦性交易罪名。在曼哈顿监狱等待审判期间,他自杀身亡。

https://www.cbsnews.com/video/bondi-subpoenaed-to-testify-before-house-committee-over-epstein-files/

Epstein survivors sue Trump administration and Google over release of personal information

March 27, 2026 / 10:02 AM EDT / CBS News

Washington — A group of survivors of convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein’s sexual abuse is suing the Trump administration and Google over the release of their personal information in troves of files made public by the Justice Department.

The survivors filed a class-action lawsuit in federal court in California on Thursday arguing that the Justice Department’s disclosure of their personally identifiable information was a violation of federal privacy law. They are seeking at least $1,000 per class member from the government and an unspecific amount of damages from Google.

In their lawsuit, the survivors said that while the Justice Department took down their information after it was published in late 2025 and earlier this year, online entities like Google continued to republish it and have refused requests to remove it.

“Survivors now face renewed trauma,” they said in their suit. “Strangers call them, email them, threaten their physical safety, and accuse them of conspiring with Epstein when they are, in reality, Epstein’s victims.”

The Justice Department published more than 3 million pages of records related to its investigation into Epstein after Congress passed and President Trump signed into law the Epstein Files Transparency Act, which required the department to disclose all of its unclassified material.

Documents were made public in several tranches in late December and through the end of January, and included videos, court records, FBI and Justice Department documents, emails, text messages and news clippings. Some of the material included mentions of prominent figures like President Trump, former President Bill Clinton, Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, formerly known as Prince Andrew, and billionaires Elon Musk and Bill Gates.

But the files also initially contained nearly 100 survivors’ personal information, including their names, phone numbers and images. After learning of the disclosures, the Justice Department took down the documents containing that information, including one with unredacted photos of 21 survivors and most of their birthdates.

Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said the Justice Department reviewed 6 million pages in all and released roughly half of those pages. A portion of the records were withheld for various reasons, he said, including because they contain survivors’ personal information.

The survivors said in their lawsuit that while the Justice Department removed the files from its website, the department has known that the unredacted documents are still publicly available on other websites, including those maintained by Google. The government has “done nothing to demand their removal,” they said.

Public statements from Blanche, “viewed together with DOJ’s subsequent document-dump, demonstrate that the United States intentionally prioritized volume and speed of public disclosure over the safety and privacy of Epstein survivors, adopting a release now, retract later approach that made unlawful disclosures of victim (personally identifying information) not merely foreseeable, but inevitable,” the survivors said.

Epstein was investigated by state authorities in Florida in 2005. He agreed to plead guilty to two state prostitution charges and serve an 18-month prison sentence as part of a deal with federal prosecutors that saw him avoid federal prosecution.

Epstein was then indicted on federal sex trafficking charges in 2019. He died by suicide at a Manhattan correctional facility while awaiting trial.

https://www.cbsnews.com/video/bondi-subpoenaed-to-testify-before-house-committee-over-epstein-files/

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