NM Dems demand raw Epstein files with graphic child sex abuse material
New Mexico Democrats are escalating their fight with the U.S. Department of Justice over Jeffrey Epstein’s Zorro Ranch records, demanding access to unredacted files even as federal officials warn that handing over millions of unredacted documents could violate court orders, federal law, and protections for victims and witnesses.
The public clash centers on New Mexico Attorney General Raúl Torrez’s revived criminal investigation into Epstein’s former 7,500-acre ranch near Santa Fe, where court documents and accusers have alleged Epstein sexually abused girls and women.
Torrez, a Democrat, has accused the DOJ of stonewalling the state’s investigation by refusing to provide unredacted records that New Mexico investigators say they need to identify survivors, witnesses, and possible co-conspirators.
But the DOJ says the demand is not so simple — and the material at issue is not ordinary paperwork.
In Epstein-related cases, unredacted records can contain the most sensitive material imaginable: victim names, addresses, identifying details, witness information, sealed investigative records, and potentially child sexual abuse material, commonly called child pornography. Such files may also include graphic evidence, images, descriptions, or accounts involving minors being raped or sexually abused — exactly the type of material federal law and court orders are designed to keep from broader disclosure.
That is the backdrop of the fight now being waged by New Mexico Democrats, who are demanding records in unredacted form despite the DOJ’s insistence that it cannot simply turn over everything without violating legal protections.
According to reporting on the dispute, a Justice Department spokesperson rejected New Mexico’s claim that federal officials were refusing to cooperate, calling the accusation “false.”
“Federal law, court orders and privacy protections for victims and witnesses do not allow us to release millions of unredacted documents, regardless of any deadline set by NMDOJ,” the DOJ spokesperson said. “We will continue to follow federal law and the court orders that are in place.”
The spokesperson added, “To capitulate to their demands would be to break federal law. Is that what the NM AG is suggesting?”
That warning has not stopped Torrez from turning up the pressure.
Torrez recently told acting U.S. Attorney General Todd Blanche that despite “verbal assurances of cooperation from the USDOJ,” state investigators had not received access to the requested documents and had received “no substantive response.” He warned that if records are not provided by July 31, New Mexico will consider the request denied and “pursue all available legal remedies.”
The New Mexico Department of Justice also posted on X that officials from the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York had informed the state they “will NOT cooperate and will not support the only active criminal investigation into Jeffrey Epstein.”
The dispute places New Mexico at the center of the national Epstein files fight — but with a major complication: the files reportedly include sensitive victim information, court-protected material, and other content that federal officials say cannot legally be handed over in raw, unredacted form.
In a separate court fight over Epstein records, the DOJ has defended redactions by arguing that many of the withheld details protect the identities and privacy of victims. Federal officials have also warned that handwritten FBI notes and other investigative materials carry a heightened risk of exposing personally identifiable information.
The Justice Department has reportedly released about 3.5 million pages of Epstein investigative materials while withholding roughly 2.5 million additional pages. DOJ officials say the remaining records are protected largely to safeguard victims and sensitive government interests.
The issue reached Capitol Hill this week when U.S. Sen. Martin Heinrich, D-N.M., pressed Director of National Intelligence nominee Jay Clayton during a Senate Intelligence Committee hearing.
Heinrich pushed Clayton to commit to providing the information requested by Torrez. Clayton said his office was willing to work with New Mexico officials but noted that some records are subject to court protective orders.
“My folks, I think as we speak, are seeking dialog with the attorney general to see if we can reach an accommodation that is consistent with those protective orders,” Clayton said.
Heinrich said he believed redacted names could be important to New Mexico’s probe.
“I think it is quite clear that it is likely that there are survivors, witnesses and co-conspirators whose names have been redacted that are necessary for him to effectively complete that investigation,” Heinrich said, referring to Torrez.
At the same time, Heinrich also acknowledged the need for caution, pointing to a prior incident in which the DOJ released some Epstein victims’ personal information.
Following the revelations, state Rep. John Block, who also serves as the Piñon Post‘s publisher, commented via X, “It’s sickening that radicals are demanding the fully un-redacted files (including personal victim information and child p*rn) — just to make political attacks — despite putting these victims in harm’s way. THEY LITERALLY WANT PHOTOS + VIDEOS OF KIDS BEING RAPED FULLY RELEASED. It’s vile and unconscionable.”
The Journal’s report also noted that a fundraising firm emailed a lunch invitation to Jeffrey Epstein on Heinrich’s behalf in 2012, a detail that adds another layer of political awkwardness as Heinrich now pushes for federal action on Epstein records.
Torrez’s office was not satisfied with Clayton’s public assurances.
“Words spoken to a Senate committee mean nothing if they don’t show up in writing to this office,” Lauren Rodriguez, the attorney general’s chief of staff, said in a statement. She reiterated the July 31 deadline before the state considers additional legal action.
The renewed Zorro Ranch investigation follows years of unanswered questions. Epstein died in federal custody in 2019 while awaiting trial on sex-trafficking charges. His death was ruled a suicide. New Mexico previously investigated allegations tied to the ranch, but no state charges were filed.
Piñon Post has previously reported on disturbing questions surrounding the ranch, including Epstein-linked references to a proposed “Zorro Smiles” dental setup, medical equipment, private ambulance plans, and allegations that victims were abused on the property. During Ghislaine Maxwell’s 2021 trial, Epstein accuser Annie Farmer testified that Maxwell abused her at Zorro Ranch when Farmer was 16.
State and local investigators searched the ranch in March after Torrez reopened the criminal investigation, but no results from that search have been publicly disclosed.
Now, the fight is shifting from the ranch itself to the records federal officials have long controlled.
New Mexico Democrats say they need unredacted files to pursue the only active criminal investigation into Epstein’s alleged crimes at Zorro Ranch.
The DOJ says releasing millions of unredacted documents could violate federal law, court orders, and victim privacy protections — including protections against exposing child sexual abuse material, victim identities, and graphic evidence involving minors.
That leaves one major question: are New Mexico Democrats demanding the records needed to finally investigate Zorro Ranch — or are they pushing federal officials to hand over sensitive victim material the law says must remain protected?
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