WASHINGTON — Victims of Jeffrey Epstein are preparing to meet with House lawmakers on Tuesday amid a deepening congressional probe into the Department of Justice’s handling of the deceased pedophile’s prosecution, which recently included a records request for suspicious financial transactions.

Virginia Giuffre, one of the most outspoken of Epstein’s victims who first sued him in 2015, committed suicide in April following a car crash, but there are allegedly more than 1,000 victims who could reveal new information about Epstein, according to a DOJ memo released in July.

The private, bipartisan meeting with the survivors is the latest effort by the House Oversight Committee to uncover new details about Epstein’s case and comes after a flurry of subpoenas. 3

Former attorneys general

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