Dershowitz Calls On Congress Should Investigate Epstein Death

Harvard Law School professor emeritus Alan Dershowitz is calling for full transparency in the ongoing fallout from the Jeffrey Epstein scandal—urging Congress to bring him in for public testimony and to unseal the identities of accusers tied to the case.

Speaking on Newsmax, Dershowitz said he welcomes the opportunity to testify before the House Oversight Committee and insisted that all relevant documents surrounding Epstein’s 2019 death be made public.

Without full disclosure, he warned, the truth may never be known.

Dershowitz’s remarks came in response to news that Tova Noel—a guard charged with failing to properly monitor Epstein before his death—will testify before the House Oversight Committee on March 26.

The longtime attorney also pointed to references involving former President Bill Clinton in Epstein-related materials, arguing that critical details have been withheld from the public.

“Clinton’s name is on the list,” Dershowitz argued. “It says Bill Clinton, not a victim in Epstein’s case, claimed she was invited to an orgy with Clinton but did not attend.”

“You know, again, let’s have a public hearing, but let’s name these accusers,” he added. “These accusers have no right to accuse and then hide behind anonymity.”

Dershowitz, who was no longer representing Epstein at the time of his arrest in 2019, reiterated his own denial of allegations against him and criticized the Justice Department for releasing documents with key names redacted.

“So, for example, let’s turn to me,” Dershowitz said. “It says blank, blank, blank, blacked out. Stated she gave him a massage on Epstein’s plane. Parenthesis. Not a minor.”

“I was never on Epstein’s plane with a young woman,” he insisted.

“So let’s understand that this is an adult, a woman who was on Epstein’s plane, she says,” said Dershowitz. “I was never on Epstein’s plane with a young woman. I never got a massage. This is total defamation, a total lie.”

He added that the lack of transparency prevents him from clearing his name.

“But he added that he can’t disprove the claim ‘because they won’t give me her name.’”

Dershowitz also addressed the circumstances surrounding Epstein’s death at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, noting that the facility’s strict security protocols make outside interference unlikely.

“It’s very hard to imagine anybody getting through the security of the Metropolitan Detention Center, which I have visited numerous times to see clients. It’s very, very hard to get through there. So if he was killed, it would have to have been an inside job, and it has to be investigated,” Dershowitz said.

Absent a full investigation, he warned the case could remain unresolved indefinitely.

“Otherwise, this is going to go down in history as one of those other unsolved mysteries, along with the Kennedy assassination and many others,” Dershowitz said. “And it’s time to put it to rest.”

He also called for scrutiny of Epstein’s New Mexico estate, known as Zorro Ranch, emphasizing that all aspects of the case should be open to public review.

“I visited the property when it was under construction, and it was a construction site,” he said. “But everything should be investigated. This should be an open book. There should be no redactions.”

“What the public needs to know is everything,” Dershowitz concluded. “Nothing restricted.”

The renewed calls for transparency come as lawmakers face mounting pressure to provide answers in one of the most controversial and unresolved cases in recent American history.

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