Unidentified speakers allege missing DOJ files tied to survivor’s claim; some say recent release included explicit images

Unidentified forum · February 25, 2026

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Summary

Unidentified participants said highlighted DOJ files tied to a survivor alleging abuse by the president when she was a minor are missing from public search results and alleged that a recent DOJ release redistributed uncensored images; the transcript records allegations but offers no independent verification.

Unidentified participants at a recorded discussion raised allegations that highlighted Department of Justice files tied to a survivor’s claim against the president are missing from the DOJ’s public manifest and that a recent DOJ document release included uncensored images.

The participants said the missing documents relate to "one survivor who has made...some serious allegations about the president, when she was a minor," and identified the survivor's age in the discussion as 14. One speaker said the documents that should appear in the searchable manifest were not present and that "all the highlighted ones are missing." The same speaker added that "those that are missing could be part of the other 3,000,000" or could have been "confiscated and destroyed." These statements were presented as claims and were not verified in the transcript.

Why it matters: DOJ records and their completeness are central to public oversight and to any potential inquiry into allegations tied to public officials. If documents are missing from a public manifest, that raises questions about recordkeeping and transparency; allegations that a release contained uncensored images raise separate concerns about privacy and the handling of sensitive material.

What was said: Speaker 1 urged others to check the manifest and said the highlighted entries were missing from the searchable files, adding that some documents the speaker could find had been located personally while others were absent. "All the highlighted ones are missing," Speaker 1 said. The speaker also accused the agency of selectivity: "we... think of the DOJ. They're just... picking and choosing what they want to." Speaker 1 further suggested missing items "could be part of the other 3,000,000" or might have been "confiscated and destroyed."

Speaker 2 described the most recent release in stronger terms, alleging it amounted to "the distribution of child ****** abuse materials," and said, "our own DOJ just redistributed child ****** abuse materials." According to the discussion, the images were not redacted: when Speaker 1 asked whether faces had been blacked out, Speaker 1 was told they were not. Speaker 2 said the photos were uncensored and recounted that The New York Times contacted them afterward and described the images as explicit.

Limits of the record: The transcript contains participants’ claims and descriptions but does not include independent documentation or confirmation that the DOJ actually removed or destroyed files, that the missing highlighted entries are part of a set of 3,000,000, or that the DOJ intentionally redistributed uncensored images. The transcript does not identify the speakers by name or provide a forum context, and it does not include any official DOJ response.

Next steps and context: The discussion in the transcript records allegations that would require independent verification from the Department of Justice or from archivists responsible for the manifested files. The transcript does not show any formal motion, vote, or agency statement; no outcome or formal action is recorded.