How to Access Court Records, FBI Files & Leaked Archives β All Legal, All Free
Skip the gossip. Skip the news spin. Go straight to the actual documents β court filings, government records, leaked archives β all legal, all free.
Everything below is 100% legal and publicly available. No hacking. No OSINT tools. No technical skills. Just government websites, document databases, and search engines most people donβt know exist.
Think of it as Google β but for the stuff Google doesnβt surface. Court records, DOJ filings, FBI archives, leaked document databases. The kind of information journalists use to write exposΓ©s, except youβre cutting out the journalist and reading the source material yourself.
π The Example β Why Jeffrey Epstein?
Not because of the conspiracy theories β because heβs the perfect test case. Massive legal footprint. Government investigations. Court filings. Media coverage. FBI involvement. If you can find information on Epstein using these tools, you can find information on almost anyone with a public record.
Every tool below works the same way for any name β politicians, executives, public figures, organizations. Epstein is just the demo.
ποΈ Source 1 β U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ)
Think of the DOJ website as the governmentβs official press room for federal cases. When the feds charge someone, announce an investigation, or release findings β it shows up here. Not opinion. Not news spin. The actual government statement.
How to use it:
- Go to justice.gov
- Use the search bar β type any name, organization, or case
- Click the search button
Youβll get official DOJ press releases, court filings, investigation summaries, and congressional committee records.
For Epstein specifically, the House Oversight Committee released the full DOJ records:
Oversight Committee β Epstein DOJ Records
This works for any federal case β drug busts, financial fraud, terrorism charges, corporate crime. If the DOJ touched it, itβs searchable here.
π Source 2 β DocumentCloud (161,000+ Documents)
Think of DocumentCloud as a library where journalists upload the actual documents behind their stories. Not the article β the source material. Court filings, leaked memos, contracts, government reports, corporate emails.
How to use it:
- Go to documentcloud.org
- Type any name or topic in the search bar
- Browse the results β each one is a real, readable document
For Epstein, this returns 161,000+ documents:
DocumentCloud β Jeffrey Epstein
You can also see every person and organization that uploaded documents on this topic:
DocumentCloud is used by major newsrooms β NYT, Washington Post, ProPublica. When they publish a story saying βaccording to documents obtained byβ¦β β those documents are often on DocumentCloud.
π Source 3 β Google Journalist Studio (Pinpoint)
Think of Pinpoint as Google Search, but specifically trained to search through scanned documents, PDFs, and handwritten notes. Regular Google canβt read inside a scanned court filing β Pinpoint can. It uses AI to OCR (convert images of text into searchable text) millions of documents.
How to use it:
- Go to journaliststudio.google.com/pinpoint
- Search any name or topic
- Browse document collections from investigative journalists and public archives
Pinpoint is completely free. Itβs made by Google for journalists, but anyone can use it. Especially powerful for handwritten or scanned documents that regular search engines canβt read.
π Source 4 β DDoSecrets (Leaked & Public Interest Data)
Think of DDoSecrets as WikiLeaksβ more organized cousin. It hosts leaked datasets, hacked archives, and public interest data β but itβs a nonprofit transparency organization, not a hacking group. They host what whistleblowers and journalists send them.
DDoSecrets β Jeffrey Epstein
What youβll find: Leaked emails, financial records, flight logs, corporate filings, and documents that governments or corporations tried to keep private but were released through legal channels or whistleblowers.
Everything on DDoSecrets is already public. Youβre not accessing anything illegal β youβre reading documents that have already been released. But be aware: some datasets are sensitive. Use for research, not for doxxing people.
ποΈ Source 5 β FBI Vault (FBI's Public Archive)
The FBI Vault is exactly what it sounds like β the FBIβs own public reading room. Declassified files, investigation records, and FOIA (Freedom of Information Act) releases.
Whatβs in there: Investigation notes, interview summaries, surveillance records, and internal memos β though much of it will be redacted (blacked out) because the FBI likes to share just enough to say they shared something.
The FBI Vault covers thousands of topics β search for any public figure, organization, or historical event. Not just crime β they have files on MLK, Marilyn Monroe, UFOs, and hundreds of declassified Cold War operations.
β‘ Bonus Sources β Where to Go Even Deeper
The five sources above cover most public investigations. But if you want to go further β here are more free, legal databases most people donβt know about:
Court Records & Legal Filings
| Source | What It Has | Link |
|---|---|---|
| CourtListener | Free archive of millions of federal & state court opinions + PACER documents | courtlistener.com |
| PACER | Official US federal court filing system β 1 billion+ documents. Free if you stay under $30/quarter | pacer.uscourts.gov |
| Google Scholar (Case Law) | Free searchable database of US court opinions β federal since 1923, state since 1950 | scholar.google.com β select βCase lawβ |
| Justia | Free case law, legal codes, and court opinions | justia.com |
| Caselaw Access Project | 6.7 million+ cases digitized by Harvard Law Library β fully searchable | case.law |
| RECAP (browser extension) | Auto-saves PACER documents you access so others can read them free | free.law/recap |
Corporate, Financial & Government Records
| Source | What It Has | Link |
|---|---|---|
| SEC EDGAR | Every public companyβs financial filings, annual reports, insider trading disclosures | sec.gov/edgar |
| OpenCorporates | Worldβs largest open database of companies β 200M+ companies across jurisdictions | opencorporates.com |
| FOIA.gov | Central hub for Freedom of Information Act requests β search whatβs been released | foia.gov |
| GovInfo | US government publications β congressional reports, federal register, court rules | govinfo.gov |
| Federal Audit Clearinghouse | Audit reports for organizations spending federal money | facweb.census.gov |
People, Property & Public Data
| Source | What It Has | Link |
|---|---|---|
| OSINT Framework | Visual map of hundreds of free OSINT tools organized by category | osintframework.com |
| Awesome OSINT (GitHub) | Massive curated list of free OSINT resources β regularly updated | github.com/jivoi/awesome-osint |
| Google Alerts | Set up free email alerts for any name/topic β get notified when new content appears | google.com/alerts |
| Internet Archive (Wayback Machine) | See how any website looked in the past β useful for catching deleted content | web.archive.org |
| Have I Been Pwned | Check if an email has appeared in any public data breaches | haveibeenpwned.com |
π§ The Bigger Picture β Why This Matters
This isnβt about stalking people. Itβs about knowing that you have legal access to an insane amount of information β and most people never look.
Every time you read a news article that says βsources sayβ or βaccording to documentsβ β those documents are usually sitting in one of these databases. The journalist didnβt hack anything. They just knew where to look.
Now you do too.
| If You Want To⦠| Start Here |
|---|---|
| Read actual court filings on a case | CourtListener or PACER |
| See what the government officially said | DOJ (justice.gov) |
| Read the source documents behind news stories | DocumentCloud |
| Search through scanned/handwritten documents | Google Pinpoint |
| Find leaked or whistleblower data | DDoSecrets |
| Check FBI declassified files | FBI Vault |
| Research a companyβs finances | SEC EDGAR |
| Track ongoing mentions of a person/topic | Google Alerts |
Quick Hits
| Want | Do |
|---|---|
| β justice.gov β search any name | |
| β documentcloud.org β journalist uploads | |
| β Google Pinpoint β AI-powered OCR search | |
| β ddosecrets.org β public interest data | |
| β vault.fbi.gov β declassified records | |
| β courtlistener.com β free PACER mirror |
The information was always there. You just didnβt know where to look. Now you do.













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