Global News Podcast - Epstein files: More than three million new pages released
Episode Date: January 31, 2026The US Justice Department releases millions more pages of files in its Epstein investigation. Victims of the late sex offender, Jeffrey Epstein, have promised to fight on, after they accused the US De...partment of Justice of protecting abusers. Also: Mexico's president warns that US tariffs on countries helping Cuba could trigger a humanitarian crisis. Claudia Sheinbaum's comments come after President Trump signed an executive order threatening additional tariffs on countries that sell oil to Cuba. Iran’s foreign minister insists his country is ready to discuss its nuclear programme with the US. Anti-ICE protests take place across the US following fatal shootings in Minneapolis. We look back at the life of the Emmy-winning actress, comedian and screenwriter Catherine O'Hara who has died at the age of 71. And, Bridgerton season four is on our screens. The Regency era drama is number 1 on the streaming platform, Netflix.The Global News Podcast brings you the breaking news you need to hear, as it happens. Listen for the latest headlines and current affairs from around the world. Politics, economics, climate, business, technology, health – we cover it all with expert analysis and insight. Get the news that matters, delivered twice a day on weekdays and daily at weekends, plus special bonus episodes reacting to urgent breaking stories. Follow or subscribe now and never miss a moment. Get in touch: globalpodcast@bbc.co.uk
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If journalism is the first draft of history, what happens if that draft is flawed?
In 1999, four Russian apartment buildings were bombed, hundreds killed.
But even now, we still don't know for sure who did it.
It's a mystery that sparked chilling theories.
I'm Helena Merriman, and in a new BBC series, I'm talking to the reporters who first covered this story.
What did they miss the first time?
The History Bureau, Putin and the apartment bombs.
Listen on BBC.com or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is the Global News podcast from the BBC World Service.
I'm Will Chalk and in the early hours of the 31st of January, these are our main stories.
The US Justice Department releases over 3 million more documents related to the late convicted sex offender
Jeffrey Epstein. Mexico's president, Claudia Shanebaum, warned that US tariffs on countries helping
Cuba could trigger a humanitarian crisis. Thousands of protesters have again gathered in the city of
Minneapolis in the United States to demand the withdrawal of federal immigration agents.
Also in this podcast. Being watched and being followed by the same faces I see in different places,
it was something that I couldn't comprehend.
We'll hear from a human rights YouTuber
who's won a court case after his phone was infected with spyware.
So three million pages, 180,000 images and 2,000 videos.
In other words, it's going to be a busy few weeks for lawyers, journalists,
and anyone else just curious, to sift through the latest,
and we're told last dump of files relating to the case of the convicted paedophile
Jeffrey Epstein. We're told there are references to public figures who've previously been
associated with Epstein, including the former Microsoft boss, Bill Gates, President Donald Trump
and Andrew Mountbatten Windsor. But there's no suggestion that appearing in the files implies
any wrongdoing and many people who have featured in previous releases have denied any illicit
behaviour in relation to the late sex offender. Women who were abused by Epstein want criminal
charges brought against some of his associates. Todd Blanche is US-Dates.
Deputy Attorney General.
There's this built-in assumption that somehow there's this hidden trance of information of men that we know about,
that we're covering up or that we're choosing not to prosecute.
That is not the case.
I don't know whether there are men out there that abuse these women.
If we learn about information and evidence that allows us to prosecute them, you better believe we will.
Our North America correspondent Peter Bowes told me more.
It is, as you imply, a vast collection of documents images,
videos, many with redactions
and that's what's making it so difficult.
In some cases, entire pages blacked out
and that fact in itself has caught the eye
of many since it makes it very difficult
to verify any of the claims being made.
But we know that there are several high-profile figures
who are mentioned, including Donald Trump,
with hundreds of references in one document.
There are a number of allegations
about the president that come from an FBI tip line,
which investigators at the time deemed not to be credible.
Many of these appear to be based on unverified tips received by the agency
and were made without any supporting evidence.
And Donald Trump has consistently denied any wrongdoing in relation to Geoffrey Epstein
and has not been accused of any crimes.
Bill Gates, the high-profile figure, has dismissed claims
that he caught a sexually transmitted disease,
claims made in email sent from Epstein's email account.
A spokesman for Mr Gates told the BBC that these allegations were absolutely absurd and completely false.
Obviously there's the redactions, but there are also documents that still haven't been released.
Is this doing anything to satisfy those people who are convinced that there is a cover-up still?
No, far from it.
In fact, there's probably more suspicion now than before this latest release of documents,
which, as you say, would appear to be the final one.
There are campaigners still say that they haven't been given full transparency.
The Epstein Survivor's Group of Women issued a joint statement saying,
this is not over.
We will not stop until the truth is fully revealed,
adding that the Justice Department can't claim it is finished releasing files
until every legally required document is released.
and a similar theme from the top Democrat on the House Oversight Committee,
which is investigating this as well,
saying that it is outrageous and incredibly concerning
that roughly only 50% of these files have been released.
That was Peter Bose.
A warning next from the President of Mexico about Cuba.
Claudia Shanebaum says Donald Trump's threat of new tariffs
on countries exporting oil to Havana could completely cripple the island.
She's determined to find, she says, a diplomatic solution.
It's very important that there is no humanitarian crisis on the island.
So I instructed the Secretary of Foreign Affairs to discuss this with the US government
or have then the US send the oil.
This is a matter of supporting the Cuban people.
Our correspondent Will Grant in Mexico City told me more about that executive order,
which was signed by Donald Trump on Thursday.
In essence, part of the aim of Donald Trump's executive order is to issue a warning, I think, to Mexico and any other prospective energy partners to Cuba, to basically say to them, look, do not step up and try to replace Venezuelan crude oil supplies to Cuba.
The aim, it appears, to all intents and purposes, is to see the end of the Cuban Revolution in power in Havana.
So I think what we're seeing on the Mexican side is that message being delivered to the presidency of Claudia Schaenbaum.
And her reaction has been in her morning press briefing that the Trump step could essentially lead to what she called a widespread humanitarian crisis on the island involving hospitals, the provision of basic food and other services.
And you were the Cuba correspondent. How bad are things on the island right now?
Well, I was there just two weeks ago, and the short answer is very, very bad.
As bad as it has been at any time since the height of the Cold War,
people by and large who lived through that experience say the current situation is significantly worse.
You've got the potential complete loss of Venezuelan oil now,
and it does look like the Trump administration has been successful in its aim
to cut out Venezuela from propping up the Cuban rule.
revolution any longer. So although we're getting noises in diplomatic notes from Caracas about
how it is inhumane and unjust and incorrect to sort of isolate Cuba in this way, the truth of the
matter is that Washington is increasingly controlling the energy sector in Venezuela. And as part of that
strategy, it will be cutting off the supply to the communist-run island of Cuba.
You talk about Mexico filling that Venezuelan void, if you like, in terms of oil shipments. How
important are the shipments than Mexico's supplying? They're vital. I mean, at the height of the
relationship between Venezuela and Cuba, the supplies knocked on the door of 100,000 barrels of oil
a day. In recent years, they've dwindled to more like 35,000 barrels of oil a day, but that
is also completely vanished now from Venezuela. That makes Mexico the biggest supplier in maybe 25,000
barrels a day. So to take that out, those rolling blackouts that I've mentioned will just get worse and
worse. I was seeing them at sort of 12, 15-hour stretches in parts of Havana. That's the capital. That's the
bit that they're suggesting always they try to keep online as much as possible. That's going to be a
struggle. It also means food rotting in fridges. It means difficulties, as Claudia Shane Baum says,
for hospitals, schools being shuttered and closed, businesses being closed,
and obviously people very, very worried about what comes next.
And when we add to the fact that there is this threat of tariffs
to all future and possible energy partners to Cuba,
then it's worth remembering that there are estimates that suggest
in terms of the oil supplies that Cuba has in reserve,
those could dwindle within as little as two weeks.
Will Grant there, speaking to me from Mexico City.
Now, Iran's foreign minister, Abbas Arakchi, insists his country is ready to discuss its nuclear program with the United States.
But he pointed out that any talks must be on an equal footing and not dictated by the threat of military action.
US warships have been deployed to the region as part of what President Donald Trump has described as a massive armada.
Mr Trump also says he wants Iran to stop killing anti-government protests and end its nuclear ambitions.
Batman Calbasi from BBC Persian told me more.
The internet shutdown obviously made it a lot harder to get information from every corner of the country to realize the depth of the crisis that this mass crackdown has caused.
But still there is a very small connectivity, level of connectivity that goes on, sometimes spikes.
And in those periods, we get a clear idea of this catastrophe.
We see the numbers of different human rights organizations, but even though none is exact,
we can confidently say tens of thousands of people have been killed and injured, and thousands
more are in detention centers under horrific conditions, torture, the possibility of executions,
just a wide area of methods that the government is using.
to shut down dissent. And, you know, next to images of mothers and fathers burying their 20-year-olds
all across the country. Still, we had just one case of a 19-year-old whose family thought he was
somewhere in a detention center since January 8th and 9th, because they basically lost touch with him
and only to find his body in a makeshift morgue. It just gives you the mass scale of the killing
by the government. The images we're getting show how they open fire on unarmed protesters
everywhere. Women, children, just sprayed them down and killed as many as possible,
clearly with an intention that to create such level of horror and terror that people would
go home and not come out protesting again. So clearly a lot of grieving going on, but do we know how
people are reacting to this news of the American Armada approaching?
That is a question that you will get mixed answers from depending on who you speak with.
But what I can say is that having spoken to very much the same groups of people throughout
the decades of this going on, I see an increased number of people who used to be against
any foreign intervention to be now for the kind of intervention that wouldn't hurt the
civilian population, wouldn't hurt the civilian infrastructure, but somehow bring the regime down.
And now, there can be a lot of debates if that's even possibility, but the feeling, the mood
has changed dramatically post-January 8th and January 9th.
There is no polling in Iran.
Nobody can tell what the majority thinks, but one can feel the mood of people who were
against it and now for it in result of this catastrophe.
Butman Calbasi from BBC Persian.
The Emmy-winning actress, comedian and screenwriter Catherine O'Hara.
You might know her from her roles in Home Alone in Shits Creek
has died at the age of 71 after a brief illness.
Canada's Prime Minister Mark Carney's paid tribute,
saying over five decades of work,
Catherine earned her place in the canon of Canadian comedy
and added that the country had lost the legend.
Our arts correspondent, David Silato, looks back at her life.
a terrible feeling.
That we didn't do something.
It was more than 30 years ago that Catherine O'Hara
playing Kate McAllister,
the mother on the plane,
realizing she'd left something behind.
Kevin!
Home alone was just one of a string of hit movies in the 80s.
Beetle juice, after hours, heartburn
for this Canadian actor who'd come up through the comedy circuit.
And then in her 60s saw her career take off again
with comedies such as Schitt's Creek and the studio.
In a statement, it was said she died at home after a brief illness.
Among those paying tribute, Kevin McCauley Culkin, who wrote,
I thought we had time.
We had so much more to say.
David Silato, looking back on the life of Catherine O'Hara.
Still to come on this podcast.
We begin another season.
I should like great gossip.
The social season.
It's number one in more than 80 countries on Netflix.
We'll hear from the stars of period drama Bridgeton.
If journalism is the first draft of history, what happens if that draft is flawed?
In 1999, four Russian apartment buildings were bombed, hundreds killed.
But even now, we still don't know for sure who did it.
It's a mystery that sparked chilling theories.
I'm Helena Merriman, and in a new BBC series, I'm talking to the reporters who first covered this story.
What did they miss the first time?
The History Bureau, Putin and the apartment bombs.
Listen on BBC.com or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is The Global News Podcast.
Thousands of protesters have again gathered in Minneapolis in the United States
to demand federal immigration agents leave the city.
Police fired tear gas at crowds in government plaza
and outside the building where immigrants have been detained.
It's been around a week since the death of protester Alex Press.
at the hands of federal immigration officers.
The death, which followed the fatal shooting of Renee Good by an ICE officer,
has ignited public outcry across the U.S.
At a news conference in Minneapolis on Thursday,
White House Bordersar Tom Homan vowed to continue the immigration enforcement operation.
In my meetings with folks so far,
and most important the governor and the AG, the mayor fry,
we didn't agree on everything.
I didn't expect to review on anything.
I've heard many people want to know why we're talking to people
who they don't consider Friends Administration.
Bottom line is you can't fix problems if you don't have discussions.
I didn't come to Minnesota for photo ops or headlines.
You haven't seen me.
I came here to seek solutions, and that's what we're going to do.
And we've come a long way, and we got some good wins.
for the people in Minnesota, I think,
and for the administration and for the safety, security of this city.
Well, let's hear from Richard Carlebone,
who's the chairperson of the Minnesota Democratic Farmer Labor Party,
which is affiliated with the National Democratic Party.
He's been talking to my colleague, Paul Henley.
What we see on the ground here is more than 3,000 ICE agents,
violating our constitutional rights,
roughing up American citizens.
The morning they asked us to ramp down the rhetoric,
they were throwing tear gas outside of a preschool in a suburb.
But are you powerless to change what is happening even though you have the political majority there?
We're not powerless.
We can continue to do all the organizing we can,
and we can continue to demand that our members of Congress,
that federal elected officials stand up and stand with Minnesota,
do not stand with Donald Trump.
One of the things that you are doing practically is offering people training in peaceful protesting.
Tell us about that and the demand for it at the moment.
Yeah, in the last three weeks, we've trained over 8,000 individuals to be constitutional observers.
What this means is that people understand what their rights are in a moment when federal agents are acting lawlessness.
And the result of this is people around the world are seeing video evidence of federal agents violating constitutional rights and breaking the law.
So the constitutional observers are doing really important work on the front lines, revealing the lawlessness.
How important is that video evidence, even when officials deny it, how crucial is the film that your trainees are taking?
Well, people can see with their own two eyes the truth.
Public opinion when it comes to ICE actions and federal agents' actions in Minnesota and around the country has shifted dramatically over the last several weeks because our observers are collecting that video evidence, producing it on the internet.
and people around the world are watching Donald Trump's federal agents violating rights,
and people are ready to hold them accountable.
Has the situation been diffused now?
Well, what I would tell you is that because Tom Homan's in Minnesota,
they want us to accept the same kind of actions we are under for the last several weeks,
but only now the person doing it is smiling at us.
Are protesters being scared off the streets?
Some must be.
I mean, there's an obvious risk in taking part in protest.
even peaceful protest.
I'm so proud of the Minnesotans who show up because it is a scary situation,
but they continue to show up.
What's really devastating to me is that they're American citizens because they are black or brown
who are afraid to leave their house.
I know people who are American citizens who literally, when they go get groceries,
they carry their passport because they've been stopped.
And that is really the devastating consequence.
You are encouraging protest, which the government says is a provocation.
How do you react when people say you are provoking trouble?
One week ago today on Friday, we had thousands, tens of thousands of people peacefully protest in a march in downtown Minneapolis.
And it was one of the most beautiful things.
All of that was peaceful.
The next morning at 9 a.m. ICE agents executed Alex Pretty on the streets of Minneapolis in broad daylight.
That is not peaceful.
That was Richard Carbom, the chairperson of the Minnesota Democratic Farmer Labor Party.
and that's just a flavor of some of the outrage that's been sparked by the Trump administration's operation
among some in Minneapolis.
The Department of Homeland Security claims its goal is to target and remove violent undocumented immigrants.
But Native Americans say they're also being targeted by ICE agents.
Anna Fagie reports.
We're citizens.
Get your ID.
We're Native.
What are you doing?
This is the moment, a member of a Native American tribe in Minnesota, gets dragged out of a car,
by federal immigration agents, it is part of a trend observed by Native Americans across the U.S.
where federal immigration agents, or ICE, increasingly target, harass, and detain members of the Native
American community.
Two people posing as volunteers come here over the weekend.
Ruth Buffalo is the president of the Minnesota Indian Women's Resource Center, a Native American
community center feeling the direct impact of the federal immigration
operation. One man was parked at a stoplight and then harassed by ICE and he gave him his tribal
ID. Ice was very aggressive to him and threw his card back at him. So it really doesn't matter,
really, if you have a tribal ID. Tribal ID is a federally recognized form of identification.
And Jacqueline de Leon, a lawyer, says ICE has absolutely no business of detaining and targeting Native Americans.
A Native American is the United States.
citizen. We've seen that Native Americans have been unfairly racially profiled. It's certainly
alarming to seize the disregard for regular process that would allow ICE to find out relatively
quickly that Native Americans are in fact United States citizens. The BBC reached out to the
Department of Homeland Security and asked for their motivation for detaining members of the Native American
community. So far, we've had no reply.
Around 35,000 Native Americans live in the Minneapolis area.
At the local coffee shop, powwow grounds, a neighborhood aid hub has sprung up.
Volunteers gather here, and to them, it's clear that ICE is picking up people based on their skin color.
Lincoln is a volunteer at the aid hub.
These are our families, our friends that are being taken and detained for however long.
Maybe we don't see them for weeks.
Maybe we don't see them ever again.
That worry, that fear has brought a lot of people together.
While Donald Trump's administration has somewhat softened its tone about the operation,
on the ground, in Minneapolis, the locals, including the Native American community,
are still feeling its effects.
For many, including Ryan, one big question remains unanswered.
So what's the plan?
Like, are they going to deport them?
I even asked them that, where are you going to send me?
I'm Native American.
Where are you going to send me?
The answer that I got is back to your reservation where you belong.
You don't belong out here in society anyway.
That report was by Anna Fagie in Minneapolis.
A Saudi human rights activist who accused Saudi Arabia of targeting him with spyware
has been awarded almost $4 million in damages by a UK court.
The High Court effectively proved that the Saudi royal family,
ordered the hack with the infamous Pegasus spyware and also organized an assault on the British
citizen in central London. Joe Tidy has been speaking to the once popular YouTuber who says
the ordeal has ruined his life. I never ever heard of Pegasus. I don't know what it is.
Until I found out my phone was hacked.
A salam alexand
London-based Saudi dissident
Ganem al-Masarir
was a popular YouTuber
but then he was hacked
In 2018 his iPhones were infected
with the infamous Pegasus spyware
He started to notice strange things
Being watched and being followed
by the same faces I see
In different places
It was something that I couldn't
comprehend
They can see your location, they can turn on the camera,
they can turn on the microphone, listen to you,
they get your data, all pictures, everything.
You feel you've been violated.
After years of legal fighting, a UK court has now found the Saudi government
was responsible for the hack and ordered it to pay Mr. Almacare
£3 million in compensation, not just for hacking him,
but also for arranging for him to be harassed,
and assaulted in the street.
Basically, they have ruined my life.
I used to be a person who is happy and enjoying life
and walking up early in the morning
and going to day-to-day life and doing work.
I can't do that anymore.
And that's because of what they have done to me.
His videos criticizing the Saudi royal family were funny and satirical,
but also at times personal and offensive.
They gathered more than 300 million views
allowing him to earn a living.
But he hasn't posted in three years
and is now shy about being in public.
In a sense, then,
am I right in saying, you know, it's tragic here,
but they've won.
They've silenced you.
I think that's what they wanted,
and they have got it.
How do you feel about that?
I feel depressed
that they can get away with something like that,
especially,
in London and Greater Britain.
The hack and assault happened in the same year
that Saudi journalist and dissident Jamal Khashoggi
was hacked and murdered in the Saudi consulate in Turkey.
US authorities assess that Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman
ordered the killing, something that the ruler denies.
Saudi Arabia initially fought Al-Masaray in court,
arguing that it had immunity because it's a country.
But it lost that immunity in 2022
and has not made any attempt to defend itself since,
which begs the question. Do you think they'll ever actually pay?
If they don't pay, we will take enforcement, my German,
and they will be forced. We will take the money anyway.
Saudi Arabia has spent the last few years and lots of money
on sporting and cultural events, including a large comedy festival in October.
Big-name Western performers, including Jimmy Carr and Kevin Hart performed,
in spite of criticism from Human Rights Watch,
something that angered Alma Serrier.
They are infighting comedians to attend to Saudi Arabia.
Arabia, a massive festival, in the same time, they are hacking a comedian and attacking them
and ruining their lives in London. That shows you how hypocrite the Saudi regime is.
We asked the Saudi embassy in London to respond to the court ruling but received no response.
That report by Joe Tidy. Now, if you're a fan of Bridgeton, the period drive,
on Netflix that critics and reviews pretty much universally refer to as steamy,
you'll have spent the last few days pretty excited.
Season four of the show is currently at number one on the streaming platform in more than 80 countries,
Stephanie Prentice has been watching.
We begin another season.
This season, viewers journey once again inside the noble Bridgeton family in Regency
era England, and this time it's another of the sibling's turn to find someone to marry.
The season's most notorious gentleman, Benedict Bridgeton, he must bow to that most
powerful of forces, mothers. One small problem.
I am charting a little ventrison course.
You're a rake. A rake, being old-school English for someone not keen on commitment,
but probably promiscuous. And this time,
series regular Luke Thompson and newcomer Yer Nhaar had to spend the most time on set with the show's intimacy coordinator.
They can eventually get fun. There's fun and there's storytelling to be held in those moments.
So an extension of expression and I think when you have someone you really trust, the sex scenes doesn't feel like a sex scene. It just feels like another scene.
Bridgeton is renowned for its adult scenes and some fans have complained that season four is just too
You sound as if you have been made a new man.
The show's creative, Jess Brownell,
says she focused on getting the right tone,
and there's much more open discussion this season than usual.
It felt like orgasm wasn't a word that was used in that time period.
Our researcher looked into it,
and so we used a thesaurus.
What are different words that suggest a kind of climax or a peak,
and it needed to be a word.
that sounded, right and pinnacle felt just obscure and silly and fun enough.
The show is based on eight best-selling books.
Their creator, Julia Quinn, told us why people find the story so charming.
I've always tried to give these historical characters certain modern dreams and goals.
You know, say for a woman, I wish I could have more agency,
or I wish my family would see me differently than the way they do.
And so what you have with Bridgeton is you have people with hopes and dreams that in many ways are very, very similar to the ones that we have today.
But they're dressed up in this beautiful world.
English period dramas and their beautiful worlds have long been a hit with world audiences.
Arguably, pride and prejudice, sense and sensibility and vanity fair walk so Bridgeton could run.
The man behind them, Andrew Davies,
says modern audiences love the past.
Stories were in a way simpler than you could do the happy ever-after stuff
and the plots tend to turn around.
That's very appealing.
That's some of the reasons.
Whatever the reasons, this time Bridgeton fans get a classic Cinderella story
inside the core text, complete with a midnight dash
and an accessory left behind.
We must find the owner of this club.
But to see if the rags to riches romance pans out, fans will have to wait until the end of February for the final four episodes.
Stephanie Prentice reporting.
And that's all from us for now.
If you want to get in touch, you can email us at global podcast at bbc.co.uk.
You can also find us on X at BBC World Service.
Use the hashtag global news pod.
Don't forget our sister podcast, The Global Story, which goes in-de-end.
depth and beyond the headlines on one big story.
That is also available wherever you get your podcast.
This edition of the Global News podcast was mixed by Risenwin Dorel,
and the producer was Wendy Urquhar.
The editor is Karen Martin and I'm Will Chalk.
Until next time, goodbye.
If journalism is the first draft of history,
what happens if that draft is flawed?
In 1999, four Russian apartment buildings were bombed,
hundreds killed.
But even now, we still still.
don't know for sure who did it. It's a mystery that sparked chilling theories. I'm Helena Merriman
and in a new BBC series I'm talking to the reporters who first covered this story. What did they
miss the first time? The History Bureau, Putin and the apartment bombs. Listen on BBC.com or wherever
you get your podcasts.
