JeffTube is a new YouTube-style site hosting Jeffrey Epstein videos released by the DOJ, helping users easily watch surveillance footage from the federal document dump.

JeffTube is a video platform built to host MP4 video files from the DOJ’s release of documents connected to the investigation of Jeffrey Epstein and related legal actions. (File Photo)
A new website called JeffTube has emerged as a unique way for the public to watch video files from the massive United States Department of Justice (DOJ) release tied to the Jeffrey Epstein investigation. Styled like the popular video platform YouTube, JeffTube lets people stream and explore surveillance footage and other video materials from the government’s document dump without having to sift through thousands of official PDFs.
The platform gained instant attention online after its launch on February 6, 2026, drawing more than 1.3 million views on social media within hours of being announced. Users have praised JeffTube for turning a complex archive of government records into a familiar and navigable video library, while others have raised concerns about relying on a third-party site for such materials.
JeffTube is a video platform built to host MP4 video files from the DOJ’s release of documents connected to the investigation of Jeffrey Epstein and related legal actions. The DOJ published more than 3.5 million pages of material, which includes over 2,000 videos and 180,000 images, as part of a transparency initiative under the Epstein Files Transparency Act. This legislation requires public access to unclassified government records relating to Epstein.
Rather than forcing users to download and open raw files, JeffTube presents this footage in a clean, searchable layout similar to YouTube. Publisher Matheus, a developer connected with the Midjourney community, created the site to make the content easier to find and watch, especially since the original DOJ portal was overwhelmed with traffic following the release.
At launch, JeffTube contained 1,083 videos organised into categories and playlists for straightforward browsing. These playlists include:
Many of the videos come from surveillance footage at the Metropolitan Correctional Center, where Epstein died in August 2019. Visitors can watch clips, scroll through different camera angles, and engage with the material in a way that resembles mainstream streaming platforms.
The JeffTube interface feels very similar to YouTube, with features such as:
This familiarity has helped the site attract strong public interest and made it easier for everyday users to access material that previously required deep document searching. Because the U.S. government’s release is mainly in large PDF files, many users found it difficult to extract and view media, a challenge JeffTube aims to solve.
The site is freely available at jmail.world/jefftube, making it accessible without special software or registration.
JeffTube is part of a larger trend of open-source tools designed to make the DOJ’s Epstein files more navigable. It is an extension of Jmail, a Gmail-style archive that reorganises Epstein-related emails from the document release into a searchable inbox-like interface. Once a user navigates through tens of thousands of legal documents and emails manually, JeffTube saves time by grouping video content into a familiar format.
The team behind JeffTube has also developed other archival tools, including Jwiki, a Wikipedia-like database compiling individuals mentioned in the files. These platforms are open source and hosted on GitHub, allowing others to review or replicate the code.
Experts and internet users have pointed out a few key considerations for JeffTube viewers:
Reactions online have been mixed, with some praising the improved access to public records and others urging the creation of mirror sites to diversify where the data is stored and reduce single-point dependency.
JeffTube highlights a growing trend in digital transparency: using familiar web formats to make complex government releases easier for the public to explore and understand. The platform’s rapid adoption shows that there’s significant demand for user-friendly access to large, previously inaccessible archives of public interest material.