FBI documents related to allegations against US President Donald Trump of sexual abuse - which were missing from the initial release of the Epstein files - have been posted online by the US Department of Justice.
This comes after American media reported on their absence, writes sky news.
They include summaries and notes from three separate interviews the FBI conducted with a woman who claimed she was sexually assaulted by Jeffrey Epstein and sexually abused by the current president.
Trump has consistently denied any wrongdoing, and he and the White House have said the Epstein files have exonerated him of the charges.
In an earlier statement on Thursday, the president's Press Secretary, Caroline Leavitt, said they are "completely baseless" and "supported by no credible evidence."
Even the Justice Department has previously warned that the files include unfounded allegations about the president.
What are the charges?
The woman, from South Carolina, turned to the law after Epstein was arrested in 2019.
She claimed the billionaire financier attacked her on Hilton Head Island, in her home state, when she was 13 years old.
The alleged incident occurred in or around 1984, according to a summary of an FBI interview.
The FBI conducted follow-up interviews on four separate dates in 2019: July 24, August 7, August 20, and October 16.
The dates were revealed as part of a catalogue of evidence against Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein's ex-girlfriend and convicted co-conspirator, which was released by the Justice Department.
But only the FBI summary of the July 24 interview was initially included in the millions of documents that make up the Epstein files. It does not mention any allegations against Trump.
It is the memos from three other interviews that have now been released. The woman – whose name has been redacted in all the interviews – alleges abuse by Epstein and several associates, including, she says, Trump.
The Justice Department has reiterated its previous warning that the Epstein files contain false and unverified claims.
At the time of their release, the Department said: "This production may include false or falsely presented images, documents, or videos, as everything sent to the FBI by the public was included."