On Thursday, the US Department of Justice released previously withheld documents in the Epstein case.
Among the documents are summaries of FBI interviews from 2019 of a woman who, among other things, makes allegations of sexual assault by US President Donald Trump.
White House spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt called the allegations "completely baseless and unsupported by any credible evidence" to Politico.
The woman describes in interview that Trump tried to force her to perform oral sex.
It is said to have happened in the 1980s, when she was between 13 and 15 years old.
Before that, she had been introduced to the future president in New York or New Jersey by the now deceased sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
Several media outlets had already reported before Thursday's publication that the document existed without being able to describe its contents.
A summary of the interviews had been published.
However, the summary of the interviews itself was not previously among the millions of documents that the Justice Department has published in the Epstein case.
The department wrote in a post on the social media X that the 15 documents published on Thursday were "incorrectly coded as duplicates" - and therefore had not been published.
Thursday's release comes as Congress looks to the Justice Department's handling of documents from the Epstein investigation that it is set to release.
Democrats have accused the department of withholding documents about Trump. A House of Representatives committee has voted to subpoena US Attorney General Pam Bondi to testify about the matter.
The Justice Department said before the recent releases of the Epstein documents that they contained "false and sensationalist allegations about Donald Trump".
Reuters has not been able to independently confirm the woman's allegations.
FBI records indicate that federal agents stopped talking to the woman in 2019.
Epstein was convicted in 2008 of trafficking underage girls. He served 13 months in prison. In July 2019, he was charged with trafficking and abusing minors. He died in prison in August 2019.
It is well known that Trump was in Epstein's circle. The president has said he cut off contact with Epstein decades ago.
/ritzau/Reuters