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A day after a batch of newly unsealed Jeffrey Epstein documents were made public, identifying people whose names secretively popped up in Virginia Giuffre's lawsuit against Epstein's longtime lover Ghislaine Maxwell, a media lawyer is asking the court to unseal a master list "of names and pseudonyms."

"Releasing the complete list of names and pseudonyms will avoid spread of incorrect information that may arise from trying to unweave the partial disclosures and will enable the public and press to understand this Court’s reasoning," wrote Christine Walz, an attorney for Julie Brown and the Miami Herald Media Company, intervenors in the case pushing for the disclosures in federal court.

Walz is asking Judge Loretta Preska to unseal a document that would "clarify how the assigned J. Doe pseudonyms line up with the disclosed individuals" and the court's reasoning behind the unsealing of each name.

A short while later, attorneys for fellow intervenor Alan Dershowitz sent the judge their own letter in support of the Herald motion.

JEFFREY EPSTEIN LIST: COURT UNSEALS NAMES IN GHISLAINE MAXWELL LAWSUIT

This July 30, 2008 photo shows Jeffrey Epstein in custody in West Palm Beach, Fla. Epstein was suspected nearly a decade ago of paying for sex with underage girls. The FBI abruptly dropped its investigation a few years ago, and Epstein pleaded guilty to a single state charge of soliciting prostitution. He served 13 months in jail. Now, two women who say they were sexually abused as girls by Epstein are hoping a trove of new documents will get the case reopened. (AP Photo/Palm Beach Post, Uma Sanghvi)

Jeffrey Epstein is seen in custody in West Palm Beach, Florida, on July 30, 2008. (AP Photo/Palm Beach Post, Uma Sanghvi)

The documents also said Dershowitz, a prominent defense attorney who previously represented Epstein, was accused of witnessing the sexual abuse of other minors by Epstein.

In a Wednesday interview on "Hannity," Dershowitz rebuffed any allegations of wrongdoing and said the accuser stated that she may have misidentified him.

"I can prove it by independent means," he said. "I have all my travel records. I have all my television appearances. I can prove that I couldn't have possibly been anywhere near any of the people who were involved in this."

The name-drops began Wednesday evening with the publishing of 40 previously redacted documents and are expected to continue for several days.

The documents identified many people who were not accused of wrongdoing, including former Presidents Bill Clinton and Donald Trump, Hollywood stars, Epstein accusers and others. 

Read the letter

JEFFREY EPSTEIN DOCUMENTS: SEE ALL 40 UNSEALED FILES IN GHISLAINE MAXWELL LAWSUIT

They also resurfaced allegations against Britain's Prince Andrew, who was accused of groping a woman and participating in "an orgy with numerous other under-aged girls."

The prince has denied wrongdoing but was relieved of his royal duties over his ties to Epstein. He settled a separate lawsuit that Giuffre brought against him in 2022.

See the faces mentioned in Epstein documents

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Most of the attention-grabbing claims came in a deposition from Epstein accuser Johanna Sjoberg, who had worked as a masseuse for Epstein and described times when he talked about his rich and powerful connections.

Jeffrey Epstein sitting at a dinner table and wearing a black polo shirt

Epstein was connected to many prominent people, including politicians, actors and academics. (Getty Images)

Epstein was also revealed to have asked Maxwell to offer a "reward" to anyone who could discredit Giuffre's accusations that he sex trafficked her when she was a minor.

Fox News' Louis Casiano contributed to this report.