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Analysis, guides, and release notes from the Epstein Exposed research team. We break down newly released documents, explain court proceedings, and surface patterns across 18 posts and the case files.
A classified UK National Crime Agency intelligence report, sent from the British Embassy to the FBI in January 2020, mapped Jeffrey Epstein's international payment flows through 7+ shell companies to banks in 12+ countries. Combined with Deutsche Bank's 20-exhibit presentation to SDNY prosecutors, the two documents constitute the most complete picture of how Epstein moved money across borders, who received it, and what it bought.
Between October 2015 and April 2016, Jeffrey Epstein received detailed investment proposals to acquire two FBI field offices and two Department of Defense buildings adjacent to the Pentagon. The documents include pitch decks, financial analyses, term sheets, and confidentiality agreements. All of this happened seven years after his conviction for soliciting a minor for prostitution.
When we cross-referenced 1.38 million SHA-256 hashes against the DOJ's EFTA servers, we found 892 documents had been deleted and 32 modified -- with no public announcement. The deletions were surgical: not just the PDFs, but every trace of metadata, person links, and OCR text was wiped clean. Only 24 fragmentary records survive. Here's what happened, what's missing, and how you can verify it yourself.
We've added 819 court documents from DocumentCloud to the database -- depositions, motions, victim impact statements, and unsealed exhibits from Giuffre v. Maxwell, US v. Maxwell, US v. Epstein, and more. 402 persons of interest were matched across 4,825 new document-person links. Here are the key findings.
On February 14, 2026, Attorney General Pam Bondi sent Congress a list of 305 'politically exposed persons' named in the Epstein files. The list includes everyone from sitting Vice Presidents to dead rock stars. We cross-referenced every name against our database of 1,500+ persons of interest to separate signal from noise.
Peter Mandelson fired. Prince Andrew under police investigation. Norway's ambassador resigned. Slovakia's foreign minister gone. Meanwhile in the U.S., the Commerce Secretary admitted visiting Epstein's island and kept his job. The Epstein files created two different realities on two different continents.
Ghislaine Maxwell sat before the House Oversight Committee on February 10 in her prison-issued brown shirt and refused to answer every question. Then her attorney offered a deal: clemency in exchange for testimony that would exonerate two presidents. The contradiction tells a story all its own.
Federal prosecutors had 60 counts ready. Sex trafficking. Conspiracy. Enticement of minors. They had 17 victims and a cooperating witness. Then the U.S. Attorney's office in Miami cut a deal that a federal court would later call 'a national disgrace.' The newly released files show exactly how it happened.
The Epstein files name 62 academics. He paid tuition at 19 universities and funded research programs from robotics to evolutionary biology. The newly released documents reveal a funding pipeline that was less about science and more about building a network of credentialed allies who legitimized a predator.
On February 10, two congressmen read six redacted names into the record. But the 835 flights with no passenger manifests may matter more. A data-driven analysis of what 3.5 million pages reveal -- and what they hide.
We catalogued 1,400 persons of interest, 6,180 documents, 1,700+ flights, and 2,700 emails to build the most comprehensive searchable database of the Epstein case files. Here's how we did it and what the network reveals.