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Investigative reporting on the Epstein case. Every claim cites specific documents from our corpus of 1.6 million court filings, depositions, and government records.
In May 2018, WATG, one of the world's largest hospitality design firms, quietly resigned from Jeffrey Epstein's multimillion-dollar island renovation after receiving undisclosed information about the project. They returned their deposit and never spoke publicly. This story has never been reported.
Richard Axel resigned from Columbia. Martin Nowak was placed on leave at Harvard. David Gelernter was barred from teaching at Yale. The Epstein files have triggered the most significant reckoning in American higher education since the admissions scandal, and the evidence suggests the rot went far deeper than anyone admitted.
UN human rights experts declared Epstein's network may constitute crimes against humanity. New Mexico created a truth commission with subpoena power. France launched raids. Meanwhile, the U.S. Department of Justice was caught surveilling lawmakers' Epstein search histories.
Brad Karp reviewed Epstein's court filings and called them "overwhelmingly persuasive." Kathryn Ruemmler called Epstein an "older brother" and was named successor trustee of his $577 million estate. Together, they represent the legal establishment's deepest entanglement with a convicted sex offender.
House Oversight Chairman James Comer has requested voluntary testimony from seven people at the center of the Epstein network, including Bill Gates, Leon Black, and Epstein's longtime executive assistant. The hearings, scheduled from April to June 2026, could produce the most detailed public accounting of how the network functioned.
In the span of three weeks, Norway became ground zero for Epstein accountability. A former prime minister was criminally charged, the World Economic Forum president resigned, and the man who brokered Middle East peace found himself explaining why Epstein left $10 million to his children.
A line-by-line comparison of three versions of the Jeffrey E. Epstein Trust reveals that in the final 48 hours of his life, Epstein added Ghislaine Maxwell as a $10 million beneficiary, removed Celina Dubin as the residual heir, increased his lawyers' payouts to $75 million combined, and expanded his legal defense fund by 2,500 percent.
Newly released DOJ documents reveal that Jeffrey Epstein hired at least six architecture firms between 2016 and 2018 to plan extensive construction on his private islands. The plans included a 'Ladies' Residence' with four identical bedrooms, a private pool, a gym, and a section labeled 'Funhouse Point.' One major firm resigned after learning undisclosed information about the project.
The DOJ has removed 90,232 files from its Epstein database. Our independent audit has preserved 99.997% of them, including SHA-256 verification hashes for every file. The numbers tell a story the department has not.
The Justice Department published 1,000+ new pages to the Epstein database on March 5 after NPR found dozens of FBI interview memos were missing. The release includes the complete 2006 case file and three 302 memos related to Trump allegations.
The House Oversight Committee voted 24-19 to subpoena AG Pam Bondi over the DOJ Epstein files, with five Republicans breaking party lines. The vote marks the sharpest congressional rebuke yet of the department's handling of the disclosure.