A stunned world froze as newly unsealed Epstein files revealed Jeffrey Epstein flew to Russia at least three times in the early 2000s—including a stop in Khabarovsk with former President Bill Clinton and Ghislaine Maxwell—followed by Shenzhen, China, per flight logs cited in court documents from Virginia Giuffre’s lawsuit.

The disclosures, part of the December 19, 2025, final release under the Epstein Files Transparency Act, show Epstein, Maxwell, and assistant Sarah Kellen on multiple Russia trips in 2002–2003 aboard Epstein’s Boeing 727. The most notable: May 2002, after Novosibirsk, the party flew to Khabarovsk on May 22. The manifest included Clinton, aide Doug Band, and others. The group then proceeded to Shenzhen, China.
No wrongdoing alleged in the travel—merely proximity amid Epstein’s trafficking empire—but the optics chilled: post-2008 conviction, Epstein’s international reach with elites persisted. Epstein invoked the Fifth when questioned about the Khabarovsk flight in 2016. Clinton has denied knowledge of crimes, stating trips were Clinton Foundation-related.
Giuffre’s memoir Nobody’s Girl (October 21, 2025) amplified scrutiny: groomed at 16, trafficked amid elite blindness. Files also revealed Epstein’s $10,000+ transfers to Russian women 2008–2012.
As disclosures yielded no “client list” or tapes, the Russia-China logs—raw, transactional—ignited fury: Epstein’s web global, power’s passport unchallenged.
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