The U.S. Justice Department’s December 23, 2025, release of nearly 30,000 pages from Jeffrey Epstein’s investigations has unearthed previously undisclosed details about President Donald Trump’s travels on the financier’s private jet. A January 2020 email from a New York federal prosecutor highlights flight logs showing Trump aboard Epstein’s plane “many more times than previously reported”—at least eight times between 1993 and 1996.
These domestic flights, often between Palm Beach, New Jersey, and Washington, D.C., included family members like ex-wife Marla Maples, son Eric, and daughter Tiffany on some occasions. Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein’s convicted accomplice serving 20 years for sex trafficking, joined at least four trips.

Most intriguingly, one flight listed only three passengers: Epstein, Trump, and a then-20-year-old woman whose name remains redacted—likely to protect a potential victim or witness. Another 1993 flight featured just Epstein and Trump. Two additional trips included women described as possible witnesses in a prospective Maxwell case.
The revelations, part of mandated disclosures under the Epstein Files Transparency Act, contradict Trump’s prior denials of flying on the jet or visiting Epstein’s island. No documents allege wrongdoing by Trump, who distanced himself from Epstein in the early 2000s, calling him a “creep.”
With over a million more documents discovered—delaying full release—these flight details reignite scrutiny over elite associations in Epstein’s network. Victims’ advocates demand unredacted names, arguing redactions shield enablers amid persistent questions about impunity in one of history’s most notorious trafficking scandals.
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