In late December 2025, under the Epstein Files Transparency Act signed by President Trump, the U.S. Department of Justice began releasing thousands of documents, photographs, and records from Jeffrey Epstein’s estate and investigations. Though heavily redacted and incomplete—spilling into 2026 amid discoveries of over a million additional pages—these files offer unprecedented glimpses into Epstein’s elite network.

Newly disclosed flight logs reveal extensive travel by prominent figures on Epstein’s private jets. Prosecutors’ emails highlight Donald Trump as a passenger on at least eight flights between 1993 and 1996, including four with Ghislaine Maxwell—more than previously reported, though no wrongdoing is alleged. Former President Bill Clinton appears frequently in photos and logs, including undated images aboard planes and social settings.
Intimate photographs pierce long-held privacy veils: Epstein posing closely with Maxwell; gatherings featuring Michael Jackson, Mick Jagger, Diana Ross, and Walter Cronkite; Richard Branson and Sarah Ferguson in casual shots. Other images show Epstein with Noam Chomsky, Woody Allen, Steve Bannon, Sergey Brin, and Ehud Barak. Some depict redacted women in close proximity, alongside items like massage oils and framed art evoking youth.
Contact books and emails name global leaders, CEOs like Leon Black and Jes Staley, and politicians including John Kerry and George Mitchell. While many associations predate Epstein’s convictions and lack criminal implications, the files underscore his access to power.
Critics decry redactions protecting identities and withheld materials, including potential videos. As releases continue, these revelations fuel demands for full accountability, exposing connections that challenge narratives of isolation in Epstein’s shadowed empire.
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