The latest tranche of documents released by the U.S. Department of Justice under the Epstein Files Transparency Act has revealed disturbing details about Jeffrey Epstein’s personal acquisitions, further illustrating the predatory nature of his lifestyle. Among thousands of pages of financial records, receipts, and inventory lists unsealed in late December 2025 are invoices showing Epstein’s repeated purchases of girls’ school uniforms—often in bulk and in various sizes—alongside orders for highly sexualized artworks that decorated his Manhattan townhouse, Palm Beach mansion, and private island.

According to the files, Epstein’s New York-based assistant regularly procured multiple sets of pleated skirts, white blouses, knee-high socks, and Mary Jane shoes from retailers specializing in children’s and school attire. One 2008 receipt lists 12 identical uniforms in sizes ranging from 0 to 6, delivered to Epstein’s East 71st Street residence. Investigators noted that these items matched descriptions provided by victims who recounted being instructed to wear the outfits during encounters at Epstein’s properties. The purchases continued even after Epstein’s 2008 conviction, with orders placed as late as 2015.
Equally chilling are the art inventories. Epstein commissioned or acquired numerous provocative pieces, including a life-size sculpture of a nude girl on all fours, a painting titled “The Young Girl” depicting a child in suggestive poses, and a custom-made mural featuring young women in school uniforms. These works were prominently displayed in his homes, including the infamous “blue room” of his Palm Beach estate, where victims say they were groomed. Receipts from high-end galleries and artists confirm payments in the hundreds of thousands of dollars for pieces described as “erotic” or “youthful” in nature.
The documents also include internal Epstein emails referencing these items. One 2011 message to Ghislaine Maxwell asks her to “make sure the uniforms are ready for the weekend,” while another discusses hanging a new sculpture in the “girls’ wing” of his island compound. Maxwell, currently serving a 20-year sentence for sex trafficking, is named in several procurement records.
These revelations, drawn from FBI-seized materials and Epstein’s estate inventories, paint a stark picture of deliberate fetishization and normalization of underage exploitation. Prosecutors have highlighted the uniforms as key evidence of grooming tactics, while the art collection underscores Epstein’s apparent pride in his depravity. As more files continue to emerge in early 2026, survivors and advocates point to these details as proof that Epstein’s crimes were not impulsive but meticulously curated, with every element of his environment designed to facilitate abuse.
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