About This Project
When the Epstein documents started dropping, everyone was talking about it — but nobody really understood what was in them. Conspiracy theories filled the void. At Harvard Business School, the questions kept coming up: How did this person accumulate so much wealth with no clear business? How did someone gain access to the most powerful circles in the world? How did this go on for so long?
The documents were public. But scattered across court filings, congressional releases, and FOIA dumps, they were practically impossible to search. So we built this archive — not to push a narrative, but to give the public the actual data.
What's Here
Epstein Secrets brings together over 33,000 documents from multiple sources:
Court Filings
Civil and criminal case documents
House Oversight Committee
Congressional releases
DOJ and FBI Vault
FOIA documents
Email Archives
From Epstein's accounts
We used AI to extract every person, organization, and location mentioned across these documents, then mapped the connections between them. The result is a searchable archive where you can explore who knew whom, trace relationships through the network, and find the original source documents.
A tool for anyone who wants to look at the actual evidence and draw their own conclusions.
Original Sources
All documents in this archive come from publicly available sources. We encourage researchers to verify information against the originals.
Government Sources
- DOJ Epstein Library — Official DOJ repository for all Epstein-related releases
- DOJ EFTA Disclosures — H.R.4405 releases, flight logs, contact books, Maxwell proffer
- House Oversight Committee — ~20,000 pages from Epstein's estate
- FBI Vault - Jeffrey Epstein — FOIA documents from FBI investigations
- CBP FOIA Records — Travel records, aircraft arrival reports
- CourtListener - Giuffre v. Maxwell — Civil case court filings
Email Archives
- DDoSecrets - Epstein Files — ~20,900 Yahoo emails and other leaked files
Other Research Tools
Other tools for exploring Epstein-related documents.
- jmail.world — Interactive viewer for Gmail and Yahoo emails
- Google Pinpoint - Epstein Collection — AI-powered document search tool
Take Action
The documents here reveal the scope of what happened. If you want to support organizations fighting human trafficking and helping survivors, these groups are doing meaningful work:
Support These Organizations
- Polaris Project — Runs the National Human Trafficking Hotline (1-888-373-7888)
- International Justice Mission — Global organization rescuing victims and bringing traffickers to justice
- RAINN — National Sexual Assault Hotline (1-800-656-4673) and survivor support
Support This Project
Help us keep this archive running and expand our research


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