Epstein
scandal broadens as trove of letters from famous figures published
New York
Times reports on letters by Ehud Barak, Woody Allen and others written for
Epstein’s 63rd birthday
Anna
Betts in New York
Tue 5 Aug
2025 18.47 CEST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/aug/05/jeffrey-epstein-letters-photos
The
long-running scandal surrounding the disgraced late financier and convicted sex
offender Jeffrey Epstein broadened on Tuesday after the New York Times
published a trove of previously unseen letters to Epstein from numerous
powerful figures as well as unseen photographs from inside his Manhattan
mansion.
The
letters, written to Epstein by a number of high-profile individuals, were
reportedly compiled as a birthday gift for Epstein’s 63rd birthday in 2016.
Their publication comes amid intense speculation around Donald Trump’s ties to
Epstein, who was found dead in a New York jail in 2019 and had long cultivated
a celebrity social circle of the rich and powerful.
In one
letter, former prime minister of Israel Ehud Barak and his wife wrote “there is
no limit to your curiosity.”
“You are
like a closed book to many of them but you know everything about everyone,”
they wrote, describing Epstein as “A COLLECTOR OF PEOPLE”.
They
continued: “May you enjoy long and healthy life and may all of us, your
friends, enjoy your table for many more years to come.”
In a
letter from film-maker Woody Allen, Allen reminisced about Epstein’s dinner
parties at his Upper East Side townhouse and described the gatherings as
“always interesting”. He noted that the parties included “politicians,
scientists, teachers, magicians, comedians, intellectuals, journalists” and
“even royalty”.
Allen
also described the dinners as “well served”: “I say well served – often it’s by
some professional houseman and just as often by several young women” who he
said reminded him of “Castle Dracula where Lugosi has three young female
vampires who service the place.”
Other
letter writers reportedly included billionaire media mogul Mortimer Zuckerman;
Noam Chomsky and his wife; Joichi Ito, the former head of the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology (MIT) Media Lab; physicist Lawrence M Krauss; and
Harvard biologist and mathematician Martin Nowak.
Allen,
Ito, Zuckerman and Nowak did not respond to requests for comment from the
Times. Barak reportedly declined to comment, and Chomsky’s wife responded on
his behalf, also declining to comment. Krauss reportedly told the Times that he
didn’t recall the letter but did attend “several lunches with very interesting
discussions” with scientists, authors and others at Epstein’s house.
In
addition to the letters, the Times also published photos from inside Epstein’s
seven-story Manhattan mansion.
In his
office, the images show a taxidermied tiger and reportedly show a green first
edition copy of Lolita – the controversial 1955 novel about a middle-aged man’s
sexual obsession with and sexual abuse and rape of a 12-year-old girl – which
the Times said was “showcased”.
Surveillance
cameras can be seen in Epstein’s bedroom and an adjoining room. In his “massage
room”, where many underaged victims said that they were sexually assaulted by
Epstein, the Times reports that there were paintings of naked women, shelves of
lubricant, and a large silver ball and chain.
Elsewhere
in the house, dozens of framed photographs show Epstein pictured alongside
longtime associate Ghislaine Maxwell, who is currently serving a 20-year prison
sentence for sex trafficking. They also pictured Epstein with notable figures
such as Pope John Paul II, Mick Jagger, Elon Musk, Fidel Castro, Bill Clinton,
Larry Summers, Richard Branson, Saudi Arabia crown prince Mohammed bin Salman
and former Trump White House adviser, Steve Bannon.
One frame
also displayed a dollar bill signed by Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates with the
message “I was wrong!” which the Times said was “possibly as payment of a bet”.
The Times
also reported that the home’s entryway featured framed prosthetic eyeballs, and
that a suspended sculpture of a woman wearing a bridal gown and clutching a
rope hung in the central atrium.
According
to the Times, a map of Israel drawn on a chalkboard that had the signature of
former Israeli prime minister Barak was also in the home.
Epstein
died in federal custody in 2019 while awaiting trial on federal sex-trafficking
charges. His death was ruled a suicide.
The
renewed scrutiny into Epstein’s case comes as Trump and members of his
administration had repeatedly vowed to release information related to the
Epstein investigations.
But in
July, the administration reversed course, and the justice department announced
it would not release any further documents or details regarding the case,
prompting bipartisan outrage, including from Trump supporters and conservative
media figures.
Epstein’s
case has long been the subject of countless conspiracy theories, in part due to
his ties to powerful people. His 2019 suicide has also fueled conspiracy
theories for years.
The
justice department’s recent announcement also reignited scrutiny of Trump’s
years-long friendship with Epstein.
In July,
the Wall Street Journal reported that Trump allegedly wrote Epstein a birthday
card as part of a 50th birthday album organized by Maxwell in 2003.
According
to the report, Trump’s letter featured a sketch of a naked woman with Trump’s
signature. Trump denied the Journal’s report and sued the newspaper for libel.
Around a
week layer, the Journal reported that justice department officials had informed
Trump earlier this year that his name appeared in the Epstein files. The paper
noted that being mentioned in the records isn’t a sign of wrongdoing. Trump’s
spokesperson denied the report, calling it “fake news”.
Facing
growing pressure, the justice department sent Todd Blanche, the deputy attorney
general and one of Trump’s former lawyers, to meet with Maxwell in late July to
see whether she had “information about anyone who has committed crimes against
victims”.
The
meeting, which lasted two days, was held behind closed doors. On Friday,
Maxwell was transferred from a Florida prison to a lower-security facility in
Texas.

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