Money,
Women and Taxes: Jeffrey Epstein’s Fiery Friendship with a Wall Street Titan
New
emails show how Mr. Epstein pressured Leon Black, his longtime friend and
patron, to fork over millions for financial services.
Matthew
Goldstein David Enrich Steve EderJessica Silver-Greenberg
By
Matthew GoldsteinDavid EnrichSteve Eder and Jessica Silver-Greenberg
Oct. 18,
2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/18/business/jeffrey-epstein-leon-black.html
Jeffrey
Epstein was furious. For years, he had relied on the billionaire Leon Black as
his primary source of income, advising him on everything from taxes to his
world-class art collection. But by 2016, Mr. Black seemed to be reluctant to
keep paying him tens of millions of dollars a year.
So Mr.
Epstein threw a tantrum.
One of
Mr. Black’s other financial advisers had created “a really dangerous mess,” Mr.
Epstein wrote in an email to Mr. Black. Another was “a waste of money and
space.” He even attacked Mr. Black’s children as “retarded” for supposedly
making a mess of his estate.
The
typo-strewn tirade was one of dozens of previously unreported emails reviewed
by The New York Times in which Mr. Epstein hectored Mr. Black, at times
demanding tens of millions of dollars beyond the $150 million he had already
been paid.
The
pressure campaign appeared to work. Mr. Black, who for decades was one of the
richest and highest-profile figures on Wall Street, continued to fork over tens
of millions of dollars in fees and loans, albeit less than Mr. Epstein had been
seeking.
Of all
the relationships that Mr. Epstein built with the rich and powerful, his
friendship with Mr. Black was arguably the most important. After Mr. Epstein
served jail time for soliciting prostitution from a minor, many of his contacts
backed away. Not Mr. Black, who kept Mr. Epstein afloat for years.
The new
emails, along with court documents and interviews, provide the most complete
picture yet of that relationship. They come at a time of renewed interest in
Mr. Epstein, stoked by the Trump administration’s refusal to release government
records related to investigations into him. The president, who was once friends
with Mr. Epstein, has sought to deflect attention onto “hedge fund guys” and
other prominent men who he says were much closer to the predator than he once
was.
Mr.
Black, 74, was pushed out of the private equity firm he co-founded, Apollo
Global Management, in 2021 over his ties to Mr. Epstein. He has said that his
payments to the sex offender were simply for tax- and estate-planning services.
Those claims have puzzled many on Wall Street, who have asked why one of the
country’s richest men would pay Mr. Epstein, a college dropout, so much more
than what prestigious law firms would charge for similar services.
The new
emails confirm that Mr. Epstein performed financial work for Mr. Black; he even
claimed, in one note, that his maneuverings had saved his benefactor as much as
$2 billion. And the messages suggest that Mr. Epstein, despite his financial
dependency, believed he had considerable power in the relationship.
The two
men had been personally entwined for more than two decades. When a former
girlfriend accused Mr. Black of sexual assault, he turned to Mr. Epstein for
advice about paying her millions of dollars to keep it quiet, according to an
email reviewed by The Times and court records. Another woman said in a lawsuit
that Mr. Black had raped her at Mr. Epstein’s Manhattan townhouse. She
eventually dropped the lawsuit.
And, for
reasons that are unknown, Mr. Black wired hundreds of thousands of dollars to
at least three women who were associated with Mr. Epstein, according to court
documents and notes taken by congressional investigators that were shared with
The Times.
Representatives
of Mr. Black did not respond to questions about those payments to women.
Susan
Estrich, a lawyer for Mr. Black, said his payments to Mr. Epstein were for tax-
and estate-planning services that an outside law firm found were legitimate.
“To imply
that Epstein somehow had influence over Mr. Black is false and patently
absurd,” she said. She added that the law firm, hired by Apollo to review the
men’s relationship, found that Mr. Black “had no knowledge of Epstein’s
criminal activities. Mr. Black has never abused a woman in his life, and any
such suggestion is false.” Mr. Black has said he regretted working with Mr.
Epstein.
The
emails reviewed by The Times — sent in 2015 and 2016 to Mr. Black through his
personal assistant, as well as to a handful of his advisers — show another
dimension of Mr. Epstein’s cruelty. While he was known for ingratiating himself
with the rich and powerful, he could also veer into nastiness and was willing
to turn the screws on his biggest client. (None of the emails reviewed by The
Times were written by Mr. Black.)
“I will
no longer, not even for one day, work on your affairs. without the compensation
that is long overdue,” Mr. Epstein wrote in November 2015. Mr. Epstein demanded
“the usual 40 million per year,” with most of it paid upfront.
Months
later, as their fight over payments roared on, Mr. Epstein offered a
concession: “Of course re any non financial issues, I am always there for you
and will continue to be the best friend I can be.”
Email
Excerpt from Jeffrey Epstein to Leon Black
Nov. 2,
2015
I never
want to have any more uncomfortable
money moments with you , I find it very distasteful. . so to be clear , my
terms are as follows . I will only work for the usual 40 million per year. It
needs to be paid, 25 million upon signing an agreement . 5 million every 2
months thereafter for 6 months ie march may june . this can begin if i am able
in January. I will immediately stop work , if the payment is not received.
‘Love and
Kisses’
Mr. Black
and Mr. Epstein met thanks to Mr. Epstein’s knack for inserting himself into
other people’s business.
One
morning in 1994, Mr. Epstein called his friend Elliot Stein and invited him to
lunch. Mr. Stein replied that he already had plans: He was meeting Mr. Black at
the China Grill in Midtown Manhattan.
Mr.
Epstein invited himself along, Mr. Stein recalled, and spent the meal chatting
with Mr. Black about markets and trading.
Soon Mr.
Epstein cultivated Mr. Black as his own friend. Later that year, after Mr.
Epstein canceled a dinner with Mr. Black and his wife, he asked an employee to
send them chocolates with an apology, according to notes taken by the employee.
The two
men had a lot in common, sharing interests in science, art and finance.
Mr. Black
had co-founded Apollo in 1990. The firm, which was a trendsetter in using debt
to buy distressed companies, became a powerful force on Wall Street.
Mr.
Epstein had no formal training in tax and estate planning. But after a few
years working at an investment bank, he convinced a few business elites to hire
him for financial advice. They included Elizabeth Johnson, an heiress to the
Johnson & Johnson fortune, and Leslie Wexner, the billionaire behind
Victoria’s Secret and the Limited.
Mr. Black
found Mr. Epstein to be impressive and a little mysterious. It wasn’t just his
ties to the ultrawealthy; he also seemed to always be surrounded by beautiful
women. “He was almost like a James Bond villain,” Mr. Black told the
publication Puck last year.
In 1997,
long before Mr. Epstein became a formal adviser to Mr. Black, he and his wife,
Debra, put Mr. Epstein on the board of directors of their newly created family
foundation. A couple of years later, Mr. Black and two other Apollo executives
together donated $500,000 to one of Mr. Epstein’s nonprofits, which gave money
to charities.
Mr.
Epstein introduced Mr. Black to several young women, according to people
familiar with their relationships, as well as court documents. Some of the
women later accused Mr. Black of abusing them.
In 2002,
for example, Mr. Epstein arranged for Mr. Black to meet Cheri Pierson, whom Mr.
Epstein had paid for massages, according to a lawsuit Ms. Pierson filed years
later and eventually withdrew. She met Mr. Black at Mr. Epstein’s townhouse,
where Mr. Black raped her in the massage room, the lawsuit said. Mr. Black
denied the claim and said he had never met Ms. Pierson.
In early
2003, Mr. Black was among the friends who contributed to a book celebrating Mr.
Epstein’s 50th birthday. Mr. Black’s entry, a handwritten poem, referred to Mr.
Epstein’s “unique tax strategy” and his interest in women: “Blonde, Red or
Brunette, spread out geographically / With this net of fish, Jeff’s now ‘The
Old Man and the Sea.’”
Mr. Black
signed off, “Love and Kisses, Leon.”
A few
years later, a Florida grand jury indicted Mr. Epstein for soliciting
prostitution from a teenager. Mr. Black later said the felony charge against
Mr. Epstein — which resulted in him serving 13 months in jail — didn’t seem
like a big deal at the time.
“I mean,
he was with a 17-year-old prostitute, got prosecuted for it and got put away
for a year,” Mr. Black told Puck. “I didn’t think this was the end of the
world, frankly.”
Dodging
Taxes
In 2011,
Mr. Epstein was at a crossroads. He was a registered sex offender, and his main
benefactor — Mr. Wexner, the retail billionaire — had long since cut ties. His
personal investments, while sizable, had plummeted since the 2008 financial
crisis, according to records filed by one of Mr. Epstein’s companies.
And his
opulent lifestyle and sex-trafficking operation continued to rack up expenses.
He needed a new source of revenue.
Mr.
Black, too, was at a crossroads of sorts. Apollo had gone public in 2011, and
Mr. Black’s personal wealth had soared. He was looking for help managing his
fortune and shielding it from taxes.
Mr.
Epstein seemed to fit the bill. He began advising Mr. Black on a wide variety
of matters, including taxes, estate planning, investments, charitable giving
and the operation of his family yacht. When Mr. Black traveled to Russia for a
meeting of a state investment board, Mr. Epstein planned to go, too, according
to a calendar entry kept by one of his assistants and a travel visa reviewed by
The Times.
Mr.
Epstein had found a new cash cow. In 2012, he received a $5.5 million payment
from Mr. Black, which appears to have been the first transaction between the
two men, according to the notes taken by congressional investigators. Months
later, they signed a contract in which Mr. Black agreed to pay Mr. Epstein
$23.5 million for “estate planning matters.”
Mr.
Epstein sought to professionalize Mr. Black’s family investment office, which
managed the billionaire’s assets. He constructed — and sometimes participated
in — art transactions that were designed to skirt capital gains taxes and keep
Mr. Black’s purchases from drawing public attention, according to emails
reviewed by The Times.
He used
his connections at JPMorgan Chase — where Mr. Epstein was a prized client — to
seek a loan for Mr. Black. In one email, he told a banker that he was advising
on Mr. Black’s $120 million purchase of Edvard Munch’s painting “The Scream.”
Mr.
Black’s representatives said Mr. Epstein was not involved in Mr. Black’s 2012
purchase of the painting.
Most
important, he found ways to minimize the taxes that Mr. Black’s estate would
owe after his death. Years earlier, at the suggestion of Mr. Epstein, Mr. Black
had set up a so-called grantor-retained annuity trust. Such trusts allow the
ultrawealthy to pass along potentially unlimited sums to their heirs, free of
any estate tax. In 2013, Mr. Epstein came up with a way to rework the trust to
potentially avoid hundreds of millions of dollars in taxes for Mr. Black’s four
children.
And when
the I.R.S. audited some of Mr. Black’s tax strategies, Mr. Epstein helped
resolve the inquiries, according to the emails reviewed by The Times.
While Mr.
Epstein repeatedly rattled off the projects he said he was undertaking for Mr.
Black, the actual role that he played — as well as the true value derived from
that work — is unclear.
Yet Mr.
Epstein told Mr. Black that the work was highly valuable. Mr. Black generally
coughed up the fees Mr. Epstein requested. The total would ultimately reach
$170 million. By a wide margin, Mr. Black was Mr. Epstein’s greatest source of
income after 2012. (The apparent runner-up: the French banker Ariane de
Rothschild, who paid Mr. Epstein at least $15 million in 2015.)
Mr.
Epstein also gave Mr. Black access to his Rolodex. Over the years, he connected
him with Bill Gates and Stephen K. Bannon. He introduced one of Mr. Black’s
sons to Woody Allen to learn about film editing, according to court records.
Mr. Black, meanwhile, donated millions to one of Mr. Epstein’s charities.
Some work
that Mr. Epstein performed for Mr. Black required the utmost discretion. For
instance, he helped him keep a long-running extramarital affair under wraps.
Mr. Black
paid nearly $10 million to Guzel Ganieva, with whom he had a sexual
relationship and who had accused him of assault. The agreement required Ms.
Ganieva not to publicly disclose the relationship. (Mr. Black has acknowledged
the affair but denied the assault allegation.) One of Mr. Epstein’s tasks was
to look into whether the payments, some of which were structured as loans,
would incur federal gift taxes, according to court filings and the emails The
Times reviewed.
Pleading
for Pay
By 2015,
fissures were beginning to surface in the relationship between the two men. Mr.
Epstein wanted more money. Mr. Black was balking.
The spat
was captured in Mr. Epstein’s emails, written in a stream-of-consciousness
manner with little regard for the conventions of grammar, punctuation or
spelling. Mr. Epstein later compiled the emails with notes to himself about the
role he had played in managing Mr. Black’s finances, apparently to help make
the case that he deserved to be paid.
Mr.
Epstein alternated between sounding angry, boastful and defensive.
He
detailed the extensive work he had performed and how much money it had saved
his client. He derided the employees in Mr. Black’s family office and one of
the billionaire’s outside advisers at the elite law firm Paul Weiss.
The
underlying message: Mr. Black could trust only Mr. Epstein, and he deserved to
be paid accordingly.
Shortly
after a meeting with Mr. Black and some of his advisers in November 2015, Mr.
Epstein typed a long email that alluded to what he said were his long-running
warnings about Mr. Black’s staff.
One
adviser’s comments were “totally incomprehensible,” Mr. Epstein wrote, and “the
charts he prepared unreadable.” Another adviser spent the meeting in a
“defensive posture,” leading Mr. Epstein to wonder if he had felt “sandbagged”
by Mr. Epstein’s presence.
Mr.
Epstein went on to propose one final year of work. “I think you should pay the
25m that you did not for this year,” he wrote. “For next year its the same 40 m
as always, paid 20 in jan and 20 in july, and then we are done.”
Over the
course of 2016, Mr. Epstein ratcheted up the pressure to get paid.
“As you
often like to remind me- you’ve paid a great deal of money to date,” he wrote
that March. “That being said - If you want my involvement moving foward, I
suggest you pay my regular I fee of 40 m.”
If cash
was a problem, he offered, then Mr. Black could pay him in other ways, like by
giving him Miami real estate or artwork, or financing his new plane.
Email
Excerpt from Mr. Epstein to Mr. Black
March 20,
2016
To help
out . im keenly aware of your current cash position. so I will consider an in-kind payment - real estate ( Miami ), , art , financing of
my new plane (allows you to spread over years
or of course the preferred cash.
Several
weeks later, still frustrated, Mr. Epstein dashed off an email that explained
the value he had provided Mr. Black over the years.
“If you
reflect on your financial life, you have been kept safe, had remarkable results
and no disasters,” he wrote.
But Mr.
Black was putting his fortune at risk, Mr. Epstein warned. “I have repeatedly
urged you to get rid of the people in your office,” he wrote. “You have
repeatedly chosen to ignore my advice.” Mr. Black had complained about his high
fees, he went on, while “ignoring the benefit of between 1.5 and 2b to the
better,” a reference to how much Mr. Epstein claimed he had saved Mr. Black.
Six
months later, in November 2016, the dispute was still simmering. Mr. Epstein
said Mr. Black urgently needed to clean up the “procrastination produced mess”
that was his estate — and that Mr. Black’s children had contributed to.
“You have
a bomb of colored string that your retarded children have formed,” he wrote.
“It has to be very carefully unwound.”
Email
Excerpt from Mr. Epstein to Mr. Black
Nov. 15,
2016
at least
for a few weeks I am unable to commit much time and make any future plans
to guide you in the redoing of your procrastination produced mess.
That
being said , the tasks at hand are the
following. You have a bomb of colored
string that your retarded children have formed , It has to be very carefully
unwound ,
The long
pressure campaign may have worked. Mr. Black kept bankrolling Mr. Epstein into
2017. Early that year, he lent Mr. Epstein about $30 million, but Mr. Epstein
repaid only $10 million. Mr. Black’s last recorded payment, of $8 million, came
that April, according to a report by the law firm, Dechert, that Apollo hired
to review Mr. Black’s relationship with Mr. Epstein.
Ms.
Estrich, the lawyer for Mr. Black, said he ultimately “fired Epstein because he
was disruptive and believed the fees for his services were excessive.”
Even
after the payments stopped, Mr. Black kept soliciting his friend’s advice.
In
October 2018, one of Mr. Black’s advisers emailed Mr. Epstein to say that Mr.
Black had requested that he provide a “high level review” of Mr. Black’s
1,700-page federal tax return.
Weeks
later, Mr. Epstein’s criminal enterprise began to unravel.
A Virgin
Islands Inquiry
In
November 2018, The Miami Herald published a series of articles about Mr.
Epstein’s sweetheart plea deal a decade earlier. The public outcry that
followed led federal prosecutors to reopen investigations into his
sex-trafficking operation. He was arrested in 2019 and died by suicide in a
Manhattan jail cell.
Mr. Black
initially played down his ties to the notorious predator, denying knowledge of
his crimes and saying that top law firms had vetted his financial services. Mr.
Black’s exalted position at Apollo and on Wall Street appeared secure.
After The
Times reported in 2020 that Mr. Black had paid Mr. Epstein as much as $75
million, Apollo hired Dechert to get to the bottom of the matter. The firm
concluded that Mr. Black’s payments to Mr. Epstein had been for legitimate tax-
and estate-planning services. But its public report, while sparse on details,
made clear that the relationship between the two men had been extensive.
That
shook investor confidence in Apollo, and in early 2021, Mr. Black was pushed
out of the firm he had helped create. He also agreed not to seek another term
as chairman of the Museum of Modern Art in New York, a post he had long prized.
The next
year, Senator Ron Wyden, Democrat of Oregon, began looking into Mr. Black’s
payments to Mr. Epstein. Investigators learned that Bank of America, where Mr.
Black had accounts, had flagged $170 million of his payments to Mr. Epstein as
suspicious. They also discovered that Mr. Black had paid millions of dollars to
eight women, according to the congressional notes shared with The Times.
At least
three of those women were listed among Mr. Epstein’s associates and victims in
federal court filings. Mr. Black’s representatives did not answer questions
from The Times about why he had paid the women.
Authorities
in the U.S. Virgin Islands, where some of Mr. Epstein’s businesses had been
based and many of his sex crimes had taken place, opened their own
investigation into Mr. Epstein’s financial partners, including Mr. Black.
Lawyers
working for the territory’s attorney general interviewed at least two women who
claimed they had been sexually abused by Mr. Black after Mr. Epstein introduced
them, according to several people briefed on the matter and interview notes.
It is
unclear whether the attorney general’s office substantiated those allegations.
In 2023, Mr. Black agreed to pay the territory $62.5 million to end the
investigation.
Whit
Clay, a spokesman for Mr. Black, said at the time that the settlement did not
involve any allegations of misconduct. He said it was simply to resolve claims
arising from the “unintended consequences” of the fees that Mr. Black had paid
Mr. Epstein.
Nicholas
Confessore contributed reporting. Kirsten Noyes, Susan C. Beachy and Julie Tate
contributed research.
Matthew
Goldstein is a Times reporter who covers Wall Street and white-collar crime and
housing issues.
David
Enrich is a deputy investigations editor for The Times. He writes about law and
business.
Steve
Eder has been an investigative reporter for The Times for more than a decade.
Jessica
Silver-Greenberg is a Times investigative reporter writing about big business
with a focus on health care. She has been a reporter for more than a decade.


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