Epstein
Files Reveal Scope of Ghislaine Maxwell’s Role in Clinton Circle
Jeffrey
Epstein’s longtime companion helped advise on the kickoff of the Clinton Global
Initiative and arranged for $1 million in funding for it, emails show.
Danny
Hakim
By Danny
Hakim
Feb. 8,
2026
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/08/us/politics/epstein-clintons-maxwell.html
Jeffrey
Epstein’s longtime companion, Ghislaine Maxwell, played a substantial role in
supporting the creation of the Clinton Global Initiative, one of President Bill
Clinton’s signature post-White House endeavors, new documents released by the
Justice Department show.
Ms.
Maxwell took part in budget discussions related to the first Clinton Global
Initiative conference; talked through challenges about it with both Clinton
aides and Publicis Groupe, the company that produced the inaugural event; and
arranged to wire $1 million to pay Publicis for its work on “the Clinton
project,” according to emails in the massive cache of documents collected as
part of the government’s investigations of Mr. Epstein.
The
source of the money is unclear, including whether Mr. Epstein provided the
funds. However, the emails show that he was aware of the payment.
“Ask him
to tell you why i million now and where will it be going,” Mr. Epstein wrote to
Ms. Maxwell a few days after she received the wiring instructions from
Publicis.
Ms.
Maxwell’s involvement in the launch of the Clinton Global Initiative took place
in 2004, before Mr. Epstein’s 2006 indictment and 2008 guilty plea for
solicitation of prostitution with a minor, and long before Ms. Maxwell, a
daughter of the media baron Robert Maxwell, was sentenced in 2022 to two
decades in prison for conspiring with Mr. Epstein to sexually exploit underage
girls.
The
emails support an assertion Ms. Maxwell made last year in an interview with the
Justice Department that she played a key role in helping set up the global
conference.
Mr.
Clinton has said he stopped speaking with Mr. Epstein sometime before his 2006
indictment. In a statement, Angel Ureña, a spokesman for the Clintons, said the
former president had “called for the full release of the Epstein files” and
“has nothing to hide.”
“He knew
nothing about Epstein’s crimes,” Mr. Ureña said. “When it became clear Epstein
had no genuine interest in lifesaving philanthropic work, there was no reason
for further contact. The facts are the facts and the truth is the truth, and
they’re both on our side.”
The new
documents provide texture about the connections between the Clinton and Epstein
circles, which have long generated a swirl of conspiracy theories and
unverified allegations.
The
emails reinforce previous accounts that Mr. Clinton and those around him had a
more enduring relationship with Ms. Maxwell than with Mr. Epstein. In addition
to her involvement with the Clinton Global Initiative, the records reveal that
Ms. Maxwell had flirtatious exchanges in the early 2000s with Doug Band, who at
the time was Mr. Clinton’s top aide.
She was
already known to have attended Chelsea Clinton’s 2010 wedding along with her
then-boyfriend, Ted Waitt, a tech billionaire who was a friend of the Clintons’
and a prolific Clinton Foundation donor. And she remained in the Clinton orbit
even after reports began surfacing accusing her of misconduct related to Mr.
Epstein’s abuse of young women. Ms. Maxwell told the Justice Department last
year that she last saw Mr. Clinton sometime between 2016 and 2018, when she
said they had dinner together in Los Angeles.
In a
Justice Department interview last year, Ms. Maxwell said that “President
Clinton was my friend, not Epstein’s friend.” Her lawyer did not return
requests for comment.
A review
by The New York Times of references to the Clintons in the recently released
files found very little related to former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
and limited new information about the former president’s interactions with Mr.
Epstein, a Democratic donor who supported Mr. Clinton’s 1992 political campaign
and donated $10,000 to help refurbish the White House. He also donated $20,000
to Mrs. Clinton’s Senate campaign in 1999.
Logs that
have previously been made public show that Mr. Epstein visited the White House
a number of times during the Clinton administration and that Mr. Clinton took
four international trips on Mr. Epstein’s private jet in 2002 and 2003. Mrs.
Clinton has said she never flew on Mr. Epstein’s plane.
The
former president has said he never visited Mr. Epstein’s private island in the
U.S. Virgin Islands, an account supported by emails between Mr. Epstein and his
associates. (The Secret Service has indicated in the past that they have not
been to the island, and said in a statement that “at this time, we have no new
information to provide regarding this matter.”)
House
Republicans have sought to put a spotlight on the ties between the Clintons and
Mr. Epstein, and threatened to hold them both in criminal contempt of Congress
if they did not testify in the House Oversight Committee’s investigation into
the convicted sex offender. Those depositions are set to be held at the end of
this month.
Mr.
Clinton has tried to downplay his association with Mr. Epstein. In a sworn
declaration submitted to the House panel last month, Mr. Clinton said that
while Mr. Epstein may have visited the White House while he was president, “I
do not recall encountering Mr. Epstein, or any specific interactions with him,
while in office.”
The
former president also said that he did not recall when he first met Ms.
Maxwell, “though I believe she was working for Mr. Epstein at the time.” Mr.
Clinton said he did not recall his specific interactions with her or when he
last saw her, “but it was many years ago.”
President
Trump, who socialized extensively with Mr. Epstein and also traveled on his
private plane, has expressed misgivings that the Clintons are being forced to
testify, despite his repeated attacks on both of them over the years.
“I think
it’s a shame, to be honest,” Mr. Trump told reporters this week. “I always
liked him. Her? Yeah, she’s a very capable woman.”
For his
part, Mr. Trump had warm words for Ms. Maxwell in 2020, after her arrest,
saying “I just wish her well, frankly.” Both presidents appear to have provided
messages for a book put together for Mr. Epstein’s 50th birthday, though Mr.
Trump’s staff has denied it.
The
Clinton Global Initiative was conceived in the early 2000s as Mr. Clinton’s
version of the annual gathering of the global elite in Davos, Switzerland, with
the goal of imbuing it with a more charity-minded mission to shape his
post-presidential legacy.
Mr. Band,
who has since had a bitter break with the Clintons, has long been credited with
being the driving force behind the project. Ms. Maxwell’s involvement has been
largely unknown.
But in
her Justice Department interview last year, Ms. Maxwell said she had a “very
central” role in setting up the Clinton Global Initiative, though she added
that the idea was not originally hers. “I don’t try to elevate myself in any
form of importance here,” she added.
Ms.
Maxwell also indicated that Mr. Epstein was engaged in the effort, saying he
“supported me to help them, but then I think he may have tried to use that to
insert himself in some way.”
Richard
Attias, a former top executive at Publicis, said in an interview this week that
Ms. Maxwell had played a key role in getting the project going.
“She was
in Davos with President Clinton, and this is when they realized the amazing
impact of Davos and they came up with the idea of creating something similar,
but with a different philosophy,” he said.
Mr.
Attias said that Ms. Maxwell sent the $1 million to Publicis to pay for its
work producing the event, which was held in New York in September 2005. He said
he was not aware who provided the funding, but said he believed it most likely
came from a variety of sources.
After
initially saying he did not believe Mr. Epstein was involved, Mr. Attias later
described Mr. Epstein as “one of the sponsors,” but in follow-up texts to The
Times, he also said he didn’t really remember, noting the discussions took
place more than two decades ago.
Mr.
Attias, who left Publicis in 2008 — and who has since produced conferences for
The Times — said in texts and the interview that he was ultimately uncertain
about the extent of Mr. Epstein’s involvement in the Clinton conference.
In 2007,
when Mr. Epstein’s lawyers were seeking lenient treatment for their client as
he was being investigated for sex trafficking, they asserted in a letter to
prosecutors that he “was part of the original group that conceived the Clinton
Global Initiative.”
The Times
identified one 2004 email to Ms. Maxwell from Mr. Attias in which he appeared
to reference Mr. Epstein.
“I trust
you and JE at 300 percent,” Mr. Attias wrote, while pleading for her to call
off what appeared to be a lawyer for Mr. Epstein who was demanding a wide range
of specific budget details early in the planning stages. (“We have no idea of
what will be the programme, the venue, the hotels, the consultants, the
speakers, etc. … ” Mr. Attias wrote to Ms. Maxwell.)
In a
statement, the Clinton Foundation, which now runs the Clinton Global
Initiative, said it accepted only one $25,000 donation in 2006 from an
Epstein-affiliated foundation, which has been previously reported. The
foundation said it did not have any record of any other financial contributions
to the Clinton Foundation or the Clinton Global Initiative related to Mr.
Epstein or Ms. Maxwell.
“Publicis
funded the development of the event which they were ultimately hired to
produce,” the foundation said, adding that it “was not responsible for raising
money for Publicis’s business.”
Post-Presidential
Ties
Ms.
Maxwell’s involvement in the kickoff of the Clinton Global Initiative came
during a period when she and Mr. Epstein were both socializing with the former
president.
In 2002,
less than two years after leaving the White House, Mr. Clinton flew on Mr.
Epstein’s plane on a 10-day trip to seven countries, including Ghana and
Nigeria. Other passengers on the trip, which has been previously reported,
included Ms. Maxwell and the actors Kevin Spacey and Chris Tucker, according to
flight manifests and photos that are among the documents that have been
released.
At some
point, Mr. Clinton appears to have handwritten a thank-you note to Mr. Epstein
on stationery that Mr. Epstein kept on one of his planes. The Times obtained a
photo of the undated note, which was framed and recovered from Mr. Epstein’s
estate. In it, the former president thanked the financier for letting him
“invade your private space” and explained that he had been “exhausted and had
to get away from the crowd.” He also wrote that “as we forge ahead, i’ll
finally figure out the financial stuff!”
The newly
released files show numerous interactions between Ms. Maxwell and the former
president’s aides.
In
November 2002, Ms. Maxwell arranged to send Mr. Clinton what she described as
“devil slippers” for his birthday, an email shows. The next month, Ms. Maxwell
and a Clinton aide corresponded about talking points for how to respond to a
Vanity Fair reporter who was writing a profile on Mr. Epstein. The same day,
another Clinton aide, Ira Magaziner, sent Ms. Maxwell an email describing a
Clinton project to combat AIDS.
Asked
about the contact, Mr. Magaziner said in an email to The Times that he had sent
the kind of information he shared with potential donors about what would become
the Clinton Health Access Initiative, a group that fights disease in dozens of
countries.
During
this period, Ms. Maxwell and Mr. Band, then a Clinton aide, were also
exchanging suggestive emails, the documents show.
“Booboo,”
Ms. Maxwell wrote to him in 2002, “are you around? I am very ill and require
immediate medical attention - I am suffering from boobooitis - a very serious
condition. Without a booboo fix the symptoms become very pronounced.”
She
referred to “cries into the night that sound like Shakespeare sonnets that
sound like this - Oh Douglas - oh Douglas - wherefore art though Douglas.”
The same
day, Mr. Band replied that “my boobooitis is also reaching epic poportions,”
adding, “Lots going on but will be In boobooville the second you arrive.”
During
their exchanges, they facilitated connections between Mr. Clinton and Mr.
Epstein. In an April 2002 message, Mr. Band wrote: “the pres wanted me to tell
you to tell jeffrey he says hello and he misses him.”
In a
statement to The Times, Mr. Band said his communication with Ms. Maxwell
occurred when he was in his late 20s and unmarried.
“There
was absolutely no physical relationship that occurred between us. Ever,” he
said, calling Ms. Maxwell “a monster.”
In 2011,
Mr. Band sent an email to another Clinton aide, directing him to “remove” Ms.
Maxwell “from all lists” giving her access to Clinton-related events as
questions about her conduct grew, according to a copy of the email viewed by
The Times.
Earlier
that year, a Daily Mail report had dubbed her “Epstein’s Girl Friday ‘Fixer.’”
Mr.
Ureña, the Clintons’ spokesman, said nothing was communicated broadly across
the organization at the time about banning Ms. Maxwell.
Ms.
Maxwell resurfaced again at a Clinton Global Initiative event in 2013, after
Mr. Band stopped working for the Clintons, and was honored for an ocean
conservation project.
Jessica
Silver-Greenberg and David Enrich contributed reporting. Julie Tate contributed
research.
Danny
Hakim is a reporter on the Investigations team at The Times, focused primarily
on politics.


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