How Trump
Appears in the Epstein Files
The New
York Times found more than 5,300 files with references to Mr. Trump and related
terms. They include salacious and unverified claims, as well as documents that
had already been made public.
Steve
Eder Michael C.
BenderDavid Enrich
By Steve
EderMichael C. Bender and David Enrich
Feb. 1,
2026
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/01/us/trump-epstein-files.html
The
Justice Department looked into sexual misconduct allegations against President
Trump in connection with the sex offender Jeffrey Epstein but did not find
credible information to merit further investigation, Todd Blanche, the deputy
attorney general, said on Sunday.
Mr.
Blanche’s comments, which he made on CNN’s “State of the Union,” came less than
48 hours after the Trump administration released about three million pages of
documents collected by the Justice Department as part of its yearslong
investigation into Mr. Epstein, who died in 2019.
The
controversy over Mr. Epstein has dogged Mr. Trump for the past year. After Mr.
Trump’s allies vowed on the 2024 campaign trail to release the Epstein files,
his administration rapidly backtracked. Mr. Trump’s resistance to releasing the
government’s files fueled speculation that they contained damaging information
about him or his allies.
The files
are peppered with references to Mr. Trump, who had been a close friend of Mr.
Epstein’s until the early 2000s. While Mr. Trump has repeatedly downplayed the
relationship, the two men bonded over their pursuit of young women. Mr. Trump
has denied any wrongdoing in connection to Mr. Epstein.
Using a
proprietary search tool, The New York Times identified more than 5,300 files
containing more than 38,000 references to Mr. Trump, his wife, his Mar-a-Lago
club in Florida, and other related words and phrases in the latest batch of
emails, government files, videos and other records released by the Justice
Department. Previous installments of the Epstein files, which the department
released late last year, included another 130 files with Trump-related
references.
Many of
the documents released on Friday that mention Mr. Trump are news articles and
other publicly available materials that had landed in Mr. Epstein’s email
inbox. None of those files include any direct communication between Mr. Trump
and Mr. Epstein. (Few of the files date back as far as the early 2000s, when
the two men were friends.)
Here is
what our review of the files has found so far.
Mr. Trump
is named in unverified tips received by the F.B.I.
Mr. Trump
is one of half a dozen prominent men about whom the agency’s files includes
“salacious information,” according to an email an F.B.I. official wrote to a
colleague last year.
Some of
that information appears to be in the form of more than a dozen tips submitted
through the F.B.I.’s National Threat Operations Center in West Virginia. Some
of the tips include accusations of sexual abuse by Mr. Trump and Mr. Epstein.
F.B.I. officials last summer compiled the tips into a summary, which was among
the files released on Friday.
The
F.B.I. summary does not include corroborating information, and The Times is not
describing the details of the unverified claims. The names of some of the
tipsters in the document have not been redacted.
The newly
released files also include notes and transcripts of interviews that federal
investigators conducted with Mr. Epstein’s victims, some of whom describe
interactions with Mr. Trump.
For
instance, handwritten notes from one interview in September 2019 — about a
month after Mr. Epstein died by suicide in a Manhattan jail — say that a
victim, whose name has been redacted, recalled being transported in a dark
green car to Mar-a-Lago to meet Mr. Trump.
“This is
a good one, huh?” the victim recalls Mr. Epstein saying to Mr. Trump. The notes
do not suggest misconduct by Mr. Trump.
In
another file, Juan Alessi, who worked for Mr. Epstein, is reported to have told
investigators that Mr. Trump — along with other well-known individuals — had
visited Mr. Epstein’s home.
A White
House spokesman declined to comment on questions about specific documents and
referred to Mr. Trump’s comments to reporters on Saturday, when he claimed that
the files “absolved me” of wrongdoing.
Some of
the documents confirm previous reports about Mr. Epstein and Mr. Trump.
Investigators,
lawyers, journalists and others have spent years trying to understand the
extent of Mr. Epstein’s relationship with powerful men, including Mr. Trump,
and a huge volume of information is already in the public domain. Many of the
Trump-related files that The Times reviewed buttress or recycle those
materials.
Some of
the new files are duplicates of emails and other records that the Justice
Department or the House Oversight Committee released late last year. Those
files show that, long after Mr. Trump and Mr. Epstein’s relationship ended, Mr.
Epstein remained intensely focused on his former friend, which included looking
for ways to leverage Mr. Trump’s political rise for his own purposes.
Some
newly released files add to the sense that Mr. Epstein was keeping close tabs
on the president. In 2018, for example, Mr. Epstein’s accountant emailed him a
link to a Reuters article about congressional investigations into Mr. Trump and
Deutsche Bank, which for years was the president’s primary lender. At the time
of the email, Deutsche Bank was also Mr. Epstein’s main bank.
The
documents also include files that confirmed previous news articles about Mr.
Epstein’s relationship with the future president.
For
example, last August, The Times published an article showing the inside of Mr.
Epstein’s Manhattan mansion, including how he displayed photos with powerful
men like Mr. Trump. Similar photos are included in the files released by the
Justice Department.
There are
also scattered references to the compendium of letters that was presented to
Mr. Epstein on his 50th birthday in 2003. In one newly released email, from
late 2002, an unidentified sender provides an update on the plans for the
birthday book, apparently noting that submissions from Mr. Trump and others
have not yet arrived.
The
birthday book, which was released by a congressional committee last summer,
ultimately included a bawdy entry apparently signed by Mr. Trump. Mr. Trump has
denied writing it and has sued The Wall Street Journal for linking him to it.
The files
include emails from a woman named Melania.
In 2002,
a woman named Melania wrote a warm email to Ghislaine Maxwell, Mr. Epstein’s
longtime associate who is now serving a 20-year prison sentence after being
convicted of participating in his sex-trafficking operation. It is not clear if
the sender of the email is the future first lady, Melania Knavs, who married
Mr. Trump about three years later.
The email
was sent shortly after New York magazine published a profile of Mr. Epstein
that included a photo of him with Ms. Maxwell. The article included a
now-famous quote from Mr. Trump in which he called Mr. Epstein a “terrific guy”
and said that “he likes beautiful women as much as I do, and many of them are
on the younger side.”
“Dear
G!,” the October 2002 email begins. “Nice story about JE in NY mag. You look
great on the picture. I know you are very busy flying all over the world. …
Have a great time!” The sender signs off: “Love, Melania.” The sender’s email
address is redacted.
Ms.
Maxwell does not appear to have replied for a few months. “Sweat pea — thanks
for your message,” she wrote in January 2003. Ms. Maxwell notes that she is on
her way back to New York and will not have time to see Melania. “I will try and
call though,” she writes. “Keep well.”
There are
also occasional cryptic references to Trump family members in the files
released on Friday. A handwritten page from a mid-2000s notebook, for example,
describes gifts — including, apparently, a bracelet for Ivana Trump, who was
married to Mr. Trump until the early 1990s and who died in 2022. The notes
appear to have been written by government investigators.
There are
a variety of other references to Trump.
The files
occasionally demonstrate the Trump administration’s apparent sensitivity about
the president’s inclusion in the trove of documents.
One file
shows a series of text messages between Mr. Epstein and Stephen K. Bannon, Mr.
Trump’s former adviser, from 2019. One of them includes a photo of Mr. Trump
delivering a speech. Mr. Trump’s face has been covered with a black redaction
box. (Mr. Bannon declined to comment on the messages.)
In
December, the Justice Department posted and then removed from its website a
photo of Mr. Epstein’s New York mansion, in which an image of Mr. Trump with a
number of women was visible inside a drawer. The department later reposted the
photo and said it had been temporarily taken down to protect Mr. Epstein’s
victims.
Another
email released on Friday indicates that Mr. Epstein was considering whether to
contact Mr. Trump in 2011. In an email to a private investigator, Mr. Epstein
indicates that he wants to speak to Mr. Trump about Virginia Giuffre. Ms.
Giuffre, who died by suicide last year, was one of Mr. Epstein’s most prominent
victims. She said that she had been lured into Mr. Epstein’s web when she
worked at Mar-a-Lago.
In the
email, Mr. Epstein asks the private investigator whether there are any
alternatives before contacting Mr. Trump. It is not clear if he tried to reach
the future president.
Mr. Trump
said last summer that he ended his relationship with Mr. Epstein at least in
part because Mr. Epstein “stole” Ms. Giuffre from Mar-a-Lago. Mr. Trump noted
that Ms. Giuffre never accused him of misconduct.
Reporting
was contributed by Dylan Freedman, Nicholas Confessore, Debra Kamin and Zach
Seward.
Steve
Eder has been an investigative reporter for The Times for more than a decade.
Michael
C. Bender is a Times correspondent in Washington.
David
Enrich is a deputy investigations editor for The Times. He writes about law and
business.


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