Epstein Client List: Every Name Confirmed by Court Documents
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What the Public Record Actually Says About the Epstein Client List
The phrase "Epstein client list" has circulated for years. People want names. The media has covered it sporadically. But what does the actual public record — court filings, depositions, and the 2,897 documents released by the House Oversight Committee — actually tell us?
This post documents only what is confirmed in public court records. No speculation. No rumors. Every name here appears in filed legal documents.
What "Client List" Actually Means
Jeffrey Epstein's criminal operation involved trafficking young women — many of them minors — to powerful men. The term "client list" emerged from civil litigation and criminal proceedings. Virginia Roberts Giuffre, in sworn depositions, named specific individuals she was trafficked to. Those depositions are part of the court record.
Additionally, the 2008 Non-Prosecution Agreement between Epstein and the U.S. Attorney's office in Miami granted immunity from federal prosecution to unnamed "co-conspirators." Those individuals have never been publicly named in any official proceeding.
Confirmed Names from Court Documents
Prince Andrew, Duke of York
Virginia Roberts Giuffre alleged in sworn depositions that she was trafficked to Prince Andrew on three occasions — in London, New York, and on Epstein's private island in the U.S. Virgin Islands. She was 17 at the time of the London encounter, she testified.
In 2022, Prince Andrew settled Giuffre's civil lawsuit against him. The settlement amount was not disclosed. He has never been criminally charged. The settlement was widely interpreted as an acknowledgment that a trial would be damaging.
Source: Giuffre v. Prince Andrew, Case No. 21-cv-6702, SDNY; court documents unsealed January 2022.
Alan Dershowitz
Virginia Roberts Giuffre named Alan Dershowitz in a sworn declaration filed in 2015. She alleged he was among the men she was trafficked to. Dershowitz, the Harvard Law professor who helped negotiate Epstein's 2008 plea deal, categorically denied the allegations and filed defamation claims against Giuffre and her attorneys.
The dispute produced years of litigation. In 2023, Giuffre settled her lawsuit against Dershowitz. The terms were not disclosed. Dershowitz maintained his innocence throughout.
Source: Edwards v. Dershowitz; multiple court filings, SDFL and SDNY; Giuffre v. Dershowitz settlement documents.
Jean-Luc Brunel
Jean-Luc Brunel, a French modeling agent and founder of MC2 Model Management, was named by Giuffre and other victims in sworn depositions. He was accused of procuring young models for Epstein and of participating in the abuse himself.
Brunel was arrested by French authorities in December 2020 and charged with rape of minors. He was found dead in his Paris prison cell in February 2022 while awaiting trial. His death was ruled a suicide.
Source: Giuffre v. Maxwell, civil depositions; French judicial proceedings 2020-2022.
Ghislaine Maxwell
Maxwell was convicted in December 2021 on five federal counts including sex trafficking of a minor. She was sentenced to 20 years in federal prison. The trial established that Maxwell was a central recruiter and facilitator in Epstein's operation — not merely a bystander.
Source: United States v. Maxwell, Case No. 20-cr-330, SDNY. Verdict December 29, 2021.
The 2008 Immunity Provision
The most significant legal mystery in the entire case is the unnamed co-conspirator immunity in the 2008 NPA. The agreement, negotiated by Epstein's legal team (which included Alan Dershowitz) and signed by U.S. Attorney Alexander Acosta, granted immunity not just to Epstein but to any potential co-conspirators.
The specific language: the agreement "resolves any potential federal criminal liability" for Epstein and "any potential co-conspirators" — without naming them.
Judge Kenneth Marra ruled in 2019 that the NPA was concluded in violation of the Crime Victims' Rights Act because victims were not notified. He did not vacate the agreement, but the ruling acknowledged its legal infirmities.
The identities of those immunized under the 2008 NPA have never been made public in any official proceeding.
The Deposition Record
The civil litigation surrounding Epstein — particularly the Giuffre v. Maxwell case — produced extensive deposition testimony that named numerous individuals. When portions of that case were unsealed in January 2024, additional names and details became part of the public record.
The unsealed documents referenced dozens of individuals by name in the context of depositions and legal filings. Some of those individuals were named as potential witnesses or for context rather than as accused parties. The distinction matters, but the breadth of the network documented in those filings is significant.
What the 2,897 Documents Add
The House Oversight Committee's release of 2,897 documents does not contain a single compiled "client list." What it contains is a massive body of correspondence, legal filings, and records that, taken together, document the network around Epstein in granular detail.
The document index identifies 2,216 unique individuals mentioned across the files. The most frequently mentioned — Trump (4,437 times), Dershowitz (1,623 times), Clinton (1,039 times) — appear primarily in news articles and legal filings discussing the network. Frequency of mention does not equal guilt.
What the documents establish is a social and professional network around Epstein that included some of the most prominent people in the world — and that this network was known to, and documented by, federal investigators before the 2008 deal was struck.
The Ongoing Gap
The full accounting of who was involved in Jeffrey Epstein's trafficking operation has never been made public. The 2008 NPA immunized unnamed co-conspirators. Epstein died in 2019 before trial. Maxwell has not cooperated publicly with prosecutors. The names that have emerged have done so through individual legal battles — one deposition, one lawsuit, one unsealing at a time.
What the public record confirms is that the network was real, documented, and known — and that its full exposure remains incomplete.
The documents are public. The court filings are accessible. The work of reading them falls to those who believe accountability requires an audience.
All names and events in this article are sourced from public court records, filed depositions, and official government documents. Sources are cited inline. This article does not make accusations beyond what has been established in court proceedings.
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