The Epstein Network: What the Public Record Actually Says
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In November 2025, the House Oversight Committee released 2,897 documents from its investigation into Jeffrey Epstein. The documents span decades — from the early 1990s through 2019 — and include emails, legal filings, news coverage, and internal records.
We processed every document. Here is what the public record actually contains.
The Numbers
The most common names appearing across all 2,897 documents:
- Donald Trump — mentioned 4,437 times across the dataset
- Bill Clinton — 1,039 mentions
- Alan Dershowitz — 1,623 mentions
- Prince Andrew — 455 mentions
- Ghislaine Maxwell — 704 mentions
- Les Wexner — 162 mentions
- Virginia Giuffre/Roberts — 348 mentions
These are not allegations. They are documented frequencies in public government records.
The Network
Jeffrey Epstein did not operate alone. A trafficking operation of this scale — spanning Little Saint James island in the U.S. Virgin Islands, a Manhattan townhouse, a Palm Beach compound, and properties in New Mexico and Paris — requires infrastructure, financing, and protection.
Les Wexner, founder of Victoria's Secret, Bath & Body Works, and Abercrombie & Fitch, granted Epstein power of attorney over his entire fortune. This is how the network was financed. The U.S. Virgin Islands, which sued Epstein's estate, settled for $105 million in 2022.
The Plea Deal
In 2008, federal prosecutors in Florida — led by Alexander Acosta — offered Epstein a non-prosecution agreement covering federal charges. Epstein pleaded guilty to two state charges and served 13 months in a county jail with work release six days a week.
Acosta later became Secretary of Labor under President Trump. He resigned in 2019 following public scrutiny of the plea deal after Epstein's federal arrest.
The 302 identified victims received no meaningful justice from that agreement.
The Unsealed Documents
In January 2024, Judge Loretta Preska ordered the unsealing of documents from the civil case Giuffre v. Maxwell (1:15-cv-07433, S.D.N.Y.). These documents contain depositions, correspondence, and evidence gathered during Virginia Giuffre's lawsuit against Ghislaine Maxwell.
The full docket is publicly accessible: Giuffre v. Maxwell on CourtListener
The House Oversight Committee documents are archived at: github.com/robertDouglass/epstein-files
Why We Built This
The ARCHIVE collection at Eps Tees exists because public memory is short and powerful people rely on that. These shirts name names from the documented record. Ten percent of every sale goes to survivor advocacy organizations.
The record is public. The names are known. Wear it.