Epstein Client List and Flight Logs - View and Download the Complete Documents
Docs leaked during litigation a decade ago. Epstein Black Book contains 227 contacts & notations; Flight log is 72 pages of passenger manifests for Epstein’s “Lolita Express” jet.

Editor’s Note - From a media and government criticism point-of-view, I’ve followed the Epstein matter since 2008. Unredacted “Epstein files” began to leak via civil litigation around 2010. Via civil leaks and the reporting of guys like Nick Bryant, this stuff is already out there. J425 is sharing a couple full files today, both to prove that the supposed transparency going on at the federal level is a charade, and to show that this information is already out there for those who choose to look. - KTH
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK — Bill, Hillary and Chelsea Clinton. Donald Trump. Prince Andrew. Chris Tucker. Kevin Spacey. Alan Dershowitz. Steven Pinker. Larry Summers. Bill Richardson. John Podesta. A Soros or two. These are just a few of the names included on authentic Epstein contact lists and flight logs published on J425 today. Some names are clients. Some are potential witnesses or victims. Some are neighbors. But all are authenticated. And it’s names like these that keep people interested in the release of files related to the expired blackmailer. But a lot of this stuff was actually released over a decade ago.
That’s why one day after the supposed release of “the Epstein files” fizzled into the bizarre charade of a few conservative influencers getting handed binders that included redacted, partial excerpts of files… …J425 writes to remind readers that the full Epstein Black Book and flight logs have been passed around internet and media circles for over a decade. These unredacted resources provide a much better look at the Epstein network than whatever edited file the government intends to release.
We’re just gonna cut to the chase and give you these two complete “Epstein files” today.
J425 subscribers can download and view both The Epstein Black Book — a contact list which contains 227 names, over 50 of which were circled as people of interest by a former Epstein butler — and the 72-page unredacted flight log and passenger manifest for the so-called “Lolita Express” — Epstein’s private plane.
Both files are included in their entirety at the bottom of this post for J425 subscribers.
Who is Jeffrey Epstein?
Jeffrey Epstein was an American financier and child sex offender who reportedly operated a multi-national blackmail ring for unknown masters. Epstein cultivated an elite social circle and procured many women and children whom he and his associates sexually abused. Born and raised in New York City, Epstein began his professional career as a teacher at the Dalton School, despite lacking a college degree. After his dismissal from the school in 1976, he entered the banking and finance sector, working at Bear Stearns in various roles before starting his own firm.
The Roots of the Epstein Federal Prosecution
In understanding the Federal connection to Epstein, and what files they might possess, it’s important to understand the roots of the case.
In 2005, Palm Beach Police began looking into Epstein after a local parent alleged that Epstein assaulted their 14-year-old daughter. In doing so, Michael Reiter, the former Palm Beach Police chief was lighting the wick that ultimately exploded in Epstein’s mysterious 2019 death in Federal custody. The Palm Beach investigation found numerous additional underage victims and eventually led to a Federal case that resulted in Jeffrey Epstein’s 2008 federal non-prosecution agreement (NPA).
Reiter got the initial tip from a parent who reported Epstein molested her 14-year-old daughter. Reiter and his lead detective, Joseph Recarey identified dozens of potential victims—girls as young as 14—interviewed them, and built a solid case, uncovering a pattern of Epstein paying for sexual “massages” at his Palm Beach mansion. By 2006, they’d compiled enough evidence to push for serious charges, like sexual assault, and Reiter personally took it to the Palm Beach State Attorney, Barry Krischer. Krischer slow-walked it, treating the victims more like willing participants than trafficking targets, and only pursued a single prostitution-related charge. Frustrated, Reiter didn’t stop—he bypassed Krischer and handed the case to the FBI in 2006, hoping federal muscle would deliver real justice.
Reiter was ultimately sidelined when the feds took over, and the U.S. Attorney’s Office under Alex Acosta let Epstein plead to state charges with a slap-on-the-wrist 13-month sentence—complete with work release every day in his Palm Beach mansion—while signing off on a federal non-prosecution deal.
Reiter later called it a betrayal of the victims, telling the Miami Herald in 2018 that he was “shocked” and “disappointed” at how the feds let it fizzle out after his department’s groundwork. He’d handed them a grenade, and they pulled the pin but didn’t throw it.
The Epstein Black Book (included below)
Epstein’s contact list aka “The Epstein Black Book” surfaced in court proceedings that followed the initial federal case described above. After Epstein's former house manager Alfredo Rodriguez tried to sell it in 2009. About 50 of the entries were circled by Rodriguez, a notation that supposedly marked victims, witnesses and clients.
According to an FBI affidavit included above, Rodriguez described the address book and the information contained within it as the "Holy Grail" or "Golden Nugget" to unraveling Epstein's sprawling child-sex network.
Rodriguez famously spent more time in prison than Epstein for the crime of attempting to sell the black book to attorneys launching lawsuits at Epstein on behalf of his victims.
Rodriguez died in 2014 after a long illness. He never spoke out about the address book, so the precise significance of the names he circled remains fuzzy. But during a conversation with an undercover FBI agent posing as a potential buyer, he "discussed in detail the information contained in the book, and identified important information" to the agent.
Circled entries include:
Alan Dershowitz
Billionaire Leslie Wexner (owner of The Limited and Victoria’s Secret)
Former New Mexico Governor Bruce King
Former New Mexico Governor and and U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Bill Richardson
Peter Soros, the nephew of George Soros
Former Miss Sweden and socialite New York City doctor Eva Andersson Dubin
Some of the circled entries include additional notes—one address in New York City, for instance, is marked as an "apt. for models," and two names bear the marking "witness."
Asked why he was included, Alan Dershowitz1 told the magazine Gawker, "I've never seen the book and I have no idea what it means. I was neither a victim nor a material witness—I never witnessed any crimes or participated in any crimes, and I can prove it."
President Donald Trump is included in the Black Book but not the flight logs.
Trump, through a spokesperson, said in 2015, "Mr. Trump only knew Mr. Epstein as Mr. Trump owned the hottest and most luxurious club in Palm Beach and Mr. Epstein would go there on occasion until Mr. Trump removed him from the premises." Trump famously banned Epstein from Mar-a-Lago over his treatment of a guest’s daughter.
Bill Clinton and Prince Andrew have been previously connected to Epstein via Federal testimony of reported Epstein victims. Their names aren't circled in the black book, but both appear heavily in flight logs to Epstein’s Little St. James Island.
Epstein noted 21 contact numbers and various email addresses for Clinton, as well as several contact numbers for the prince.
Epstein Flight Logs - The Lolita Express
Former President Bill Clinton took more than 50 trips on the "Lolita Express"—the private passenger jet owned by billionaire pedophile Jeffrey Epstein—according to flight logbooks originally obtained by the defunct magazine Gawker.
The logs show that Clinton shared more than a dozen flights with convicted child sex trafficker and Epstein fixer Ghislaine Maxwell, who federal prosecutors proved procured underage girls to sexually service Epstein and his guests.
Before his arrest and later death in custody, Epstein settled lawsuits from more than 30 "Jane Doe" victims, the youngest of whom was 12 years old at the time of her abuse.
One of these victims, Virginia Roberts, claimed in a federal court filing that Epstein recruited her as a "sex slave" at the age of 15 and "sexually trafficked [her] to politically-connected and financially-powerful people," including Prince Andrew and attorney Alan Dershowitz.
Maxwell, the daughter of the media mogul Robert Maxwell (who died in a bizarre yachting accident2), was accused by Roberts of photographing Epstein's victims "in sexually explicit poses and [keeping] the child pornography on her computer," and "engag[ing] in lesbian sex with the underage females she procured for Epstein."
Ghislaine Maxwell was found guilty of child sex trafficking in 2021 and sentenced to 20 years in prison. She refused to testify about Epstein clients.
According to the logs, Clinton shared Epstein's plane with Maxwell on at least 11 flights in 2002 and 2003—before any of the allegations against them became public—according to the pilots' logbooks, which surfaced in civil litigation surrounding Epstein's crimes.
In January 2002, for instance, Clinton (story continues and files are attached after the jump)
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