The Vault: The Epstein Files

Lesley Groff and the Administrative Backbone of Epstein’s World (Part 2) (6/1/26)

16 min · 1. kesä 2026
jakson Lesley Groff and the Administrative Backbone of Epstein’s World (Part 2) (6/1/26) kansikuva

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Lesley Groff was Jeffrey Epstein’s longest-serving and most senior assistant, working for him from 2001 until his 2019 arrest, and the newly examined records place her closer to his daily life than almost anyone else in the Epstein files. Her name reportedly appears more than any other name in the released material, because she handled the machinery of Epstein’s world: calendars, travel, calls, appointments, visitors, gifts, household details, meals, flights, logistics, and the constant scheduling of massages. Groff has always maintained through her lawyers that she did not know Epstein was committing crimes, and she has never been criminally charged. But the record creates the obvious and uncomfortable question: how could someone so embedded in Epstein’s routines, movements, communications, and appointments remain unaware of what was happening around him for nearly two decades? The documents show her as an intensely loyal functionary inside Epstein’s operation, someone who could move from arranging absurd household preferences to coordinating meetings with powerful men, while also helping facilitate the flow of young women, guests, and associates through his homes and social orbit. The larger significance is that Groff’s role sits in the gray zone between legal culpability, claimed ignorance, and moral responsibility. She was not Ghislaine Maxwell, and the public record does not show that prosecutors ever charged her as an accomplice, but she was also not a distant employee who occasionally answered a phone. She was the person Epstein relied on to make the system work, and that system included the very rhythms that survivors later described as central to his abuse: massages, travel, private meetings, assistants, young women, and a network of people whose access had to be managed. Congressional investigators have since sought to interview her because they believe she may have information that could help explain what the government missed or failed to act on. Groff’s defense is that she did not know; the enduring problem is that the Epstein files make clear she was close enough to the center of the operation that the question of what she saw, what she understood, and what she chose not to ask remains impossible to avoid. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: ‘Seriously the best boss ever’: inside the world of Jeffrey Epstein’s assistant | Jeffrey Epstein | The Guardian [https://www.theguardian.com/news/2026/may/28/inside-the-world-of-jeffrey-epstein-assistant-lesley-groff]

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jakson Trump’s DFC Chief Ben Black and the Lingering Shadow of Jeffrey Epstein (Part 1) (6/8/26) kansikuva

Trump’s DFC Chief Ben Black and the Lingering Shadow of Jeffrey Epstein (Part 1) (6/8/26)

Ben Black, Donald Trump’s appointee to lead the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation, is facing scrutiny after released DOJ Epstein records showed personal and business connections between him, his family, and Jeffrey Epstein. The records reviewed by the Guardian show that Black and family members invested in Environmental Solutions Worldwide in 2011, a company where Epstein held a stake through his Virgin Islands entity, Financial Trust. Ben Black and his brother Joshua became directors of the company that same year, while Epstein’s involvement intersected with Leon Black, Ben’s father and Epstein’s highest-paying known client. The Guardian also reported records suggesting Epstein was scheduled to meet Ben Black, obtained his contact information after a family estate-planning meeting, claimed to have attended Ben Black’s 30th birthday, weighed in on Ben’s $11.5 million townhouse purchase, and appeared in correspondence involving a woman who sought Epstein’s advice about communicating with Ben. Black has not been accused of wrongdoing, and his spokesperson denied that he had any personal or professional relationship with Epstein. The controversy matters because Black now oversees the DFC, a taxpayer-backed overseas investment agency whose lending cap was recently tripled to $205 billion, dramatically increasing the power of the office he runs. Trump appointed Black after Black and Palantir co-founder Joe Lonsdale promoted a more market-driven approach to foreign aid, but the Guardian reported that some DFC staff had already questioned his qualifications before the Epstein records became an internal concern. The broader issue is not just whether Ben Black personally did anything improper; it is that another person placed in a high-level federal role sits inside the sprawling overlap of Epstein, elite finance, inherited power, private investment, and political appointment. The reporting also places Ben Black’s rise against the backdrop of Leon Black’s long financial relationship with Epstein, including the Senate Finance Committee’s finding that Leon Black paid Epstein $170 million for what Black described as legitimate tax and estate-planning services. to contact me: bobbycapuccI@protonmail.com source: Trump appointee leading $205bn US agency had personal ties to Epstein, emails show | Trump administration | The Guardian [https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/jun/03/ben-black-investment-trump-epstein]

8. kesä 202614 min
jakson Mega Edition: Ghislaine Maxwell And Her Ex Husband Scott Borgerson (6/8/26) kansikuva

Mega Edition: Ghislaine Maxwell And Her Ex Husband Scott Borgerson (6/8/26)

Scott Borgerson entered the Epstein story through his relationship with Ghislaine Maxwell, which was initially hidden from public view even as prosecutors later revealed she was married. Borgerson, a tech executive and former Coast Guard officer, was widely identified as Maxwell’s secret husband after her arrest, and court reporting indicated the marriage became part of her bail arguments because her lawyers tried to present it as proof she had roots, assets, and reasons not to flee. Before that, Borgerson had publicly denied reports that Maxwell was living with him or that they were romantically involved, even as scrutiny intensified after Epstein’s death and Maxwell went underground before her 2020 arrest. The relationship reportedly collapsed once Maxwell was jailed and facing trial. According to media accounts citing people close to Maxwell, Borgerson ended the marriage during a tense jailhouse phone call and had moved on with a yoga teacher, an account most prominently reported after Maxwell’s conviction. That detail has the quality of tabloid humiliation, but it also fits the broader pattern of Maxwell’s post-arrest isolation: the socialite who once moved through elite circles with Epstein was left fighting for herself, while even the man presented in court as her husband had apparently stepped away. In that sense, Borgerson’s role is not central to Epstein’s criminal operation, but it is central to the collapse of Maxwell’s last public refuge — the private life she tried to keep sealed off from the wreckage around her. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

8. kesä 202639 min
jakson Mega Edition: Transcripts From The DOJ's Sit Down With Ghislaine Maxwell (Part 19-23) (6/7/26) kansikuva

Mega Edition: Transcripts From The DOJ's Sit Down With Ghislaine Maxwell (Part 19-23) (6/7/26)

On August 22, 2025, the U.S. Department of Justice released redacted transcripts and audio recordings of a two-day interview it conducted in July with Ghislaine Maxwell, who is serving a 20-year federal prison sentence for her role in Jeffrey Epstein’s sex-trafficking ring. During the interview, Maxwell denied ever seeing any inappropriate behavior by former President Donald Trump, describing him as a “gentleman in all respects,” and insisted she “never witnessed the president in any inappropriate setting in any way.” She also rejected the existence of a so-called “client list,” countering years of speculation, and claimed to have no knowledge of blackmail or illicit recordings tied to Epstein. In addition to defending high-profile figures, Maxwell expressed doubt that Epstein’s death was a suicide, while also rejecting the notion of an elaborate conspiracy or murder plot. The release of the transcripts—handled under the Trump-era Justice Department—has stirred sharp political debate. Trump allies have framed her remarks as vindication, while critics and Epstein’s survivors question her credibility, pointing to her conviction and suggesting her words may be aimed at influencing potential clemency or political favor. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Interview Transcript - Maxwell 2025.07.24 (Redacted).pdf [https://www.justice.gov/storage/audio-files/Interview%20Transcript/Interview%20Transcript%20-%20Maxwell%202025.07.24%20(Redacted).pdf]

8. kesä 20261 h 16 min
jakson Mega Edition: Transcripts From The DOJ's Sit Down With Ghislaine Maxwell (Part 16-18) (6/7/26) kansikuva

Mega Edition: Transcripts From The DOJ's Sit Down With Ghislaine Maxwell (Part 16-18) (6/7/26)

On August 22, 2025, the U.S. Department of Justice released redacted transcripts and audio recordings of a two-day interview it conducted in July with Ghislaine Maxwell, who is serving a 20-year federal prison sentence for her role in Jeffrey Epstein’s sex-trafficking ring. During the interview, Maxwell denied ever seeing any inappropriate behavior by former President Donald Trump, describing him as a “gentleman in all respects,” and insisted she “never witnessed the president in any inappropriate setting in any way.” She also rejected the existence of a so-called “client list,” countering years of speculation, and claimed to have no knowledge of blackmail or illicit recordings tied to Epstein. In addition to defending high-profile figures, Maxwell expressed doubt that Epstein’s death was a suicide, while also rejecting the notion of an elaborate conspiracy or murder plot. The release of the transcripts—handled under the Trump-era Justice Department—has stirred sharp political debate. Trump allies have framed her remarks as vindication, while critics and Epstein’s survivors question her credibility, pointing to her conviction and suggesting her words may be aimed at influencing potential clemency or political favor. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Interview Transcript - Maxwell 2025.07.24 (Redacted).pdf [https://www.justice.gov/storage/audio-files/Interview%20Transcript/Interview%20Transcript%20-%20Maxwell%202025.07.24%20(Redacted).pdf]

8. kesä 202649 min
jakson Jeffrey Epstein And The World Fine Dining (6/7/26) kansikuva

Jeffrey Epstein And The World Fine Dining (6/7/26)

Jeffrey Epstein’s relationship with fine dining was less about food and more about access, status, and proximity to power. Even after his 2008 sex-offender conviction, he continued moving through elite restaurant culture, private dinners, exclusive clubs, and high-end hospitality circles where wealthy people, academics, tech figures, financiers, media personalities, and socialites could gather under the respectable cover of “dinner.” Reporting has described Epstein dining at major New York restaurants with Tim Zagat, the co-founder of the Zagat restaurant guides, and emails obtained by journalists suggested Zagat was among the elite figures who shared meals with Epstein years after Epstein’s criminal history was public. The symbolism matters: Zagat represented the old New York dining establishment, and Epstein’s ability to remain welcome in that world showed how elite culture often treated his conviction as an inconvenience rather than a moral disqualification. The Zagat connection also exposes one of the stranger contradictions of Epstein’s persona. He reportedly moved through some of the most prestigious dining rooms in New York, yet accounts described his own tastes as childish or plain, with one report saying he ate “like a sixth-grader” even while dining in expensive restaurants. That makes the fine-dining world around him look less like indulgence and more like theater: the table was a stage, the guest list was the currency, and the restaurant was neutral territory where relationships could be maintained without looking like a backroom deal. Epstein used those environments the way he used universities, think tanks, foundations, private islands, and mansions — as social machinery. The food was almost beside the point; the real menu was proximity, normalization, and power. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source:  https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-12214333/Jeffrey-Epstein-repeatedly-dined-NYCs-restaurants-listed-sex-offender.html

8. kesä 202610 min