The trove of more than 20,000 pages of emails handed to the House Oversight Committee sketches a world where Jeffrey Epstein moved effortlessly through Democratic power circles, even as his reputation darkened. In one 2016 message, he vents that he cut off Bill Clinton after catching the former president contradicting himself with “whole-hearted conviction” only weeks apart. Clinton’s team now insists this proves their distance from Epstein, stressing he knew “nothing” of the financier’s crimes and hadn’t spoken to him in decades.
Yet other messages and records blur that clean break. Epstein appears in discussions about a “men of the world” conference with Clinton and other tarnished figures, while logs and flight records confirm years of contact, donations, and shared travel. Kathryn Ruemmler’s friendly exchanges with Epstein, and her later rise to Goldman Sachs, underscore how deeply he was embedded in elite networks that long preferred not to ask, or answer, too many questions.
