Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jun 11, 2026

EpsteinExposed

EpsteinExposed is a free, open-source online database that indexes and cross-references documents from the Jeffrey Epstein case files. As of March 2026, the database contains over 2.1 million documents, 1,500 persons of interest, 3,600 flight records, and 9,900 emails sourced from DOJ releases, court filings, FBI disclosures, and congressional investigations.

Last revised
Jun 11, 2026
Read time
≈ 4 min
Length
987 w
Citations
28
Source
EpsteinExposed
Type of site
Open-source document database
Owner"Eric Keller" (pseudonym)
URLEpsteinExposed
CommercialNo
RegistrationOptional
LaunchedFebruary 5, 2026 (2026-02-05)
Current statusActive
Content license
Public domain source material

EpsteinExposed is a free, open-source online database that indexes and cross-references documents from the Jeffrey Epstein case files.1 As of March 2026, the database contains over 2.1 million documents, 1,500 persons of interest, 3,600 flight records, and 9,900 emails sourced from DOJ releases, court filings, FBI disclosures, and congressional investigations.2

History

The first released set of Epstein-related documents were related to Ghislaine Maxwell's civil litigation, and these were released through federal court dockets scattered across several states over a period of time, with some of them made accessible via PACER and other repositories. The second batch was folders of image files and videos, many previously released, without description inside folders on a Google drive.3 Following that, data sets were released as individual files without any context,4 many documents poorly scanned5 and redacted,6 and had file extensions that hid videos as PDF files.7 In response to the high volume and poor quality of the releases, different groups of journalists and engineers created tools to make the files truly searchable and meaningful. Some of the systems created are proprietary tools used specifically by news organizations,89 but others—like EpsteinExposed—are available to the public.

EpsteinExposed was created by a data engineer using the pseudonym "EricKeller2".1 In February 2026, Keller shared the project on Reddit, where it received approximately 5.5 million views.210 The site subsequently attracted hundreds of thousands of visitors.1

Keller has stated that his motivation is partly rooted in his own experience as a survivor of childhood sexual abuse.1 The site is non-commercial, ad-free, and community-funded, with monthly operating costs of approximately $8,900.2

Features

The database provides a searchable interface for documents released under the Epstein Files Transparency Act, as well as materials from the Jmail archives, the Maxwell case unsealing, and other public sources.1 By mid-March 2026, it had indexed 2.15 million documents, catalogued 1,500 people, and mapped thousands of connections.1

EpsteinExposed focuses on making clearer the relationships between the pieces of data, cross-referencing people, wire transfers, flight records, and other details.1 Features include network graph visualization of connections, interactive flight log mapping, and artificial intelligence-powered document analysis and summarization.2

The network graph has one circle for each of the hundreds of people in Epstein's network, and lines showing the connections between each person; the screenshot shows the entire graph, and visually it is massive and requires clicking and zooming in to learn details
Network graph source ↗
A Sankey diagram shows the flow of money through different accounts
Forensic financial analysis source ↗
Screenshot shows long list of dossiers for the people surrounding Epstein
Dossiers source ↗

Sources

EpsteinExposed includes publicly available documents and reporting, and does not include private or leaked data.11

Major public releases and leaks of Jeffrey Epstein–related documents (2024–2026)a
Date Source / Tranche Volume Within EpsteinExposed Scope
January 2024 Court-ordered unsealing in civil litigation Varied by order; no single aggregate count available Yes
August 27, 2025 Distributed Denial of SecretsEhud Barak email cache (via Handala) 100,000+ emails (2007–2016) No (leaked/hacked material)
September 2, 2025 U.S. House Oversight Committee document release12 33,295 pages Yes
September 11, 2025 Bloomberg News email cache13 ~18,700 emails No (independently acquired; not a public record)
November 14, 2025 Distributed Denial of Secrets – "Epstein Files" consolidated archive14 439.88 GB Partial (official government and court components within scope; leaked emails (Barak–Epstein) are not)
November 26, 2025 Distributed Denial of Secrets – "Epstein Emails"15 About 18,700 emails and 2,200 attachments No (leaked material)
December 19, 2025 DOJ "Data Sets 1–8"16 ~12,285 items (~125,575 pages) as of statutory deadline, per DOJ letter to federal court17 Yes
January 30, 2026 DOJ "Data Sets 9–12"18 3 million+ additional pages; 180,000 images; 2,000 videos (~3.5 million pages combined with prior releases) Yes
March 5, 2026 DOJ sixth release (previously removed files) ~50,000 files Yes
See also

See also

Notes

Notes

  1. "Within EpsteinExposed scope" indicates whether a given tranche falls within the sourcing criteria stated by EpsteinExposed.com, which indexes publicly available court, congressional, and government records. Indexing of eligible tranches may be ongoing.
References

References

  1. Biller, Ryan (March 18, 2026). "He Built the Definitive Epstein Database—and It Consumed His Life". Wired (magazine). Archived from the original on March 25, 2026.
  2. Wullman, Israel (March 21, 2026). "The man behind the world's largest Epstein files database". Ynet News.
  3. Groves, Stephen (September 2, 2025). "Many of the Epstein case files that were just released by a House committee were already public". PBS News Hour. Associated Press.
  4. "DOJ releases millions of Epstein records, many lacking context or corroboration". Scripps News. January 30, 2026.
  5. Miller, Dean (February 5, 2026). "Fact Check: DOJ Epstein Library's Formatting Glitch Turned Email About 'sexy and cute, 19y0' Brazilian Into 'sexy and cute, =9yo'". Lead Stories.
  6. Gollom, Mark (December 25, 2025). "How internet sleuths are un-redacting some of the Epstein files". CBC Television.
  7. Barrientos, Alex (February 17, 2026). "How a Basic URL Change Exposed Sensitive Epstein Files on DOJ Servers". Yahoo News.
  8. Deck, Andrew (March 4, 2026). "AI-powered search is fueling a wave of Epstein Files transparency projects". Nieman Foundation for Journalism.
  9. Kahn, Gretel (February 19, 2026). "From AI tools to Prince Andrew's arrest: How newsrooms are digging into the Jeffrey Epstein files". Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism.
  10. "I mapped every connection in the Epstein files. It started with 6,000 documents. It's now 1.5 million. Here's what changed". Reddit. February 13, 2026. Archived from the original on March 29, 2026. Retrieved March 29, 2026.
  11. "Sourcing". EpsteinExposed. Retrieved March 29, 2026.
  12. "Oversight Committee Releases Epstein Records Provided by the Department of Justice". U.S. House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform. September 2, 2025.
  13. Bloomberg News (September 11, 2025). "Key Takeaways from Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell's Emails". Retrieved March 29, 2026.
  14. "Epstein Files". Distributed Denial of Secrets. November 14, 2025. Retrieved March 29, 2026.
  15. "Epstein Emails". Distributed Denial of Secrets. Retrieved March 29, 2026.
  16. "New Epstein files include photos, documents with redactions". CBS News. December 21, 2025. Retrieved March 29, 2026.
  17. "Nearly all Epstein files still unreleased a month after Congress deadline". The Guardian. January 9, 2026.
  18. "Department of Justice Publishes 3.5 Million Responsive Pages in Compliance with the Epstein Files Transparency Act" (Press release). U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Public Affairs. January 30, 2026. Retrieved March 29, 2026.