US Releases Over 3 Million Epstein Pages and 2,000 Videos: Washington Braces for Fallout WASHINGTON — On January 30, 2026, the U.S. Department of Justice fulfilled what it called its final obligation under the Epstein Files Transparency Act, publicly posting more than 3 million additional pages of documents, along with 2,000 videos and 180,000 images […]
Archives for February 2026
“The Man in the Shadows”: The Nameless Guests on Epstein’s Pedophile Island l
A lone red dot blinked on the digital map of Little St. James—one of nearly 200 cell phones pinging from Epstein’s infamous “pedophile island” between 2016 and his 2019 arrest. The WIRED investigation exposed it: precise location data from a controversial broker tracked wealthy, powerful visitors straight to their homes in gated mansions, luxury high-rises, […]
Epstein Paid $200 to Introduce New Victims – The Price of Silence on the Island: Tony Figueroa testified to receiving $200 per referral—a key part of the sex trafficking network that caused decades of torment for hundreds of girls l
A crumpled $200 bill changed hands in the dim light of Epstein’s Palm Beach mansion—payment for a single introduction, nothing more, nothing less. Tony Figueroa, barely out of his teens and once dating victim Virginia Giuffre, testified under oath that Epstein handed him exactly that amount for every new girl he recruited and brought over. […]
Hundreds of Dollars in Cash for Each “Encounter” on Little St. James: Depositions confirm Epstein handed out cash payments of hundreds per session—easy money that masked coercion, threats, and loss of freedom l
Hundreds of dollars in crisp cash pressed into trembling hands—that was the lure on Little St. James, Epstein’s private paradise turned prison. A teenage girl, barely out of high school, stepped onto the sun-drenched dock expecting a simple “massage” gig for quick money. Instead, depositions reveal the grim truth: Epstein routinely handed out $200 to […]
$200–$300 Per Session – The “Pay” for Working for Epstein on the Island: Victims like Marina Lacerda were lured with promises of “earning $300 for massages”—but reality meant forced sexual acts and lifelong psychological trauma l
She was only 14, clutching $300 in crumpled bills, her hands shaking as she stepped off the private plane onto the sun-bleached dock of Little St. James. The “massage job” promised quick cash—easy money for a teenager from a broken home—had sounded almost too good. But the reality hit like a wave crashing over the […]




