Full list of names in Jeffrey Epsteins contact book has been revealed

Full list of names in Jeffrey Epsteins contact book has been revealed

Bill Clinton and Donald Trump are included, largely because both used Epstein’s aircraft at different times in the past. Both have repeatedly denied any involvement in Epstein’s crimes and face no formal allegations.

The list also includes celebrities like Michael Jackson, Naomi Campbell, Courtney Love, Mick Jagger, and Chris Tucker. Their involvement ranges from brief interactions to social acquaintances — none have been accused of participating in Epstein’s criminal activity.

Numerous business leaders, wealthy families, and entertainment figures appear, including Les and Abigail Wexner, Glenn and Eva Dubin, Bill Richardson, Tom Pritzker, and others whose names have circulated in past reporting. Their levels of association vary widely: former friendships, business ties, past dating relationships, or simple name entries from Epstein’s expansive social circles.

Flight logs reveal a broader cast: chefs, assistants, security personnel, stylists, educators, administrative staff, and individuals who worked for Epstein at different times. Some, like Sarah Kellen, Nadia Marcinkova, and Adriana Ross, were named years ago as potential co-conspirators in the original 2008 plea deal. Others were merely employees with no allegations tied to them.

The list also includes accusers like Virginia Giuffre and Courtney Wild — which reinforces how complex and wide-spanning the records are. Epstein kept the names of victims alongside the names of celebrities and wealthy friends, all without context. This is exactly why investigators continue cautioning the public not to jump to conclusions as more pages roll out.

The political stakes around the release are enormous. The decision to compel disclosure is being framed by lawmakers as a matter of public accountability and the need for government transparency. The Justice Department’s handling of Epstein’s earlier plea deal, the failures surrounding his detention, and the murky circumstances of his death have fueled distrust for years. Many see the release as overdue.

But others warn that selectively surfaced names will be used for sensationalism, misinterpretation, and political warfare. Some figures on the list — especially those with powerful allies or enemies — may face renewed waves of public scrutiny regardless of their actual connection to Epstein’s crimes.

The documents are expected to expose inconsistencies in previous statements, gaps in the original investigations, and internal missteps across multiple agencies. They may also shed new light on how Epstein maneuvered around law enforcement for so long and how many people knew far more than they admitted.

Still, one fact remains central: inclusion in these documents, including the contact book, does not automatically translate into participation in wrongdoing. Some individuals were victims, some were bystanders, some were professional contacts, some were friends from decades earlier, and some were pulled into Epstein’s orbit without understanding who he truly was.