About The Epstein Index
Our Mission
The Epstein Index exists to ensure that the documented connections, events, and evidence in the Jeffrey Epstein case remain accessible, organized, and searchable by the public. We believe transparency and accountability are best served when information is structured, sourced, and easy to navigate.
What This Project Does
We maintain a knowledge graph that maps the people, organizations, locations, events, and documents connected to the Epstein case. Every entry is graded by evidence level — from court records and official documents down to single-source reporting and allegations.
The goal is not to draw conclusions but to organize what is publicly known, make it searchable, and let the evidence speak for itself.
How It Works
Data is collected automatically from public sources including:
- Court filings and depositions (CourtListener, DocumentCloud, PACER)
- Government documents and FOIA releases
- Established news reporting
- Congressional records and DOJ releases
- Public archives (Wikipedia, Epstein document archives)
AI-assisted extraction identifies entities and relationships from source documents, which are then categorized by type and graded by evidence level. A conservative deduplication system merges duplicate entries while preserving source references.
For technical details about our methodology, see the Methodology page.
How to Get Involved
- Report inaccuracies — If you spot incorrect or outdated information, let us know via our contact form
- Submit source documents — Have court filings, FOIA responses, or other primary sources? We’d love to include them
- Share the project — Help increase public awareness by sharing The Epstein Index with journalists, researchers, and the public
- Embed our data — Use our embeddable entity cards on your website or blog