Norway’s central authority for fighting economic and environmental crimes, Økokrim, just announced it has opened an investigation into former Prime Minister Thorbjørn Jagland on suspicion of aggravated corruption. Politico reported that the allegations relate directly to Jagland’s contact with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein during periods when Jagland held incredibly powerful international roles.
The recently released documents detail communication between Jagland and Epstein, when he was the Chairman of the Norwegian Nobel Committee and the Secretary General of the Council of Europe (CoE), the continent’s leading human rights organization. Pål K. Lønseth, the director of Økokrim, stated that they will be investigating if Jagland received “any gifts, travels or loans in connection with his position.”
Back in 2012, Jagland, who was then the CoE chief, allegedly sent Epstein an email discussing “extraordinary young girls” in Albania. Then, in 2013, Jagland expressed interest in visiting Epstein’s private island, writing that they had “seen pictures of your island and we would be delighted to visit it.” Jagland has since told reporters that he never actually visited the island, but the fact that a high-ranking official was soliciting a visit is terrible.
It is especially horrible when you know Epstein’s history of abuse
Beyond the disturbing emails, Jagland appears to have offered Epstein access to high-level political contacts. Reports first surfaced in November 2025 detailing a 2018 chat where Epstein asked Jagland to put him in touch with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov. Jagland’s response was immediate and helpful, saying he would suggest the connection to Lavrov’s assistant. A clear indication of potential corruption.
This whole situation is complicated because as the former head of CoE, Jagland has immunity from criminal prosecution. As a result, Norwegian Foreign Minister Espen Barth Eide announced that he is formally asking the CoE to revoke Jagland’s immunity so the investigation can proceed properly. The CoE’s media department confirmed they received the request and are examining it.
The CoE actually conducted its own internal administrative inquiry into the matter, revealing that Epstein attended events at the Secretary General’s official residence on at least two occasions. They also established that Jagland stayed in private premises linked to Epstein on several occasions. The organization stressed that they found no indication that this involved official CoE business with Epstein, and found no traces of these private meetings in Jagland’s official diary.
Despite the seriousness of the charges, Jagland’s lawyer, Anders Brosveet, has stated that they welcome the opening of the investigation. Brosveet said that they are “calmly awaiting the outcome” and believes it’s good for Jagland to finally get an authoritative clarification from Økokrim, rather than having the entire press corps running their own “private investigations.”
Jagland is just the newest Norwegian politician to come under increasing pressure because of his ties to Epstien, following WEF President and the Norwegian Princess into public scrutiny.
Published: Feb 8, 2026 11:10 am