The Jeffrey Epstein files were always likely to expose other people engaged in something nefarious — particularly those who were around Epstein at the pinnacle of his influence. Many expected fellow sexual harassers to be exposed; and very few expected it might actually end with members of the Donald Trump administration being caught in a lie.
Secretary Howard Lutnick once claimed that he hadn’t been around Epstein since 2005, but the files suggest that in 2012 he visited him with his wife and children. The current U.S. Secretary of Commerce was asked in a 2025 interview with the New York Post about his relationship with Epstein, and he gave an impassioned response that some online are now retrospectively describing as “virtue signaling.”
Lutnick claimed that he vowed to never visit the late convicted child sex offender in 2005 after an uncomfortable conversation with the financier about massages. The senior official said he found Epstein “gross” for having a massage table in his living room and decided to never speak to him again.
New Epstein files reveal that U.S. Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick personally made plans to visit Jeffrey Epstein on a private island, with his children, according to the email.
— Shadow of Ezra (@ShadowofEzra) January 30, 2026
The email reads, "I have another couple with me on my boat, and each of us has 4 children."… pic.twitter.com/tk5s2n3xpK
The Department of Justice has now released an additional tranche of 3.5 million pages following congressional and public pressure. One of those pages suggests that Lutnick may not have been telling the truth about the last time he saw Epstein. Unlike other allegations — which have not yet passed the threshold of proof and where the burden remains with the accusers — Lutnick’s exposure comes in a far more verifiable form: emails.
According to DOJ findings, there is an email sent by someone investigators believe to be Lutnick inviting Epstein to a Hillary Clinton fundraiser for her 2015 presidential campaign. Admittedly, there is no proof that Epstein attended or that the two met there. But earlier, in November 2012, an aide allegedly reached out to Lutnick to ask whether he could meet Epstein for lunch on his private island, which Lutnick agreed to. In December 2012, Lutnick allegedly visited the island with his four children, another couple, and their four children.
The media has been attempting to reach Lutnick for comment since the report was released. The New York Times later reported that Lutnick declined to comment on the files because he had not read them yet. He reportedly ended the call by saying, “I spent zero time with him.”
It is not even an unthinkable assumption that Lutnick went to the island with family and friends for what he believed was an innocent vacation. Not everyone who knew Epstein was a co-conspirator. However, it is suspicious to insist that you immediately cut someone off after sensing something was wrong — especially if the reality is that you knew he was strange all along and remained in his circle for personal benefits, such as access to a private island for vacation.
The concern is that Lutnick is a secretary in Trump’s cabinet, and that this conduct may reveal a deeper moral flaw. If officials are willing to lie about this, critics ask, why not lie about Trump’s jobs report or the effects of tariffs on the economy — issues he is already in constant debate with the press over. Leadership, some argue, should be rooted in trust.
Just recently, the UK prime minister fired the UK ambassador to the U.S. after he falsely claimed he was not close to Epstein. By comparison, the Trump administration appears to be lagging behind in accountability.
Published: Jan 31, 2026 07:11 am