This is a network analysis tool for exploring relationships between people, places, and events captured in the Epstein emails released by the House Oversight Committee. LLMs were used to extract these relationships from the raw document text, and as such, it is likely that there are some errors and omissions. Click on a relationship in the timeline after selecting or searching for a specific actor to see the document it was taken from with the principals highlighted. You can verify for yourself if the relationship is accurate according to the document.
How to use:
- Search for actors using the search bar
- Click on nodes in the graph to explore their relationships
- Use filters to focus on specific content categories
- Click document links in the timeline to view source documents
See also Wired [no paywall] – Pranksters Recreated a Working Version of Jeffrey Epstein’s Gmail Inbox. Using Jmail, you can read thousands of Jeffrey Epstein’s emails in a familiar format. Use the star function to highlight notable finds… Now, you can browse all those emails just like you would on your own Gmail account. Jmail is a website that looks very much like Gmail, except that there is a little hat hanging on the logo and that the profile picture in the top right corner is a grinning Epstein. (Click on it and it says “Hi Jeffrey!”) The inbox lets you click through thousands of emails, formatted to look exactly like a regular message would in your inbox. In the sidebar, you can sort by Inbox, Starred, and Sent. In Gmail, a lower sidebar section reads Labels and separates emails by category. In Jmail, it is a list of people who corresponded with Epstein…”