Nearly Ninety Flights Linked to Epstein Reportedly Arrived at or Departed from UK Airfields

Analysis has found that approximately 90 aircraft journeys associated to Jeffrey Epstein allegedly arrived at and departed from UK airfields, with some reportedly having onboard women from the UK who assert they were abused by the found guilty sex offender.

Flight Logs Show Pattern of Travel

The flight logs were part of a trove of court documents and files made public by the estate of Jeffrey Epstein that have been made public over the past year. The analysis identified 87 aircraft movements tied to Epstein – featuring many that were previously unknown – landing or taking off from British airfields between the start of the 1990s and 2018.

Onboard Individuals and Post-Conviction Flights

Unnamed “females” were listed among the individuals flying to and from the UK. Notably, 15 of these flights involving the UK took place following Epstein’s 2008 guilty verdict for soliciting sex from a minor.

“It was ‘shocking’ that there had never been a ‘full-scale UK investigation’ into his dealings in the country,” said US lawyers representing hundreds of Epstein victims.

UK Survivors and Court Cases

A statement from one of the British victims aided the conviction of Epstein’s associate Ghislaine Maxwell of child sex-trafficking in the US in 2021. However, that survivor has not been approached by British law enforcement, according to her attorney based in Florida.

In a response, the the Met indicated they had “not received any further information that would support reopening the probe.” They commented, “Should fresh and pertinent information be brought to our attention, encompassing any resulting from the disclosure of documents in the US, we will review it.”

Ongoing Document Release and Judicial Decisions

Proposed legislation to make public all files held by the US government in concerning Epstein was approved by the US Congress last month. The US justice department has until 19 December to follow through. A vast number of files are anticipated to be released.

In a related development, a federal judge decided last week that the DOJ could make public case files from a sex-trafficking case against Maxwell, Epstein’s long-term associate, who is currently serving a 20-year prison sentence over the charges.

Sarah Sims
Sarah Sims

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