Approximately Ninety Air Travels Linked to Epstein Allegedly Landed at or Took Off from British Airfields

Analysis has found that nearly 90 aircraft journeys linked to Jeffrey Epstein are said to have touched down at and left British airfields, with some reportedly carrying women from the UK who assert they were exploited by the found guilty child sex offender.

Flight Logs Show Trail of Travel

These aviation records were among thousands of legal papers and papers made public by Epstein’s estate that have been disclosed over the last year. The analysis found 87 flights tied to Epstein – including many that were not previously known – landing or taking off from UK airports between the start of the 1990s and 2018.

Passenger Details and After Guilty Verdict Flights

Unnamed women were recorded among the travelers entering and exiting the UK. Crucially, 15 of these British airport journeys happened subsequent to Epstein’s 2008 guilty verdict for procuring prostitution from a underage person.

“This is ‘shocking’ that there had never been a ‘comprehensive British inquiry’ into his dealings in the country,” remarked American attorneys representing numerous Epstein victims.

UK Survivors and Legal Proceedings

Testimony from one of the British victims aided the conviction of Epstein’s accomplice socialite Ghislaine Maxwell of sex trafficking of minors in the US in 2021. However, that individual has not received any contact by UK authorities, according to her attorney based in Florida.

In a statement, the Metropolitan police stated they had “not received any additional evidence that would support restarting the probe.” They commented, “Should new and relevant information be presented to us, encompassing any resulting from the disclosure of documents in the US, we will evaluate it.”

Continuing Disclosure and Legal Rulings

A bill to disclose all files held by the US government in regarding Epstein was approved by the US Congress last month. The Department of Justice has until 19 December to adhere to this requirement. Hundreds of thousands of files are expected to be made public.

In a related development, a federal judge ruled last week that the department could make public evidence from a sex-trafficking case against Maxwell, Epstein’s longtime confidante, who is serving a 20-year jail term over the allegations.

Bailey Brown
Bailey Brown

Elara is a tech enthusiast and writer with over a decade of experience in digital innovation and AI development.