🔗 Share this article Nearly 90 Air Travels Connected to Jeffrey Epstein Reportedly Arrived at or Departed from British Airports An investigation has identified that nearly 90 aircraft journeys associated to Jeffrey Epstein are said to have touched down at and left UK airports, with some reportedly having onboard British women who allege they were exploited by the convicted sex offender. Flight Logs Show Pattern of Travel The travel manifests were part of a trove of legal papers and papers released by the estate of Jeffrey Epstein that have been made public over the last year. The analysis uncovered 87 flights connected to Epstein – featuring many that were previously unknown – landing or taking off from UK airports between the start of the 1990s and 2018. Passenger Details and After Guilty Verdict Travel Unidentified “females” were recorded among the passengers flying to and from the UK. Notably, 15 of these British airport journeys took place subsequent to Epstein’s 2008 guilty verdict for soliciting sex from a minor. “This is ‘astonishing’ that there had never been a ‘full-scale UK investigation’ into his operations in the country,” stated US lawyers representing numerous Epstein victims. UK Survivors and Court Cases Evidence from one of the UK-based survivors helped convict Epstein’s accomplice socialite Ghislaine Maxwell of child sex-trafficking in the US in 2021. However, that survivor has not received any contact by police in the UK, as stated by her attorney based in Florida. In a statement, the the Met indicated they had “not been provided with any new information that would support restarting the investigation.” They commented, “Should new and relevant information be presented to us, including any resulting from the release of material in the US, we will evaluate it.” Ongoing Disclosure and Judicial Decisions Proposed legislation to disclose all files held by the US government in concerning Epstein passed the US Congress last month. The Department of Justice has until 19 December to adhere to this requirement. Hundreds of thousands of files are projected to be made public. Separately, a federal judge ordered last week that the department could publicly release investigative materials from a trafficking prosecution against Maxwell, Epstein’s longtime confidante, who is currently serving a 20-year prison sentence over the allegations.