
The Trump administration continues to make good on its promises to release the Epstein files, and while there's been plenty of discussion about how the government has handled documents relating to the shamed financier and convicted sex offender, they continue to flow.
After there were calls for Attorney General Pam Bondi to resign over the files, and President Donald Trump has continued to distance himself from his own personal relationship with Epstein, there's been a slow trickle followed by the occasional deluge.
Former President Bill Clinton was featured prominently in a December 2025 release, while Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates spoke out over February 2026 allegations that he caught an STD from 'Russian girls'.
The latest release contained a mere three million pages, 180,000 images, and 2,000 videos, meaning wading through this information overload is quite the ordeal. With the Department of Justice's Epstein Library not being the most user-friendly way of searching through all of Epstein's correspondence, someone has created Jmail to simplify the process.
Advert
Opening like its very own virtual Gmail, the Jmail site will look familiar to those who use Google's email service. There are currently 7,546 emails, which is already a massive leap from the 2,235 that were in there when we last reported on the project.

Over on X, investigative reporter CoffeeZilla cheered the usefulness of Jmail and added: “No one has worked harder than the Jmail team to make the Epstein files accessible to the public."
Although the service is free to access, the team has apparently racked up huge server bills and is now asking for donations to support its continued development.
You can support Jmail online as it cheers its 'open transparency journalism', with $18,325 already being raised for the project.
Instead of being the sometimes hard-to-read and poorly scanned emails that make up the DoJ's Epstein Library, Jmail is much easier to browse.t
Created by internet artist Riley Walz and web developer Luke Igel in November 2025, the pair admits they basically 'cloned' Gmail.
Keen to differentiate itself from Google's official Gmail, the Jmail logo has a holiday hat hanging on it. Still, the entire database is comprised of emails sent to or from his official [email protected] email.
Opening Jmail, you can search for people and subject matters, with 601 emails relating to Elon Musk. Other big names who are mentioned or have communicated with Epstein range from Steven Bannon to Hillary Clinton, Richard Branson, and Jeff Bezos.
It's important to note that not all of these have directly communicated with Epstein via email and might simply have been mentioned. Also, even those who've emailed him from their own accounts aren't implicated in any wrongdoing.
Numerous emails mention flight plans, while the majority of Jmail is (unsurprisingly) taken up by emails from his longtime executive assistant, Lesley Groff.
The attachments tab also makes for particularly interesting viewing when it comes to finding photos. Away from crude memes, there are pictures of what appear to be boat renovations, private jets, the infamous Epstein Island, and even Jeffrey Epstein’s own updated headshots.
Epstein's inbox includes major figures from the worlds of tech to entertainment, and everything in between, although there's also admittedly a lot of rubbish to trawl through.