The documents show that Epstein was not merely a proactive donor, but also a direct target of fundraising efforts by Israeli and pro-Israel institutions.
Among these is a letter from Amos Gayer, Vice President for External Relations at the University of Haifa between 2008 and 2013, addressing Epstein as a potential donor and inviting him to fund a university project at a time when Epstein's reputation was already heavily burdened by allegations of sexual abuse of minors.
Correspondence also includes communications with the U.S.-Israel Binational Science Foundation, as well as a letter from an American organization called The Israel Project, which presented itself to Epstein as a media and political lobbying platform supporting Israel. The organization explicitly requested his donation to a special fund aimed at influencing media coverage, public opinion, and policymakers in the United States and globally.
Epstein and the Mossad: Intelligence Links in FBI Reports
Beyond financial trails, the files reveal a highly sensitive dimension concerning Epstein's potential links to intelligence agencies. An FBI report, citing a "confidential human source," states that Epstein maintained connections with U.S. and allied intelligence services.
The report claims that Israel's Mossad conducted debriefings of Epstein's phone calls with his lawyer, Alan Dershowitz. It also cites former U.S. Labor Secretary Alex Acosta as saying that Epstein's case was "above his pay grade" because it was "linked to intelligence."
Acosta was tasked with getting Epstein a sweet-heart deal in Florida that saw Epstein spending his jail time at home, when first convicted. When Miami journalist, Julie K. Brown, started investigating why Epstein was given such a lenient sentence, she blew the top off the Epstein "Perversion of Justice" and her book tells the tale.
Another FBI report from 2020-- largely redacted-- includes an interview with an unnamed individual who expressed fear that Epstein may have been "an Israeli spy."
Additional testimonies link Epstein to former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak, with allegations that Epstein received intelligence training under Barak's supervision as part of a broader network involving senior politicians and business figures.
Emails sent by Epstein on May 20, 2012, further reveal his ideological positions, in which he wrote that "Palestine has no historical existence" and that it "was never an Arab or Palestinian independent state."
On January 31, the U.S. Department of Justice announced the release of more than three million additional Epstein-related documents to the public, while allowing members of Congress full in-person access without permission to digitally copy the files.
Epstein, who died in jail in 2019 while awaiting trial on charges of operating a sexual exploitation network targeting underage girls, has long been at the center of global controversy. His death sparked widespread speculation and conspiracy theories suggesting he may have been killed to protect powerful figures.
The documents include references to numerous prominent individuals, including Britain's Prince Andrew, former U.S. President Bill Clinton, current U.S. President Donald Trump, former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak, and singer Michael Jackson.
One of the most explosive disclosures involves a leaked audio recording attributed to Ehud Barak, in which he allegedly asks Epstein to help facilitate the migration of one million Russian-speaking individuals to Israel. In the recording, Barak reportedly states that such a number would dramatically alter Israel's demographic, economic, and cultural structure.
Barak is quoted as saying that Israel could easily absorb this population but should be "more selective" than in previous immigration waves, emphasizing what he described as the "quality" of new immigrants. He reportedly argued that social pressure could accelerate integration and suggested broadening religious definitions of Jewish identity-- even encouraging conversion-- citing biblical figures to justify this approach.
Barak was referencing the Jewish immigrants from Ethiopia, which Israelis have treated as second-class citizens because their skin is black. Israelis are highly racist. They feel only Jews are humans, all others are subhuman, and even black Jews are not the "quality" they want as neighbors in Israel.
(Note: You can view every article as one long page if you sign up as an Advocate Member, or higher).




