Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Feds tracked Jeffrey Epstein's criminal network through prostitution, drug rings, money laundering, and the Russian mob, but Trump aborted the effort by kneecapping a task force that specialized in such cases


(Bloomberg.com)

An informant's tip that Jeffrey Epstein was involved in the funding and distribution of so-called club drugs -- including ecstasy, ketamine, and methamphetamine -- led to the noted sex trafficker becoming part of a long-running federal investigation of organized crime that had been secret until now. That's from a new story by investigative reporter Jason Leopold at Bloomberg News. It's a winding tale that provides valuable insight on Epstein and the powerful figures in his orbit. It also raises many disturbing questions, and No. 1 on the list is this: Why did the second Trump administration, in September 2025, defund and shut down a government task force known for its ability to combat illicit finance and take down transnational criminal networks. In other words, it was exactly the kind of outfit that needed to be front and center on the Epstein case. But Trump shut it down. Is that because Trump saw a need to stunt the Epstein probe in any way he could, thereby protecting himself and perhaps any political or corporate toadies who support him? We invite you to ponder that question as you follow the trail Leopold and Bloomberg have set out for us, presenting the very latest reporting on the Epstein saga.

At the time of the probe in 2015, Epstein had pleaded guilty in 2008 to prostitution-related state charges in Florida. It was not until 2019 that he was indicted on federal sex-trafficking charges and died in custody before standing trial. Epstein was a registered sex offender from 2008 until his death, but his arrest on federal charges turned him into a household name, making him known as a notorious pedophile. His infamy grew when evidence surfaced of his ties to political, business, royal, and entertainment elites -- including Donald Trump, Bill Clinton, Prince Andrew, Bill Gates, Les Wexner, Robin Leach, and many more. When the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) began to release the Epstein files in November 2025, Trump soon was enveloped in a disturbing news cycle that no sitting president had ever faced. Documents included allegations that tied Trump to child murder and rape, even claims that Trump had funded underage sex parties at his properties and a young murder victim was buried on one of the president's golf courses.

Jason Leopold's latest reporting shows that, long before disturbing allegations against Trump came to light, Jeffrey Epstein was of interest to federal investigators. Under the headline "Ketamine, Prostitution, and Money: Details of a Secret DEA Probe of Jeffrey Epstein," Leopold writes:

The Federal Drug Enforcement Administration opened an investigation into Jeffrey Epstein and a dozen other individuals in 2015 that centered on allegations of money laundering, drug trafficking and the procurement of Eastern European prostitutes for high-profile clients, according to five people familiar with the case.

The investigation, which grew out of a longstanding probe into organized crime, was conducted by a secretive intelligence and law enforcement unit of the DEA and a transnational crime-fighting task force. It began after an informant told authorities that Epstein was involved in the illicit funding and distribution of so-called club drugs, including ecstasy, ketamine and methamphetamine,  according to the people, who asked not to be named in order to discuss sensitive law enforcement matters.

The individuals named in a document related to the investigation, according to the sources, included Epstein’s accountants, attorneys and European women who worked as his assistants or fashion models. The DEA investigation also named two businesses. 

None of the individuals were charged with any offenses as a result of the investigation. It’s unclear how long the investigation remained open and what authorities ultimately learned from it because the complete case files have not been released. Yet descriptions of the DEA probe add to questions about what federal authorities knew about Epstein before they arrested him in 2019. By that time, he’d victimized more than 1,000 people, the US Department of Justice has said. 

Most of the attention on Epstein has been driven by the federal sex-crimes probe and news accounts about his ever-growing ties to the famous, rich, and powerful. The latest developments, however, show federal interest in Epstein was more far-reaching and of longer duration than was widely known. Leopold writes:  

Initial information about the 2015 investigation surfaced in January in a heavily redacted document that was released by the DOJ. These new details about the investigation deepen the mystery surrounding the serial sex abuser, and reveal a striking level of scrutiny into him that extended beyond the federal sex-crimes probe that has captured international attention for years. They also reflect a pattern: As Epstein famously cultivated high-profile connections with Wall Street executives, politicians and royalty, federal authorities secretly kept their eyes on him.

Because of the sweetheart deal Epstein received on the state charges in Florida, many Americans probably have assumed authorities also took a relaxed approach to the federal sex-trafficking probe. But that does not appear to be the case, as Leopold makes clear:

Beginning in 2009, when Epstein was released from state custody in Florida after pleading guilty to charges that included soliciting a minor for prostitution, at least eight US government agencies, including the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the DEA, the US Treasury Department and the State Department’s Diplomatic Security Service, conducted their own investigations into Epstein, according to various documents that the DOJ released in January.

The documents show that law enforcement agencies kept tabs on Epstein by tracking his movements, building dossiers on his connections and following his money as it moved through offshore accounts. Foreign governments did likewise. The US Secret Service’s White House division and Harvard University’s campus police conducted background checks on Epstein years after he was released from custody in Florida.

Epstein was an obscure figure in 2010 when federal agents began to investigate a drug-trafficking operation that had tentacles in five U.S. states, plus Mexico. That ultimately led to a spotlight shining on Epstein and his associates. It also led to curious actions from from the second Trump administration. Jason Leopold explains:

In December 2010, long before Epstein or anyone in his circle surfaced in their probe, the DEA and the FBI started investigating a drug trafficking operation in nightclubs in New York, New Jersey, Nevada, Florida, South Carolina, and Mexico, according to the five people familiar with the case. One person who’d been arrested in connection with the probe had attempted to ship a package to Florida containing ecstasy tablets and ketamine, a drug known to facilitate date rape.

The following year, the DEA requested the help of the Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Forces (OCDETF), a Reagan-era Justice Department division made up of hundreds of prosecutors and thousands of intelligence and law enforcement personnel from across the federal government. OCDETF, as it’s called, worked jointly on investigations with other agencies to combat illicit finance and take down transnational criminal networks. Getting OCDETF’s buy-in unlocked additional funding and resources — including access to its fusion center, which the DOJ called “the single largest repository of federal and foreign investigative reporting throughout the federal government.”

Last year, as Bloomberg News first reported, OCDETF was defunded and shut down amid the Trump administration’s cost-cutting spree, sparking alarm among law enforcement officers given the task forces’ achievements over the decades, which included a leading role in the 2019 capture of Sinaloa Cartel leader Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman. The administration transferred various responsibilities, including 5,000 existing cases, to a new set of task forces under the Department of Homeland Security that are focused mainly on immigration enforcement. In short, Trump took the task force duties away from veteran professionals and put them under Kristi Noem, who since has been ousted when the raging incompetence on her watch became too much for even Trump to stomach.

In May 2011, OCDETF formally launched an operation called Chain Reaction. Over the next four years, federal authorities targeted and prosecuted nearly a dozen people in New York, including associates of the Genovese crime family, on various racketeering charges including loan sharking, drug trafficking, and running an illegal gambling business. They brought charges against a police officer in Suffolk County, New York, for extortion, narcotics distribution, and counterfeiting. At least two of the cases involved the distribution of ketamine.

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Just as the case appeared to be winding down, an informant help bring it back to life, Leopold reports:

Around January 2015, the lead DEA agent on Operation Chain Reaction wrote in a status update that he expected the case to wrap up in a few months after all the defendants were sentenced, the five people familiar with the investigation said. But in a twist, one suspected drug trafficker became an informant and told federal agents that Epstein had been involved in the funding and distribution of ecstasy, ketamine and methamphetamine, the people familiar with the matter said. The informant also said that Epstein ran a prostitution ring.

A few months later, on April 28, 2015, the DEA requested that OCDETF’s fusion center prepare a “target profile” on Epstein, 12 other individuals and two businesses. A target profile is typically a compilation of information on individuals and entities that includes biographical details, border crossings, financial information, and any criminal histories. A DEA agent told OCDETF the agency needed the information to support an investigation into money laundering, drug trafficking and the procurement of Eastern European prostitutes for high-profile clientele, the people familiar with the matter said.

The investigation was led by the DEA’s Special Operations Division, a unit that works in concert with 34 agencies including the Central Intelligence Agency, FBI, National Security Agency, Department of the Treasury and the intelligence partnership between the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand.

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Leopold reviewed a document that describes the scope of the DEA investigation, which focused on dubious financial activities tied to illicit drug and prostitution operations in the U.S. Virgin Islands and New York City. It should be noted that Little Saint James Island, also known as Epstein Island is a private 72-acre tract that is about two miles from St. Thomas.

The next month, OCDETF responded with the target profile. An analyst at the fusion center wrote in the 69-page document that the DEA’s investigation involved “illegitimate wire transfers which are tied to illicit drug and/or prostitution activities occurring in the U.S. Virgin Islands and New York City,” according to a heavily redacted copy released by the DOJ. (CBS News first reported on the existence of the redacted document. Last month, Democratic Senator Ron Wyden asked the DEA to provide an unredacted copy of the document and additional details about its “mystery investigation.”)

The 12 individuals and two businesses were redacted from the document the DOJ released. Bloomberg has learned their identities from the people familiar with the matter. They include Epstein’s lawyer, Darren Indyke; his brother, Mark; and his accountants, Bella Klein, Harry Beller and Richard Kahn. Indyke and Kahn are co-executors of Epstein’s estate. Epstein died while in federal custody in August 2019.

The two businesses are Wagging Tail Entertainment and Ossa Properties Inc. Peggy Siegal, an entertainment publicist and friend of Epstein’s, did business under Wagging Tail, according to multiple emails in the DOJ’s Epstein documents. Ossa is a real estate company owned by Mark Epstein. Anthony Barrett, who was an executive at Ossa Properties, was also named in the target profile. Some of Epstein's victims have said in civil lawsuits that they were sexually abused in a building managed by Ossa Properties.

A representative for Siegal said she was never questioned by the DEA or FBI, is no longer affiliated with Wagging Tail and was never aware of any investigation. Siegal wasn’t one of the named targets in the OCDETF document.

In an interview, Mark Epstein said he was not aware of the DEA investigation and never spoke to any investigators about illegitimate wire transfers, illicit drugs or prostitution. He added that he would not answer any additional questions unless it was about the circumstances of his brother’s death. Jeffrey Epstein’s manner of death was ruled a suicide. Mark Epstein maintains that his brother was murdered.

Daniel Weiner, an attorney for Indyke and Kahn, said neither of his clients was “ever aware of any DEA investigation.” Klein, Beller and Barrett didn’t respond to requests for comment.

Bloomberg is not revealing the identities of six women who were also named as targets by the DEA either because they could not be located or because publicly available information indicates that they could be considered victims of Epstein’s sex-trafficking operation.

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A central goal for investigators was to determine how Epstein's sex-trafficking operation was funded -- and if it was tied to other criminal activities. That proved to be a challenging task, Leopold reports:

For years government agencies have been trying to follow Epstein’s money through his sprawling network of offshore investment vehicles and shell companies to determine how his sex-trafficking operation was funded and whether he was also involved in other criminal activity.

As early as 2007, federal prosecutors launched a money laundering probe alongside a sex-crimes case. But when Epstein, who fiercely resisted scrutiny into his finances, signed a controversial non-prosecution agreement with federal authorities in 2007, that investigation ended. (The agreement allowed him to plead guilty to Florida state charges that included procurement of a minor to engage in prostitution.)

After he was released from state custody in 2009, Epstein frequently enlisted assistants and accountants to wire funds to women around the world, at times without a stated business purpose, according to emails released by the DOJ. He’d also coach staffers on how to respond if financial institutions asked questions about the transfers, according to emails and other documents.

In October 2012, Klein, one of his accountants, sent Epstein an email saying Western Union canceled a $2,600 wire to a woman for “security purposes” and would not authorize a separate wire for about $4,000 to a modeling scout, unless she could answer detailed questions about the purpose of the wire transfer.

“Just say a friend wanted to borrow money,” Epstein wrote, according to the email, which was in the DOJ’s cache of Epstein records.

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The riddle of Epstein's complex web of financial maneuvers has yet to be solved. But Sen. Wyden has been working on it for several years, and surveillance has unearthed evidence of suspicious banking activity. Leopold provides details:

OCDETF amassed a wide range of intelligence and financial data on Epstein and his associates from seven federal agencies that fed information to the fusion center, as well as the FBI’s National Information Crime Information Center, according to the OCDETF target profile.

The document says that Epstein and the 12 other individuals were the subjects of a combined 40 suspicious activity reports, or SARs, totaling nearly $50 million that banks sent to the Treasury Department’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, or FinCEN, between 2010 and 2015 and 37 currency transaction reports between 2010 and 2014 totaling $1.2 million. (Banks are required to file SARs with FinCEN whenever their compliance departments spot signs of money laundering, wire fraud or other financial crimes. They’re required to file currency transaction reports when a cash transaction exceeds $10,000 in a day. Neither is evidence of a crime.)

One agency that the fusion center pulled information from was the State Department’s Diplomatic Security Service, which protects the Secretary of State and also investigates transnational organized crime and visa fraud. A portion of the report lists a person whose identity is redacted as the sponsor of a non-immigrant visa for one of the DEA’s targets.

The targeting profile showed that more than a dozen law enforcement agencies in the US and abroad, including Harvard’s police department, the US Secret Service and the agency’s White House division, queried a national crime database 311 times between 2013 and 2015 for information about Epstein.

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That the U.S. Secret Service and its White House division searched, over a two-year period, a national criminal database 311 times for information on Epstein . . . well, that is bound to raise eyebrows. Leopold explains what it might mean:

The query by the Secret Service’s White House division in August 2014 suggests that Epstein may have been vetted because he was expected to come into contact with the agency’s protectees, such as the president, or a protected government site. There’s no public record indicating that Epstein visited the White House that year. A spokesperson for the Secret Service said the agency was unable to track down records related to the query because “records from 2014 fall outside the applicable federal records retention schedule for this category of information.”

A Harvard University spokesperson told Bloomberg News that the campus police’s query occurred on Nov. 6, 2013, a day before a meeting between university officials on whether Harvard would reconsider its position of no longer accepting gifts from Jeffrey Epstein. A 2020 report by Harvard said it did not reverse the ban.

The target profile also included details about Epstein’s border crossings and shows that under a program called Operation Angel Watch, which alerts foreign law enforcement authorities when sex offenders travel abroad, ICE notified Paris officials that Epstein planned to be there in mid-2013. Another document in the files shows that in September 2016, the FBI alerted its legal attaché in Paris that Epstein planned to travel there, underscoring how federal authorities continued to track his movements after his 2008 guilty plea in Florida.

“No action is required,” an FBI analyst wrote in the advisory. “This message is only intended to advise you that this individual, previously convicted of a sex crime against a child, is traveling to your country, and for any follow-up deemed necessary.”

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Leopold turns to an insider in an effort to tie up the many loose threads still exposed in the Epstein story:

Thomas Padden was the acting director of OCDETF until September 2025, around the time the Trump administration began to shutter the unit. He worked for the task forces for 17 years, previously as deputy director, which covered the time frame of the OCDETF-DEA investigation. Padden told Bloomberg he was not familiar with the probe into Epstein. But after reviewing the redacted version of the target profile, he said that he’s not surprised that Epstein may be connected to a transnational criminal network.

“Money laundering is always a part of it,” Padden said. “And it’s not surprising that it could touch or potentially include Jeffrey Epstein as one of the conspirators. The DEA felt that they needed to inquire about him and connect it into their case. And what that tells me is there's smoke.”

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A reasonable mind cannot help  but wonder: What could Jeffrey Epstein have accomplished if he had set his mind on serving humanity, protecting the environment and animals, fostering peace and prosperity? Instead, overwhelming evidence suggests he was driven by the most base of desires -- and a determination not to be caught in his despicable acts. 

Investigators who followed his trail wound up in some dark places -- from a murder-for-hire case, tied to the Genovese crime family, in Yonkers, NY, to money laundering and human and drug trafficking tied to Russian organized crime. Jason Leopold summarizes:

Chain Reaction, which grew to involve other agencies, including the Internal Revenue Service and Homeland Security Investigations, and state and local police, continued for another eight years. The final case from the larger investigation that began in 2011 centered on a member of the Genovese crime family named John Tortora. He was indicted in 2018 and charged with his alleged involvement in a murder-for-hire plot involving the stabbing death of Richard Ortiz in 1997 in Yonkers, New York.

Prosecutors later dropped the murder charge against “Johnny T,” as he was known, and he ultimately pleaded guilty to obstruction and gambling charges in 2020. He was sentenced to four years in federal prison.

On April 4, 2019, a few months before Epstein was arrested and charged with sex trafficking, OCDETF launched a separate operation with the FBI: Trip Knot, a money laundering and human and drug trafficking investigation tied to Russian organized crime that was linked back to FBI and DEA probes in 2017 and 2018, according to the people familiar with the case. Epstein’s name surfaced repeatedly in that case as well, the people said.

Operation Chain Reaction was officially closed on June 16, 2023.

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Americans are feeling pain at the pump, and that means inflation for consumer goods is coming 'round the bend, but Trump offers a hearty, reassuring shrug

(Transit Display)


Donald Trump seems to be counting on Americans to happily put up with higher gasoline prices in exchange for whatever it is he is trying to accomplish by attacking Iran. A jointly published report from Rolling Stone and Yahoo! News, however, suggests Trump is wildly miscalculating the situation, with potentially dire results for his presidency and Republican hopes in the 2026 midterms. On the bright side, a dire outcome for Trump and Republicans could lead to a rebirth for our nation. But we don't need to wait until 2028 (or even later in 2026) to get rid of them. They need to be forced out of office now.

As someone who lived through the Arab Oil Embargo of 1973, and a similar "oil shock" in 1979, I know from firsthand experience -- along with millions of others in my age group -- that Americans do not react well to pain at the pump. If Trump doesn't know that -- and it's likely he never has pumped a gallon of gas in his life -- he is even more dense than many of us have long thought.

Under the headline "Trump Shrugs Off Skyrocketing Gas Prices as Iran War Intensifies," Nikki McCann Ramirez paints a picture that could spell trouble for Trump and his allies:

The war always comes home, and the effects of Donald Trump’s campaign against Iran are already being felt by Americans in the form of skyrocketing gas prices, which could lead to inflation and pile more economic pressure on everyday Americans. While the nation is quite literally paying the price for the president’s war, he would like everyone to please stop complaining.

“Short term oil prices, which will drop rapidly when the destruction of the Iran nuclear threat is over, is a very small price to pay for U.S.A., and World, Safety and Peace,” Trump wrote on Truth Social on Sunday afternoon. “ONLY FOOLS WOULD THINK DIFFERENTLY!

So anyone who has qualms about Trump's unauthorized war is a fool? That means, based on my social-media feeds, there are busloads of fools out there, typing feverishly on their devices, trashing Trump. I happen to know that many of these people are caring, intelligent, and informed Americans. They tend to publish posts, create videos, and share memes that indicate they consider Trump to be an existential threat to American democracy.  If Trump thinks he is in a war with Iran, he should take a hard look at his March 2026 approval numbers to see that he might have even more serious problems at home. Ramirez writes:

A few days earlier, Trump dismissed the idea that prices were getting steep in an interview with CNN’s Dana Bash. “I asked about rising gas prices, and he said, ‘That’s all right. It will be short term. It will go way down really quickly,’” Bash recounted. When she told Trump prices were high now, she says he replied: “No, they’re not. They’re up a little bit, not much, but it will drop to record lows.”

Prices are indeed up a lot. On Monday morning, global oil prices spiked to more than $110 a barrel — the largest surge since the Covid-19 pandemic. Nationally, the price of a gallon of gas is up to an average of $3.48 — a hefty upswing from the $1.99 Trump touted, dubiously, during his State of the Union address just a few weeks ago. The spike in gas prices — caused primarily by the Iranian blockade of the Strait of Hormuz — is threatening to spill over into virtually every industry as increased transportation costs may result in higher prices for consumer goods, and a resurgence of inflation.

When Bash asked Trump if he was going to figure out the Strait of Hormuz, Trump claimed, according to Bash, that “it’s already figured out” and that Iran’s navy had been “knocked out.”

In time, some knowledgeable figure -- assuming there are any in the Trump administration or the GOP-controlled Congress -- might rise from the mist to credibly show that Iran's navy truly has been greatly diminished. Until that happens, we are left with Trump's word -- and his word has a worth similar to that of the six casinos, hotels, and resorts Trump drove into bankruptcy. For those who persist in thinking Trump is a business titan, here is a summary of his "achievements," as uncovered by The Washington Post:

Trump’s Taj Mahal opened in April 1990 in Atlantic City, but six months later, “defaulted on interest payments to bondholders as his finances went into a tailspin,” The Washington Post’s Robert O’Harrow found. In July 1991, Trump’s Taj Mahal filed for bankruptcy. He could not keep up with debts on two other Atlantic City casinos, and those two properties declared bankruptcy in 1992. A fourth property, the Plaza Hotel in New York, declared bankruptcy in 1992 after amassing debt.

PolitiFact uncovered two more bankruptcies filed after 1992, totaling six. Trump Hotels and Casinos Resorts filed for bankruptcy again in 2004, after accruing about $1.8 billion in debt. Trump Entertainment Resorts also declared bankruptcy in 2009, after being hit hard during the 2008 recession. 

What is the grim tally on all of this? Well, we knew from Trump's first term that he can't govern; it's been documented that he can't tell the truth, and now we know that his business skills pretty much begin and end with the ability to file bankruptcy petitions. 

Let's return to Rolling Stone's take on the Iran war and its deleterious effect on the U.S. economy. We learn that Trump isn't the only GOPer trying to smooth things over with the public. Nikki McCann Ramirez writes:

Republicans and figures in Trump’s administration similarly have been trying to assure Americans that everything will be all right.

House Majority Whip Tom Emmer (R-Minn.) backed the president in a Monday appearance on CNBC’s Squawk Box. “There are going to be some temporary effects on our domestic economy,” Emmer said. “But as soon as this is taken care of, those prices will tumble and people will recognize that this was a short-term cost to pay for a major long-term gain in terms of peace and security.”

Trump’s energy secretary, Chris Wright, predicted prices would be back down to normal within a month in an interview with CNN on Sunday. “You never know exactly the time frame of this, but in the worst case this is a weeks, not months, thing,” he said after Jake Tapper asked him about the historic spikes in oil prices and Trump telling Reuters “if they rise, they rise,” regarding gas prices.

Trump's buddies seem to forget that the president has offered no logical rationale for getting into the Iran war and no discernible plan for getting out of it. Ramirez writes:

The central problem with Trump’s confidence that the conflict driving this instability will be a short-term problem is that he himself cannot establish a clear end point to the offensive against Iran. What was initially sold to the public as a series of strikes has over the course of a few days evolved into a war of escalation the president refuses to pull back on unless he secures the “unconditional surrender” of Iran. If anything, the conflict seems on the precipice of escalating into full-blown regional warfare, with the Trump administration keeping open the possibility of deploying American troops to Iran.

But even as Trump attempts to project confidence, the anxiety over high prices is creeping in. Enough so that he’s suggesting potential nonmilitary courses of action. According to Fox & Friends host Brian Kilmeade, Trump is encouraging oil-tanker captains to “show some guts” and power through the danger.

“Here is exactly what he said: ‘These ships should go through the Strait of Hormuz and show some guts, there’s nothing to be afraid of. [The Iranians] have no navy, we sunk all their ships,’” Kilmeade recalled.

But this isn’t a game of Battleship, and no one is eager to face the possibility of a flaming shipwrecked death to help keep the price of oil down in the United States.