New Epstein Mansion Photos Reveal Ties to Trump and Other Figures

A sculpture of a bride clinging to a rope. X/ @Tinkeringhalo2
August 5, 2025 Hour: 11:36 am
Among the newly published images are photos showing Epstein with former President Clinton and billionaire Branson.
On Tuesday, The New York Times published an article featuring several items that once decorated Jeffrey Epstein’s Manhattan mansion. Among them were photographs of Epstein with powerful political figures, paintings of nude women, and a map of Israel.
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The newspaper released never-before-seen images from the financier’s residence. Epstein, who was accused of sex trafficking of minors, died by suicide in prison in 2019. His connections to global elites are once again under scrutiny during President Donald Trump’s second term.
Among the newly published images is a portrait of Epstein posing with Trump and Melania, as well as other photos showing him with former President Bill Clinton, billionaire Richard Branson, and Pope John Paul II.
In one massage room, paintings of nude women adorned the walls alongside shelves stocked with lubricants. According to investigators, Epstein instructed young women to give him massages while naked, and in some cases, assaulted or raped them.
Other eccentric items captured in the photographs include a first edition of Vladimir Nabokov’s novel Lolita, a map of Israel drawn on a whiteboard and signed by former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak, a taxidermized tiger, dozens of prosthetic eyeballs, and a sculpture of a bride climbing a rope.
In addition to the photographs, the New York Times also obtained letters addressed to Epstein for his 50th birthday in 2003—some of which had already been made public—as well as letters from 2016, including one from filmmaker Woody Allen. In it, Allen describes “young women” serving food and compares Epstein’s home to Dracula’s castle.
The Trump administration faces mounting pressure to clarify Epstein’s case after the Department of Justice and FBI announced on July 7 that Epstein did not maintain a list of high-profile clients he allegedly provided minors to, and that he had, in fact, died by suicide—contradicting a conspiracy theory popular among Trump supporters.
teleSUR/ JF
Sources: EFE – NYT