🔗 Share this article Approximately 90 Flights Associated to Jeffrey Epstein Allegedly Came to or from UK Airfields An investigation has found that close to 90 aircraft journeys connected to the late financier Jeffrey Epstein are said to have landed at and took off from British airfields, with some reportedly carrying women from the UK who claim they were victimized by the convicted sex offender. Flight Logs Reveal Pattern of Travel These aviation records were among thousands of legal papers and papers made public by Epstein’s estate that have been made public over the previous twelve months. The analysis identified 87 aircraft movements connected to Epstein – featuring many that were hitherto undisclosed – landing or taking off from British airfields between the start of the 1990s and 2018. Onboard Individuals and Post-Conviction Flights Unnamed “females” were documented among the travelers flying to and from the UK. Significantly, 15 of these UK flights happened following Epstein’s 2008 guilty verdict for procuring prostitution from a underage person. “It was ‘appalling’ that there had never been a ‘comprehensive British inquiry’ into his activities in the country,” said American attorneys acting for hundreds of Epstein survivors. UK Survivors and Legal Proceedings Testimony from one of the British victims aided the conviction of Epstein’s associate Ghislaine Maxwell of child sex-trafficking in the US in 2021. However, that victim has never been contacted by police in the UK, according to her Florida-based lawyer. In a response, the Metropolitan police stated they had “not received any new information that would support reopening the probe.” They commented, “Should new and relevant information be presented to us, encompassing any arising from the disclosure of material in the US, we will evaluate it.” Continuing Disclosure and Legal Rulings A bill to disclose every document held by the American government in relation to Epstein passed the US Congress last month. The US justice department has until 19 December to follow through. Hundreds of thousands of papers are expected to be released. In a related development, a federal judge ordered last week that the DOJ could disclose evidence from a sex-trafficking case against Maxwell, Epstein’s longtime confidante, who is serving a 20-year prison sentence over the allegations.