Front Burner - Why the Epstein emails go way beyond Trump
Episode Date: November 14, 2025This week, thousands of pages of documents were released from the estate of convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.Some suggest Donald Trump knew more about Epstein’s crimes than the President has l...et on –– though the White House has called it a smear job.These 23-thousand pages also tell a story that goes much further than the White House, giving insight into just how enmeshed Epstein was with global power-players and events.Murtaza Hussain, a national security and foreign affairs reporter for Drop Site News, joins the show to discuss all of this and to share what his reporting has uncovered about the link between Epstein, Israeli intelligence officials and more.
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Hey, everybody. I'm Jamie Poisson.
This week, thousands of pages of documents from sex offender Jeffrey Epstein's estate were released.
First, email exchanges where Epstein suggests that Donald Trump knew more about Epstein's crimes than the president has led on.
though the White House has called it a smear job.
Then, an additional 23,000 pages that tell a story that goes much further than the White House.
They give some more insight into just how enmeshed Epstein was with global power players and events.
We're going to discuss all of this today with Murtaza Hussein.
Murtaza reports on national security and foreign affairs for drop site news.
His reporting also details an increasingly complex picture of the link between Epstein and Israeli intelligence officials.
Okay, let's get to it.
Mertaza, hi, thank you so much for coming on to Front Burner.
Thanks for having me.
So let's talk first about what House Democrats released.
These are three exchanges over email between the years 2011 and 2019.
They include conversations about President Trump.
And why don't we begin with that?
the one between Epstein and his confidant Galane Maxwell in 2011.
Epstein writes, quote,
I want you to realize that the dog that hasn't barked is Trump.
He adds that...
Virginia spent hours at my house with him.
A reference to Virginia Joufrey, the White House says,
one of Epstein's victims who died by suicide earlier this year,
though she never accused Trump of wrongdoing.
He has never once been mentioned.
To which Maxwell responds with, quote,
I have been thinking about that.
And what do you make of that back and forth?
Yeah, you know, it's interesting seeing these communications because obviously, to some
degree, they're fragmentary and they're open to interpretation.
But a lot of these emails, when we have the full context that we know Epstein was doing at that
time and the relationship between them, it's very suggestive of what Trump may have known
and what his own dealing with Epstein may have entailed.
So, you know, while it's hard to say determinably,
it does strongly suggest that there was some shared knowledge of Epstein's activities.
And if you look at the other communication, there's like a intimacy that clearly exists
personally between them, which suggests that it would have been difficult for Trump to not have been aware.
I just want to go over a couple more exchanges.
There's the series of emails between Epstein and the American journalist and author Michael Wolf about Trump
And months before Epstein was eventually arrested, Epstein says to Wolf about Trump, of course he knew about the girls as he asked Galane to stop.
Democrats are using this to suggest that Trump may have intervened in some way or was at the very least aware of the fact that there were underage victims.
And then there's another exchange between Epstein and Wolfe in 2015.
Just before a scheduled presidential debate, Wolf tells Epstein that CNN plans to ask Trump about the nature of
of their relationship during the debate. Epstein responds with, quote,
if we were able to craft an answer for him, what do you think it should be?
And Wolf says, quote, let him hang himself.
If he says he hasn't been on the plane or to the house that gives you currency,
there's a lot that jumps out at me about this one, questions about Wolf and Epstein
and how this question would have even made it to Wolf before a debate.
But also, as you're saying, this level of coordination that Epstein himself was involved in
concerning the question of his and Trump's relationship and just like how about you how are you
thinking about about that one yeah i totally agree with what you're saying regarding the interesting
sort of communication between epstein and ostensibly a journalist when it seems like they're
more engaging and strategizing and i think what's very fascinating about this email is that there's
been speculation uh for a very long time that perhaps epstein would involve in blackmailing people
because he had the knowledge of people's, you know, transgressions and illegal activities related to the sexual abuse of minors.
He had this island.
He had these apartments.
He had these connections where, you know, he was said to be facilitating the sex trafficking.
So would, one, someone in a position like they'll be able to use it to compromise people?
And, you know, this exchange with Wolf, it doesn't prove that, but it's another data point which is suggestive of the fact that they had considered things I did.
at least.
I know that journalists are still sorting through what's in the rest of these documents
that the Republicans dropped, but some of it that has come out so far as is pretty wild.
There's an email that shows a former New York Times reporter tipped off Epstein that another
journalist was looking into him.
Messages where Epstein positions himself as an advisor to.
foreign officials, like suggesting that he could give the Russian foreign minister insight into
dealing with Trump, mentioning he'd had similar conversations with Russia's ambassador to the
United Nations and talking politics with people like Steve Bannon, promising him these
one-on-ones with government leaders in 2018 when he was still advising Trump. I know that there's
a lot there, but, you know, when you look at kind of this information that's coming out, does it
give us a clearer picture of just how deep Epstein ties actually went.
Just how kind of enmeshed he was in all of this globally.
So, you know, I think there's two important points about this.
First of all, the emails, just what we see right now, they do look really bad.
They have a lot of damning information seemingly about a lot of people.
Epstein, very fascinatingly, what I found is that he seemed to have far more connections
around the world with powerful people,
then I think one person would be able to organically generate.
There seem to be something almost inorganic
about the level of access he had
to political officials at all levels
in very geographically disparate parts of the world,
powerful business magnates all around the world and so forth.
It seems difficult to be able to generate that on one's own.
That's just my interpretation.
And secondly, you know, I do find some
interesting about these disclosures, which is that in a way, you know, what they're disclosing
is very important. But on the other hand, they seem to sort of elide broader questions.
So it points a lot to Epstein's involvement in sex trafficking. And that's a really horrifying
and important story that should be known and should be focused on. But there's another aspect
to Epstein, which is his ties to foreign governments and intelligence agencies, how we develop
those ties, what do you use those ties for, what his interests were, on who behalf he worked,
what were the consequences of those interactions. That aspect in the story has not really been
focused on a lot. And it's not to say that the sex trafficking part is the distraction,
because that's also an extremely important part. And so on, I think the two have to be
understood in conjunction with one another. But without the other aspect of the story, which I think
we have insufficient transparency about an insufficient focus on, I don't think that the whole
picture of who Epstein was and what he was doing, it really becomes clear. And I would
have quoted by analogizing it to the metaphor of, you know, a bunch of blind people touching
an elephant that are all touching a different part of the elephant. But they can't really
understand the full elephants until, you know, that that picture is clear. And I think that's
the issue with Epstein now. We're all having fragmentary parts of the story. And that's not true
transparency. And in some ways, it can also be a distraction. Well, when you say that you
think it's kind of
inorganic, right? That was the word that you used
that he would have that level of access
that you do not think that he could do it on his
own to all of these
world leaders and powerful people. Like, what do you
mean by that? Do you mean that you think
that the emails are
exaggerated or not true?
Or are you talking about something else
here? Yeah, no.
What I mean is that
you know, if you look at these emails as well
and separate back-in with emails that have been released
through other channels,
showing this range and scope of Epstein's access.
It's interesting because he is technically a private citizen,
but political officials at the highest level all over the world
are seeking his access and support,
government officials, again, all over the world are seeking his access and support,
and yet he has no provision that would seem to justify this level of influence.
He's not a government official, he's not a powerful business magnate per se.
He was someone who was, you know, a math teacher who worked in finance for a little small time in Wall Street.
And, you know, he just seemed to be this gentleman who everyone seemed to nonetheless want to gain the support of.
And if you look at his interaction with people as well, too, very powerful people who reported on, heads of state, you know, billionaires, oligarchs, they were all seeking his approval.
They were seeking his attention and so forth.
So, you know, something doesn't add up in the description.
of who he was or who we're told to understand who he was
and the influence and access that he enjoyed.
There's a disconnect there, which is an important part of the story
we have not yet gotten.
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I think this is maybe a good place for us to get into some of your reporting on the links between Jeffrey
Epstein, Israeli intelligence services and the state of Israel more broadly. And it does bring
some new light to this part of the Epstein story, particularly his relationship to a senior
Israeli intelligence officer and longtime aid to the former Israeli PM and defense minister
Ahud Barak. And can you walk me through some of what you have discovered? So a few years ago,
there was a hack that took place of a number of Israeli political officials and military officials.
Among them was Ayud Barak, the former defense minister and Israeli prime minister.
And those emails, it seems that the hack likely took place in 2016.
That's roughly around the time the emails cut off.
But they were done by, well described, the pro-pal city and hacking group.
We don't know the full identity of them, but they speculate maybe have ties to Iran
and dumped online, and then they were later hosted by a file-sharing website called
Distributed Denial of Secrets.
It's like a successor organization of WikiLeaks in a way, and the emails are currently
on that website sitting there alongside many other disclosures from different parts of the
world, and the emails in Barak's inbox, they show extensive contact with Epstein between
the period of 2012-2016, roughly, and they show that Epstein and Barak had been very
closely involved in helping Barack promote Israeli security interests and economic interests
in different parts of the world. And Epstein was somebody who had extensive contacts in Africa,
in Central Asia, in Europe, in Russia, the United States. And he was making connections for
Barack to help him promote technology firms to these foreign countries as a means of accomplishing numerous
things, first of all, generating revenue for Barack and the private consultant, now leaving
public life, but also furthering the interests of these firms and also finally the political
interests of the Israeli government. What would happen is that Epstein would introduce Barack
to people around the world in Mongolia, Cote d'Ivoire. These are a couple of countries we've
written about already. We have more stories coming about this. Barack would sign deals with
these countries with Epstein's coaching and guidance. And then later,
those private deals would become the seed for formal security arrangements signed by the Israeli
government and these foreign governments, which furthered the country's political interests.
But the core of it all was Epstein.
And I think that it's really important to understand the current government disclosures,
which, again, I think are a bit fragmentary and don't necessarily make sense on their own,
in conjunction with these emails.
Because the email shows structurally what they were trying to accomplish and who Epstein was
as a critical node for Barack and others,
as an international dealmaker, so to speak.
He had the money, he had the connections,
and those emails really helped to make sense
of the government disclosures
which are taking place right now.
On their own, they don't always explain the whole story.
I think we have to look at what's out there
from other channels that they didn't control
in conjunction with that,
and then we can get a full of picture.
It's really interesting.
I mean, there is this mythology, right,
around Epstein as some kind of quasi-age
working on behalf of a foreign government that's been around since the beginning of this story,
that he was not just a sexual predator with elite connections,
but this go-between in intelligence.
And let me ask you plainly,
do you think that Jeffrey Epstein was an asset of some kind,
whether formally or informally of the Israeli intelligence service
or of some other intelligence service?
Well, you know, this is a question which has been asked for a long time,
And even before current reporting, did Jeffrey Epstein work for the Mossad?
I think the answer is no.
He did not work for Israeli intelligence, but he did work with Israeli intelligence.
And the intelligence agencies of other countries as well, too.
I think that, you know, it's difficult to sort of define, but he seemed like somebody who
was above working for an intelligence agency.
He was someone whom intelligence agencies relied upon for his influence and power.
He furthered the interests of certain states, including the Israeli state, and he was ideologically
invested in that, too, as far as private communications.
But he was certainly not someone who was answerable to the Israeli government per se or
employed by the Israeli intelligence, as far as any information that we have suggests.
But, you know, that's it was almost, if I were to put it in a kind of crude way, it kind of
seemed like in practical effect.
The Mossad worked for Jeffrey Epstein rather than vice versa.
Because the Israeli intelligence-linked firm that he was helping Barack to deploy around the world were clearly lower than him on the hierarchy of these interactions.
And even Barack, who was one most influential people in the Israeli security establishment at that time, if you look at their communications, he was trying to get the attention of Epstein, support Epstein rather than vice versa.
This narrative, you know, that he is some kind of big intelligence player has been widely referred to as a conspiracy theory.
And this new reporting of yours has not been picked up by mainstream American press, really at all.
And, like, why do you think that is?
well you know this is an ongoing issue that i think myself and my colleagues have encountered we've done
a lot of reporting around the world you know which has been verified by high level government officials
and does cause a lot of controversy in some cases but oftentimes because politically
inconvenience it's not always acknowledged or if a certain narrative is already anchored that
something is a conspiracy or it's beyond the realm of possibility to discuss there's
you know, a investment, I guess, and not acknowledging it when the contravening information
comes to light. And presently, I think that the issue with the Epstein story is that it's being
vision-hold as part of the ongoing domestic political disputes in the United States between
President Donald Trump and his opponents. And, you know, Donald Trump's involvement in this
is very important. But it seems that there's just not an incentive to discuss, you know,
this issue of his intelligence ties, if I were to speculate, I would suggest there's a few
reasons for this. One is that a very broad range of powerful individuals are implicated in ties
with Epstein. You know, I'll say, I'll put it this way. When we do reporting, the same name
seems to be coming up a lot, and not just about Epstein, but other subjects as well, too.
We're working on a story or not about Epstein's ties to a certain African country. The names that
come up in that story also were very prominent in another story, myself, my colleagues did about
corruption in Pakistan a few months ago. But, you know, it's a small kind of relatively small
community of people who are connected around the world who are implicated in this corruption
from this story. It's very injurious and raises uncomfortable questions. And, you know,
there's a small bend diagram of people who have the capacity and the willingness to report on
this. But, you know, there's a lot of people who it would just be very difficult to report on.
It's not very hard. It's a technically challenging task to report these emails.
and if someone does have the resources, they may not have the clinical willingness.
So I think that's kind of what adds up to that.
And yeah, you know, I think that we shouldn't make assertions and believe things that lack
evidence, but I do think that we do have evidence for something.
We need to update our beliefs.
So I hope that there is for this reporting, a greater incentive by the quote-unquote
ministry media to look into the subject more.
I mean, I guess depending on which direction this all has in the U.S., you could get
additional kind of records and information out of this, too, right, to kind of not just focus on
the Trump stuff, but all this broader stuff that you're talking about, too, right? And just can you
explain to me what's actually happening in the United States right now around, like, whether
or not more records are going to be released. It centers around this thing called a discharge
position, I think, is like a rare parliamentary mechanism. Yeah, so there's an effort.
U.S. Congress to try to force more disclosures about Epstein.
Congresswoman Adelita Grahalva sworn in after a seven-week delay,
signing on to the petition to force a vote on the files release as her first act in Congress.
I will sign the discharge petition right now to release the Epstein files.
And it comes down to the broader heading of Epstein files.
I do think that there's something about these disclosures, which
there's so much political interest in gaining short-term political advantage out of whatever they contain
that I'm not fully certain whether it's actually aimed at furthering public transparency about the subjects, period.
In an attempt to stop the petition, top White House and Justice Department officials,
including the Attorney General and FBI Director, attempting to pressure Congresswoman Lauren Bobert into removing her name from it,
meeting with her Wednesday in the Situation Room.
But it didn't work.
Bobert, ultimately one of four Republicans who signed on in support.
You know, there's a term, a term of art called the limited hangouts
that I think was coined by Richard Nixon.
And it refers to a very damaging political subject
which public is demanding information about
and public officials feel pressured to respond to.
But they do not want to give the whole story,
but they will give a part of the story in the hope that that will say.
situate public attention while leaving the crux of the matter still private.
So, you know, I will wait for these disclosures.
I do hope that any disclosure we get does help because it's more puzzle pieces we can
use to put together a broader picture.
But I don't bank everything on this disclosure happening.
And when it does happen, you know, I will still be skeptical as what has not been
received.
With the passage of time and the diminishment of the, you know, urgent political salience of
issues, we do tend to learn more about historical episodes. Jeffrey Epstein died maybe five,
six years ago. It wasn't really that long ago. And as we discussed, the issues of political
issues he raised are still relevant to contemporary politics. And that disincentivizes people from
being honest and transparent about this at the moment. And just one last one before you go,
I'd be curious to know what you make of this push that we've been seeing around Galane Maxwell.
You know, it was just revealed that she is working on her commutation application.
Trump has repeatedly refused to rule out the fact that he could negotiate a deal with Maxwell
that could see her released early from federal prison.
But like you see people in the megaverse influencers, for example, starting to call themselves free Galane advocates.
They kind of see her as like the Rosetta Stone.
They feel like she is this well of information.
that should be tapped.
And, like, how are you thinking about,
how do you think about that?
Or do you see it kind of in the same way
as you do these documents
that are being released?
Well, you know,
anyone speaking more
or giving us some information is helpful.
And, you know,
she obviously is somebody
who is integral to the sex trafficking
that obscene was involved.
And I just find the whole issue
with her commentation
and the discussion of it.
it to be so glaring in what seems to be just ranked corruption at this point.
I think that it's unfortunate that the MAGA movement has been crystallized as almost
a cult of personality in some ways around Trump, furthering whatever his short-term political
interests are, I think it's a degradation of what people hope to see out of any anti-establishment
political candidate. And I assume that this commutation will come alongside significant concessions,
made by Maxwell to Trump,
perhaps regarding these historical ties to between Trump and Epstein.
So, you know, I view it all as sort of a very complicated political chess game which is going on.
And I think that once the disclosures happen, more of them and once maybe even Maxwell is commuted and what you see after,
we can try to put together what they discuss thereafter.
But I don't have any short-term hope that this will result in any greater transparency.
Okay.
Mertazza, this was really, really interesting.
Thank you so much for coming by.
Thank you so much for paying attention
and for helping bring more public insight to the subject.
All right, that is all for today.
Front Burner was produced this week by Joytha Shen Gupta, Matt Mews, Matthew Amha,
Lauren Donnelly, and McKenzie Cameron.
Our YouTube producer is John Lee.
Our music is by Joseph Shabbison.
Our senior producer is Elaine Chow.
Our executive producer is Nick McKay Blokos, and I'm Jamie Poisson.
Thanks so much for listening.
We'll talk to you on Monday.
