The elite visitors to Jeffrey Epstein’s infamous “pedophile island” has been exposed in an enormous data breach of nearly 200 mobile devices, which left an undetectable trail of data leading back to the homes and businesses of attendees.
The maps of the visits were created by a multinational data broker with links to the military.
The data trails how repeated visits from high profile elites, all of whom appeared unconcerned that Epstein was a prolific pedophile sex offender and sex trafficker.
Near Intelligence, a location data broker, gathered revealing data showing the residences of many guests of Little Saint James, the infamous property in the United States Virgin Islands where Epstein groomed, trafficked, and assaulted women and girls as young as 14, Wired reported.
However, the former Attorney General of the United States Virgin Islands said girls smuggled to Epstein by members of his high social circle were as young as 12.
Near Intelligence recorded devices that visited Little St. James from 80 cities, spanning 26 US states and territories, including:
Florida
Massachusetts
Texas
Michigan
New York
Those locations corresponded to estates in affluent gated communities in Michigan and Florida and properties on Martha’s Vineyard and Nantucket in Massachusetts.
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Many ad exchanges have canceled agreements with Near after claiming the company’s use of their data breached the terms of service, the Wall Street Journal reported.
The data is designed for use by businesses looking to establish where prospective consumers work and live.
However, the Journal reported that Near had already delivered data to the US military via secret marketing organizations and conduits to defense contractors.
Wired also obtained bankruptcy filings showing that Near Intelligence signed a year-long deal with nContext, a subsidiary of military contractor Sierra Nevada, in April 2023.
While the captured coordinates point to multimillion-dollar homes, others also point to lower-income areas Epstein prowled for new victims. One such location was West Palm Beach, Florida, where 40 of Epstein’s victims were found.
Lisa Bloom, the lawyer who represented 11 of Epstein’s alleged victims, said, “Most of the clients who come to me, their number one concern is privacy and safety.”
“It’s deeply concerning to think that any sexual abuse victims’ location will be tracked and then stored and then sold to someone, who can presumably do whatever they want with it.”
However, a Department of Justice representative for the US District Court for the Southern District of New York refused to confirm whether its investigators ever used Near’s services.
As we know, the only person charged for Epstein’s large-scale sex trafficking operation was Jeffrey Epstein himself and his “madame” Ghislaine Maxwell.
Meanwhile, Epstein’s client list remains in the FBI’s possession and has not been released to the public, despite some of the files being made public in January.
As we highlighted in February, Twelve Epstein victims sued the FBI for its failed investigation into the allegations of sex trafficking for over 20 years.
According to the victims, the FBI failed to interview victims or collaborate with other law enforcement despite receiving tips about Epstein as early as 1996.
The Epstein list includes 150 names and revealed high-profile figures. The records were sealed as part of a defamation case filed by Virginia Giuffre, one of Epstein’s accusers.
The files regarding Jane Doe #3 exposed information about Prince Andrew and Jean Luc Brunel.
Among those include former President Bill Clinton, known as “Doe 36” and mentioned in multiple redacted court documents.