
Warning: This article contains discussion of child abuse which some readers may find distressing
The new site which allows anyone in the world to access Jeffrey Epstein's emails has led to some more major revelations about the late paedophile and those associated with him.
Epstein may well have died in 2019, but he is seemingly more relevant now than ever, with the US Justice Department recently releasing another three million pages of information about the disgraced financier and the horrific sex trafficking crimes he committed.
How are people accessing Epstein's emails?
New information is being discovered every day as the world ploughs through the huge amount of information included in the files, but now, Jmail has managed to streamline things somewhat by setting up a website that allows users to see Epstein's emails as if they were their own.
There have already been plenty of new allegations in the latest files, whether it's someone claiming that Epstein has a secret son, or disturbing photos showing Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor in a compromising position.
Advert

Some of the most explosive email exchanges, however, take place between Epstein and former Labour party politician Peter Mandelson, who had already been found to have called Epstein his 'best pal' after some of his previous 'sickening and disturbing' emails were first released.
What was Peter Mandelson's relationship with Jeffrey Epstein?
As Prime Minister Keir Starmer continues to face pressure in the world of politics for his decision to appoint Mandelson as the UK's official ambassador to the US back in December 2024, the emails have exposed exactly how close he was to the paedophile.
Newly-released emails between the pair saw Mandelson call the sex offender 'one of my best friends', while also writing: “Where r u? I miss you.”
Shockingly, he also seemed to leak information about the British government to Epstein before it was announced to the public, suggesting that he 'finally got' Gordon Brown to go, an email that was sent hours before the former PM announced his resignation outside Downing Street in 2010.

The emails also expose Mandelson for looping in Epstein on government issues and emails, also giving the billionaire businessman advanced notice that there would be a $500 billion bail out to save the Euro.
Epstein's accounts also reveal that he wired $75,000 to Lord Mandelson and his partner back between 2003 and 2004, but the former ambassador has claimed he has no memory of this.
He said: "I have no record and no recollection of receiving these sums and do not know if the documents are authentic.”
Mandelson has always denied any wrongdoing amid his association with Epstein, suggesting that he wasn't introduced to young women in the same way that others were because he is a gay man.

In another email, on the day of the 2010 general election, he wrote: "We are praying for a hung parliament. Alternatively, a well hung young man.”
Epstein served a brief 13-month prison sentence before being freed in 2009 after allegations that he had abused a 14-year-old girl, and Mandelson was one of the first people he contacted to let him know he was back home.
On the day he was released, he e-mailed Mandelson: "free and home."
The then-business secretary appears to reply “How shall we celebrate ?” to which Epstein respond: “with grace and modesty ( those are the names of two strippers ).”
A few hours later, Mandelson appears to ask Epstein: “How is freedom feeling ?” to which Epstein replied: "she feels, fresh, firm, and creamy."

To this, the former minister appears to respond: “Naughty boy”.
The pair also shared lewd emails about Princess Beatrice, joking about incest, before their relationship finally seemed to take sour turn in 2012 when Epstein accused him of essentially being too needy and giving nothing back in their friendship.
If you’ve been affected by any of these issues and want to speak to someone in confidence regarding the welfare of a child, contact the NSPCC on 0808 800 5000, 10am-8pm Monday to Friday. If you are a child seeking advice and support, call Childline for free on 0800 1111, 24/7.
Topics: Jeffrey Epstein, Politics, Crime, UK News, US News