The Epstein Files: Read Epsteins emails as if you hacked into his Gmail with Jmail

Published: (February 11, 2026 at 01:52 PM EST)
2 min read

Source: Mashable Tech

Introduction

Having trouble following the latest Epstein Files revelations?

Every few weeks there’s a new release of documents related to Jeffrey Epstein and his ties to the powerful, rich, and famous. Each new dump sends shockwaves across the tech, political, and entertainment worlds. For example, OpenAI lost a board member after Larry Summers resigned following November’s email release, which revealed his close contact with Epstein. And, of course, Saturday Night Live, The Daily Show, and others have covered the most interesting revelations.

Most recently, the Department of Justice released a new batch of 3.5 million pages of documents on Jan. 30, which includes 180 000 new images and 2 000 video files.


What is Jmail?

In November 2025, after the House Oversight Committee’s Epstein Files dump, Riley Walz—described by Wired as a “prankster”—and developer Luke Igel released Jmail, a recreation of Epstein’s email inbox. Jmail is essentially a Gmail‑clone interface that makes it appear as if you’re viewing Epstein’s emails via his jeevacation@gmail.com account.

Key features

  • Searchable inbox – a search box lets you find names, keywords, and other information across the emails.
  • Inbox / Sent / Starred – separate views for received, sent, and crowdsourced “most interesting” messages.
  • People sidebar – a contact list of notable individuals who appear in the emails.

Jmail combines art and web development to create a journalistic research tool, and it has continued to expand since its release.

See the latest Epstein Files in Jmail

Jmail’s creators add every new Epstein Files release to the archive, so the latest emails can be viewed as if you have unauthorized access to Epstein’s personal Gmail account.

Additional Google‑inspired features include:

  • JPhotos – a Google Photos clone containing all released photos.
  • JDrive – a Google Drive‑style view for PDFs and other files.
  • JFlights – maps Epstein’s travels.
  • Jamazon – an Amazon‑like interface for his order history.
  • Jotify – a Spotify‑style player for released audio files.
  • JMessage – displays text messages Epstein sent to contacts.
  • Jemini – a Gemini‑style AI chatbot for asking document‑related questions.

According to the founder, the site has crossed 450 million pageviews as of Feb. 9, 2026.

Update (Feb. 11, 2026, 1:55 p.m. EST): This piece has been updated since its original publication on Nov. 21, 2025, with additional context.

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