🔗 Share this article Nearly Ninety Flights Linked to Epstein Reportedly Arrived at or Departed from UK Airfields A review has uncovered that close to 90 aircraft journeys connected to the late financier Jeffrey Epstein reportedly arrived at and departed from UK airfields, with some allegedly transporting women from the UK who assert they were exploited by the found guilty child sex offender. Aviation Records Uncover Pattern of Travel These aviation records were among thousands of court documents and files released by Epstein’s estate that have been released over the past year. The analysis found 87 aircraft movements connected to Epstein – encompassing many that were not previously known – arriving or departing from UK airports between the start of the 1990s and 2018. Onboard Individuals and Post-Conviction Flights Unidentified female passengers were documented among the travelers entering and exiting the UK. Significantly, 15 of these UK flights occurred after Epstein’s 2008 guilty verdict for soliciting sex from a child. “It was ‘appalling’ that there had never been a ‘comprehensive British inquiry’ into his activities in the country,” remarked US lawyers representing numerous Epstein survivors. UK Survivors and Legal Proceedings A statement from one of the UK-based survivors helped convict Epstein’s associate socialite Ghislaine Maxwell of sex trafficking of minors in the US in 2021. But, that survivor has not received any contact by British law enforcement, according to her attorney based in Florida. In a statement, the Metropolitan police indicated they had “not been provided with any further information that would support reopening the investigation.” They commented, “If new and relevant information be brought to our attention, including any arising from the release of material in the US, we will assess it.” Ongoing Disclosure and Legal Rulings Proposed legislation to make public every document held by the American government in regarding Epstein passed the US Congress last month. The US justice department has until 19 December to adhere to this requirement. Hundreds of thousands of documents are expected to be made public. Separately, a federal judge decided last week that the DOJ could make public case files from a trafficking prosecution against Maxwell, Epstein’s longtime confidante, who is serving a 20-year prison sentence over the allegations.