Epstein Document Archive
1,410,635 documents. AI-classified. Community-investigated.
📌 Document of the Day
February 25, 2026🔥 Noteworthy Documents
How This Works
Every document in this archive is automatically analyzed by our AI classifier and indexed across three search engines. Here's what happens behind the scenes:
Document Classification
Each document is analyzed for content type — emails, legal filings, flight records, financial statements, law enforcement reports. The classifier reads the actual text and identifies structural patterns.
Investigative Scoring
Every document gets a 0–100 investigative value score based on who's mentioned, what dates appear, how many named entities are present, and which of the 24 investigative questions it touches.
24 Questions Framework
Documents are tagged against 24 specific questions organized in three phases: Detection, Verification, and Pattern. This is the backbone of every search and investigation on this platform.
Community Intelligence
Every comment, bookmark, and share teaches the system. When you highlight a connection the classifier missed, you're building the investigation for everyone. The community IS the index.
The 24 Questions
In 1764, the Massachusetts legislature formed the Committee of Correspondence — a network of citizens who systematically shared intelligence across colonial borders. They didn't wait for authorities to investigate. They asked their own questions, verified each other's findings, and built a shared picture of what was happening to them.
This framework exists for the same reason. The Epstein document archive contains over 1.4 million pages of DOJ releases, court filings, financial records, flight logs, and communications. No single person can read them all. No single institution has proven willing to connect the dots. So we built 24 questions — organized in three investigative phases — that let a distributed community of researchers systematically process the archive, exactly like the Committees of Correspondence processed intelligence across the thirteen colonies.
Every tag you see on a document — D6 V14 P18 — is one of these questions. Click any of them to see the evidence.
Detection D1 – D8
Is something wrong? These questions identify the initial signals — the power shifts, the procedural shortcuts, the silenced voices. This is where investigation begins.
Verification V9 – V16
Is the evidence solid? Once you detect a signal, you verify it. These questions test document integrity, cross-reference testimony, trace money, and analyze sources.
Pattern P17 – P24
What does the bigger picture show? Pattern questions map networks, trace travel, follow money at scale, and identify the systemic structures that made all of this possible.
The Committees of Correspondence didn't need permission to investigate. They needed a framework, a network, and the discipline to share what they found. That's exactly what this is.