Friday, March 13, 2026

Epstein’s Personal Accountant Drops A Smoking Cannon On Trump

 

BREAKING: Epstein’s Personal Accountant Drops A Smoking Cannon On Trump

Richard Kahn just confirmed what we’ve suspected for years — Epstein’s estate paid off one of Donald Trump’s accusers. This isn’t a smoking gun. It’s a smoking cannon.

March 12, 2026

Jeffrey Epstein’s personal accountant sat before the House Oversight Committee for seven hours yesterday, and by the end of it, the levy had broken.

Richard Kahn — the man who managed every dollar Epstein moved for over a decade, who was named in Epstein’s will two days before his mysterious death, and who appears more than 50,000 times in the DOJ’s Epstein files — confirmed under congressional questioning that a woman who accused Donald Trump of sexual abuse received a settlement payment from Epstein’s estate.


Epstein’s estate.

Trump’s accuser.

A cheque that matches up perfectly with the infamous 53 missing pages and hundreds of thousands of redactions referencing Donald J Trump in abuse accounts so sick, I had a hard time detailing them here:

Democratic Congressman Suhas Subramanyam walked out of that closed-door deposition and went straight to X. His notes don’t mince words: “A Trump accuser has received $ from the survivor fund managed by Kahn.”

When reporters pressed him for detail, Subramanyam didn’t back down. “Another person who was an accuser of Donald Trump was given a settlement by Jeffrey Epstein’s estate. We did confirm that,” he said. “We wanted to confirm that certain accusers had received settlements, and he confirmed that.”

Why does Epstein’s estate — managed by his closest financial operative — have a Trump accuser in its survivor fund at all? That question is going to need an answer. Under oath.

The Five Families

Kahn didn’t stop there. He confirmed the names of five “rich and powerful” parties who bankrolled Epstein’s operation:

Les Wexner. Glenn Dubin. Steven Sinofsky. The Rothschilds. Leon Black.

These are the people who transferred significant sums of money to Jeffrey Epstein — a convicted sex trafficker and predator of underage girls. Kahn’s explanation? He thought Epstein was a tax advisor and financial planner. He thought the money was consulting fees.

Nobody believes that. Not one person on that committee. Not one person reading this.

Let’s clear it all up:

EPSTEIN’S FIVE PAYMASTERS: WHO THEY ARE AND WHAT THE DOCUMENTS SAY

LES WEXNER — The Original Sponsor

The Victoria’s Secret billionaire is where Epstein’s entire empire begins. Wexner retained Epstein as his financial manager from 1987 to 2007 and was initially the “main client” of Epstein’s money-management firm. Epstein ran his business from a house Wexner owned and sometimes lived in.

The arrangement was extraordinary in scope. Within a couple years of meeting, Wexner had turned over management of his entire fortune to Epstein and gave him power of attorney in 1991, allowing Epstein to make investments, do business deals, and purchase property. Wexner’s claim that the relationship was purely professional collapsed when DOJ files revealed a draft letter in which Epstein wrote to Wexner that the two “had ‘gang stuff’ for over 15 years” and were mutually indebted to each other.

Then there’s the FBI’s assessment. On February 10, 2026, Rep. Ro Khanna revealed that the FBI had named Wexner as an unindicted co-conspirator. He has not been charged with any crime. He already testified before the House Oversight Committee last month, where he called Epstein a “world-class con man” who duped him — a claim Democrats called “bogus.”

GLENN DUBIN — The Most Documented Accused

Dubin is a hedge fund billionaire who co-founded Highbridge Capital and is a MoMA board trustee. His entanglement with Epstein is among the most document-heavy of all five. Dubin appears prominently across multiple dimensions: as a named individual in Virginia Giuffre’s allegations of sexual abuse, as a long-term social contact of Epstein’s documented through emails spanning at least 2011–2018, and as a figure whose former employee Rinaldo Rizzo was identified as possessing “knowledge of Epstein underage activity.”

The Giuffre allegation is damning. In a 2015 defamation suit, Giuffre claimed that Epstein trafficked her as a “sex slave” to several of his influential friends in 2001 when she was 16 — and that Dubin was the first.

His former household manager’s account is worse. Rinaldo Rizzo recounted an encounter at the Dubin home with a 15-year-old girl allegedly trafficked by Epstein in 2005. According to his testimony, after Maxwell and Epstein brought the girl to the house, Dubin’s wife Eva told the girl she would be working for her as a nanny — and Rizzo saw her again a month later on a flight to Sweden with the Dubin family.

There’s also this: Eva Andersson-Dubin was Epstein’s girlfriend for 11 years before marrying Glenn. And files revealed that Epstein told friends in 2014 that the Dubins’ daughter Celina — then 19, who had called him “Uncle Jeff” — was the only person he wanted to marry. Dubin has denied all allegations. Weeks after Epstein’s death, JPMorgan Chase filed a suspicious activity report for transactions connected to Dubin, as well as Leon Black, Alan Dershowitz, and Les Wexner, totalling approximately $1 billion.

STEVEN SINOFSKY — Silicon Valley’s Dirty Secret

This one broke wide open just this week. Sinofsky ran Microsoft’s Windows division — he was once the presumptive heir to Steve Ballmer, and today sits as a board partner at Andreessen Horowitz, one of the most powerful venture firms in the world. DOJ documents detail how, after leaving Microsoft in 2012, Sinofsky brought on Jeffrey Epstein — an already convicted sex offender — as a paid negotiator on his exit deal.

Epstein charged Sinofsky a $1 million fee to handle his departure from Microsoft (Bll Gates BESTIE). He ultimately secured a $14 million exit deal. On September 16, 2013, Epstein received confirmation that the wire had completed: “Wire hit JPM yesterday… Confirming $1,000,000.”

And Sinofsky didn’t just use Epstein once. He continued to email Epstein through 2018, discussing his finances, career prospects, and social events in New York, San Francisco, and Seattle. The files place him in over 1,400 email exchanges. He also appears to have been part of Epstein’s pipeline into Bill Gates. He has not been charged with any crime and has declined to comment.

THE ROTHSCHILDS — $25 Million and a Tax Problem

The specific Rothschild named in the documents is Ariane de Rothschild, head of the Edmond de Rothschild Group. A draft agreement dated October 5, 2015 records the Edmond de Rothschild Group agreeing to pay $25 million to Epstein’s US Virgin Islands-registered Southern Trust Company for services related to introductions and strategic/tax-risk advice connected to US investigations into Swiss banking practices. The Wall Street Journal also reported on this $25 million consulting contract. Like the others, the Rothschilds’ position is that any payments were legitimate advisory fees. The timing — while Swiss banks were under US federal investigation — raises obvious questions about what exactly Epstein was being paid to make go away

.LEON BLACK — The Biggest Dollar Figure

This is where the paper trail gets staggering. Senate Finance Committee investigators discovered that the true amount Black paid to Epstein totalled $170 million — $12 million higher than previously known. Black’s settlement with the US Virgin Islands explosively acknowledges that “Jeffrey Epstein used the money Black paid him to partially fund his operations in the Virgin Islands.”

Black agreed in January 2023 to pay the Virgin Islands government $62.5 million in cash to obtain immunity from any current and future legal claims related to Epstein. To be clear: he paid $62.5 million for criminal immunity. That’s not how innocent people spend their money.

One of Epstein’s accounts that received money from Black — Financial Trust Company Inc. — was previously used for Epstein’s sex-trafficking operation. Bank records made public in Ghislaine Maxwell’s sex-trafficking trial show that Epstein used that same account to transfer $30.7 million to Maxwell, including over $7 million spent on a helicopter accusers said was used to ferry girls to Epstein’s private island.

One more layer: Trump selected Black’s son Benjamin Black to lead the US International Development Finance Corp. The man whose father paid $170 million to Epstein — money that directly funded the trafficking operation — now runs a US government agency at Trump’s personal direction.

Kahn also confirmed that former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak had close financial ties to Epstein — investments in Barak’s entities or vice versa. A foreign head of state. In the books.

Who Is Richard Kahn?

Here’s what the mainstream coverage is soft-pedalling.

Kahn wasn’t just Epstein’s number cruncher. He ran Epstein’s financial infrastructure through his company, HBRK Associates Inc. He coordinated wire transfers. He signed cheques. He managed what the DOJ files describe as medical reimbursements for “the girls.” He vouched for Epstein when banks flagged tuition payments to young women. He impersonated Epstein in communications with banks, which he admitted to Congress yesterday. He helped facilitate a fake marriage between two women connected to Epstein, which he also admitted yesterday.

And then he showed up to Congress and said he had no idea anything was wrong.

Democratic Rep. James Walkinshaw wasn’t having it. Epstein’s sex trafficking ring, he said, “would not have been possible without Richard Kahn, who managed Epstein’s money for years, authorized payments, including payments to victims and survivors.” Walkinshaw said point-blank he did not find Kahn’s testimony credible.

The Republican chair, James Comer, tried to run interference — saying Kahn testified he “never saw a transaction involving Trump or his family.” That’s not the same thing as saying the payment didn’t happen. The settlement came through the estate. Kahn could have signed that cheque without ever being told who it was connected to. That’s how a financial infrastructure built for concealment works.

The 13-Year-Old

We already know Trump’s name runs through the Epstein files like a river. We know a woman accused him of sexually abusing her when she was 13 years old — an allegation credible enough that the FBI interviewed her four times. We know Pam Bondi’s DOJ tried to bury those interview records before they were finally uncovered.

Now we know that at least one Trump accuser received money from the estate of the man Trump called his “terrific guy” friend.

This is the first confirmed, first-person, financial corroboration connecting Epstein’s money to a Trump accuser. That’s not nothing. That’s not a conspiracy theory. That’s testimony, before Congress, under oath, from the man who ran the books.

What Comes Next

Epstein’s attorney and the other estate co-executor, Darren Indyke, testifies March 19th. If Kahn was the man who moved the money, Indyke is the man who built the legal structures that made the movement possible.

The transcript of Kahn’s deposition will be released. When it is, we will know more.

What we know right now is enough: the financial infrastructure of a convicted child sex trafficker paid off an accuser of the President of the United States.

Enough is enough. This accountant needs to be put back in that chair and made to answer every single question until there’s nothing left to recall.

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