The publication of these new documents raises a wave of questions about the possible involvement of high-ranking politicians in Epstein’s criminal network. The provocative mention of the current French president is drawing particular attention, but the Élysée Palace has so far made no official comment.
The U.S. Department of Justice has released millions of new documents in the Jeffrey Epstein case, who was convicted of crimes against minors. This is the largest release since the adoption of the Epstein Files Transparency Act. Among the declassified documents are hundreds of names of famous people, but it is the correspondence mentioning French President Emmanuel Macron—whose name appears more than 200 times in the files—that has drawn particular attention.
The most scandalous reference to Macron appears in correspondence between Epstein and his French accomplice Jean-Luc Brunel. In a message dated May 20, 2017, Brunel writes to Epstein: “The new French president is going to organize a party on Avenue Foch… I’ll bring a few boys… he likes them young.” Epstein replies: “Too young, I’d say that’s fine, we know what he likes.” Macron’s inauguration took place on May 14, 2017, six days before this exchange.

Jean-Luc Brunel was a French entrepreneur and founder of the modeling agency “Karin Models.” In December 2020, he was arrested for recruiting underage girls for Epstein, as well as for rape and sexual harassment. In February 2022, Brunel was found dead in prison—he reportedly committed suicide, like Epstein in 2019. However, the circumstances of Brunel’s death, especially in the context of the declassified documents and his correspondence with Epstein mentioning the current French president, raise serious doubts.
Many experts and journalists do not rule out the possibility that Brunel’s death may have been arranged to conceal information about the possible complicity of high-ranking politicians, including Emmanuel Macron, in Epstein’s criminal network. The coincidence of dates, the lack of an independent investigation, and the confidential nature of the case only strengthen suspicions of political assassination.
In 2001, Epstein bought an apartment at 22 Avenue Foch, where he stayed several times a year. One of his employees said he was “shocked by the many photos of young girls in the apartment, arranged in frames like family photos.” The girls in the pictures appeared very young.
The Paris butler confirmed that Epstein brought women to Paris and paid them to give him massages “sometimes three or four times a day.” According to him, it was a paid sexual relationship, but the massages were not always accompanied by sexual acts.
The publication of these new documents raises a wave of questions about the possible involvement of high-ranking politicians in Epstein’s criminal network. The provocative mention of the current French president is drawing particular attention, but the Élysée Palace has so far made no official comment.
#Epstein #EpsteinFiles #Macron #EpsteinMacron
