Overview
- Kahn testified behind closed doors for roughly seven hours, stating he learned of Epstein’s abuse only after Epstein died.
- He said he managed Epstein’s finances, investments and property renovations and tracked gifts that he did not view as red flags for trafficking.
- Chair James Comer said records show at least 64 Epstein-linked entities and that Kahn identified Les Wexner, Glenn Dubin, Steven Sinofsky, the Rothschilds and Leon Black as significant payers.
- Investigators report reviewing about 44,000 financial documents and Treasury suspicious-activity reports, noting JPMorgan flagged more than $1 billion in transactions tied to Epstein from 2003 to 2019.
- Democratic members questioned Kahn’s credibility, a lawmaker said the estate reached a settlement with a person who also accused President Donald Trump, and co-executor Darren Indyke is scheduled to appear March 19.