Which court cases, depositions, or FBI materials publicly reference William Kyle Riley or other names mentioned in the Sasha Riley audio?
Executive summary
Publicly released “Epstein files” and reporting on them include references to a “William Riley” appearing in emails and witness testimony, and online researchers have connected those mentions to a William Kyle Riley; however, mainstream reporting and the declassified document releases identified in available reporting do not provide a clean, publicly cited court docket or FBI file that explicitly ties the full name “William Kyle Riley” to specific court cases or depositions beyond these evaluated references and social-media investigations [1] [2] [3].
1. What the declassified Epstein documents actually show
A court-ordered, January 2024 release described as the first phase of declassified Epstein materials included roughly 1,400 pages of documents and depositions that name multiple individuals, and those public materials contain references to a “William Riley” in at least one released email and in testimony from a Palm Beach compound manager, according to contemporary reporting summarizing that document batch [1] [2].
2. How online researchers link “William Riley” to William Kyle Riley
Independent researchers and social posts cataloguing the released documents report that “William Riley” appears in emails recommended by Epstein and that a “Bill Riley” is mentioned several times in deposition testimony; those same researchers have sought to identify that figure as William Kyle Riley, a Georgia-based pilot and former licensed private investigator, assembling public records and social-media traces to build the connection [3] [4].
3. Depositions, court cases, and FBI reports: what is publicly cited — and what is not
Reporting assembled so far notes depositions within the released Maxwell/Epstein files and references to FBI and CPS reports connected to a William Kyle Riley in some secondary accounts, but none of the sources provided here points to a named court case number, a specific deposition transcript page number explicitly showing the full name “William Kyle Riley,” or an indexed FBI file that is publicly posted with that full-name attribution; available accounts instead summarize that some depositions and emails mention “William Riley” and that social researchers claim CPS/FBI reports exist referencing him [5] [1] [2] [3].
4. Claims that Sasha (Sascha) Riley’s audio matches public records — corroboration and limits
Advocates and threads users assert that Sasha Riley contacted police, the FBI, and testified before an Oversight Committee, and some claim release of sworn filmed depositions that overlap with the audio released on Substack, but those assertions rest largely on user posts and a Substack audio publication rather than on direct citations to a court docket or an FBI public file in the reporting provided here; mainstream outlets covering the viral audio repeatedly emphasize the allegations remain unverified in court records available to them [6] [7] [8].
5. Competing narratives, hidden agendas, and the cautionary margin
The pattern in reporting and social-media threads is mixed: mainstream outlets describe the file release and note names appearing without implying criminality, while activist researchers and social posts seek to map the released “William Riley” references to a living William Kyle Riley and to alleged CPS/FBI materials; these investigator-driven chains can reflect confirmation bias and motive to connect public names to viral allegations, and the primary sources cited in news summaries do not, in the material provided here, deliver an incontrovertible, fully documented naming of “William Kyle Riley” in a specific court filing or FBI index [1] [2] [3] [4].
6. Bottom line for researchers seeking primary materials
The public, declassified Epstein/Maxwell document batch contains references to a “William Riley” in emails and depositions (as summarized by news reporting), and social researchers have publicly tried to map those references to William Kyle Riley using public-record sleuthing, but the sources assembled here do not furnish a single, clearly cited court docket number, deposition transcript with page citation, or an FBI file publicly indexed under the full name “William Kyle Riley”; further confirmation would require consulting the released document PDFs directly or FOIA/Federal court dockets and comparing exact name strings and document identifiers, a step not completed within the cited reporting [1] [2] [3].