What’s the estimated victim count between Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell?

Checked on February 6, 2026
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Executive summary

A defensible, document-based baseline for the combined victim count tied to Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell is at least the roughly 350 individual victims that attorneys submitted to the government for redaction review, while court records, prosecutions and DOJ releases suggest the total could be substantially higher though not precisely known [1] [2] [3]. Legal findings and reporting show dozens of named, testifying survivors and many more alleged victims in civil suits and investigative files; public releases to date do not provide a single, vetted aggregate that would allow a firm final tally [4] [5] [6].

1. The documented baseline: the attorneys’ 350 names and what it means

The clearest, repeatedly cited numerical anchor in public reporting is the list of about 350 victims that lawyers Brad Edwards and Brittany Henderson provided to the Justice Department to ensure redactions — that list was used as a protective step in the disclosure process and is treated in news coverage as a concrete, documented set of alleged victims connected to Epstein’s operation [1] [2]. That 350 figure is not speculative: it was an operational list supplied to prosecutors and quoted in multiple summaries of the “Epstein files,” and therefore represents a defensible minimum count of individuals identified in litigation and law‑enforcement work [1] [2].

2. Why any single number understates the scope: multiple sources, civil suits and grand jury materials

Counting is complicated because victims appear across civil complaints, grand‑jury exhibits, investigative charts and witness testimony rather than a single unified database; Judge Preska’s unsealing orders, the recent DOJ release of millions of pages and media reports about FBI diagrams and charts all underscore that many victims are documented in different forums and that releases continue to reveal new identities and relationships [1] [3] [6]. Journalistic and legal accounts also emphasize that not everyone named in files was necessarily abused and that some materials contain errors or unredacted private information — complicating any effort to produce a simple validated headcount from public records alone [1] [6].

3. Ghislaine Maxwell’s culpability and the “dozens” implicated in reporting and trial evidence

Maxwell was convicted in 2021 for her role in recruiting and facilitating abuse of multiple minor girls over a long period, and prosecutors and reporting describe her as implicated by “dozens” of victims and as a co‑conspirator in civil and criminal filings — this establishes that a substantial subset of the broader Epstein victim pool is attributed directly to Maxwell’s conduct [4] [5] [7]. The Southern District of New York’s sentencing materials and news coverage describe a years‑long scheme in which Maxwell recruited, groomed and trafficked young girls to locations where Epstein abused them, reinforcing that the combined operation involved numerous individual victims across jurisdictions [4] [5].

4. A cautious estimate and the unavoidable caveats

A conservative, evidence‑based answer: at least ~350 victims are documented in materials submitted to the DOJ and reported in multiple sources; beyond that, file releases, trial testimony and investigative charts indicate the true number is likely higher — plausibly several hundred more — but public records as of the latest releases do not yet permit a definitive, fully vetted total and contain redaction and data‑quality issues that prevent simple aggregation [1] [3] [6]. It is equally important to note that legal standards differ: some counts derive from civil complaints, some from grand‑jury items, and some names may be duplicates, misidentified, or include people alleged but not proven to be victims, so higher estimates reported in commentary or media should be treated as provisional pending full, careful verification [1] [8].

5. What to watch next and why the final picture may change

The Justice Department’s massive releases under the Epstein Files Transparency Act, and judicial unsealing decisions, are still unfolding; as more grand‑jury exhibits, photos and interview notes are reviewed and redacted properly, researchers and prosecutors may be able to refine the count — either confirming the 350 baseline while adding validated additional names or consolidating duplicated entries — but for now the responsible public estimate remains “at least 350, likely substantially more, but not precisely known from currently released, fully validated public records” [1] [3] [6].

Want to dive deeper?
How many victims testified at Ghislaine Maxwell’s 2021 trial and who are they?
What does the DOJ’s Epstein file release include and how are victim identities being protected?
How do civil suits against Epstein and Maxwell overlap — are the same individuals counted multiple times across filings?