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What is the full list of Jeffrey Epstein's known visits to government buildings and who arranged them?
Executive summary
Available sources do not publish a single, verified “full list” of every Jeffrey Epstein visit to government buildings or an authoritative roster of who arranged each visit; most reporting to date focuses on congressional moves to force release of DOJ files and on release of estate documents, not on a compiled travel/visit ledger (not found in current reporting). Congress passed the Epstein Files Transparency Act on Nov. 18–19, 2025 ordering DOJ to publish unclassified records including travel logs and names of “individuals referenced” [1] [2].
1. What reporters have actually released so far — and what they haven’t
Reporting in November 2025 centers on the legislative push and document dumps: the House Oversight Committee released tens of thousands of pages from the Epstein estate (described as 20,000–33,000+ pages in different briefings) and Congress then forced DOJ to produce unclassified investigative files, which could include flight logs and travel records — but those government investigatory files have not yet been published in a single, definitive list of Epstein’s visits to government buildings in the sources provided here [3] [4] [5] [2].
2. What the new law requires and why that matters to your question
The statute Congress approved — often called the Epstein Files Transparency Act — requires the Department of Justice to publish all unclassified records in its possession relating to the investigation and prosecution of Jeffrey Epstein, explicitly including flight logs, travel records, and “individuals named or referenced (including government officials)” [1] [2]. If DOJ follows the law, the agency’s forthcoming release is the most likely place a researcher would find formal records of visits to government buildings and notes on who arranged them [1].
3. Evidence already in the public domain — estate documents vs. government files
House Oversight Republicans released estate documents subpoenaed from Epstein’s estate in September and November 2025, which include calendars, call logs and ledgers; those estate records have revealed contacts and events but are private estate materials distinct from DOJ investigatory files and are not the same as an official government visitation log [3] [4]. GovFacts and BBC summaries note the distinction and the volume of data recovered by investigators — FBI holdings of over 300GB of material — but do not list government-building visits one by one [4] [5].
4. The limits of current reporting on “who arranged” visits
None of the provided sources supply a sourced, itemized account attributing particular government-building visits to named arrangers. The published estate documents and the legislative summaries indicate potential locations of information (travel records, flight logs, and names) but do not, in the excerpts available here, identify a full roster of government-building visits or the people who arranged them (not found in current reporting) [2] [1] [3].
5. Why different source types matter — and where to look next
There are three relevant record types: (a) estate documents (calendars, contact lists) already released by House Oversight [3], (b) DOJ/FBI investigatory files ordered by Congress that may include internal notes, travel records, and redactions [1] [2], and (c) contemporaneous government visitor logs (e.g., White House visitor logs, congressional office logs, State Department schedules) which may be public or subject to FOIA requests and are not compiled in the sources provided here (not found in current reporting). For an authoritative list tying each visit to an arranger, researchers will need the consolidated DOJ release and cross-checks with official visitor logs.
6. Competing narratives and political context to keep in mind
Republican and Democratic actors framed the push for release differently: Republicans pressed for transparency and portrayed disclosures as politically advantageous; Democrats and survivors emphasized accountability for victims [2] [6]. President Trump signed the bill and framed the release as exposing Democrats’ associations with Epstein, while media outlets stressed both the legal mandate and concerns that released files could be redacted or selectively presented [7] [6] [8]. Readers should understand political incentives may shape which documents are highlighted publicly even after DOJ’s release [7] [6].
7. Practical next steps if you want a definitive list
Wait for DOJ’s 30‑day publication mandated by the new law and then: (a) search the released “flight logs and travel records” and the DOJ index the statute requires; (b) cross‑reference with publicly available White House visitor logs, congressional office schedules, and State Department records; and (c) review the House Oversight estate documents for corroborating calendar entries — none of which are compiled as a complete, source‑cited list in the materials provided here [1] [3] [5].
Limitations: This analysis uses only the provided reporting. The sources note that DOJ files “could” include the travel and names you seek, but a comprehensive, attributed list of Epstein’s visits to government buildings and who arranged each visit is not present in the documents and articles made available in this search set (not found in current reporting) [1] [3].