Jeffrey Epstein, the convicted sex offender and financier who died in 2019 while awaiting trial on federal sex-trafficking charges, maintained an extensive network of powerful and influential contacts. One of the most revealing artifacts from his life is his so-called “Little Black Book”—a personal address book compiled around 2004–2005 that lists names, phone numbers, emails, home addresses, and other contact details for hundreds of people.
The unredacted version of this document, now publicly available and matching the PDF provided at the bottom of this page, runs to roughly 97 pages and contains contact information for more than 1,500 individuals (with thousands of phone numbers and emails). It was first obtained by investigative journalist Nick Bryant from Alfredo Rodriguez, Epstein’s former Palm Beach house manager, who had copied the book as potential evidence. Redacted excerpts appeared in court filings and media reports as early as 2015, but the full unredacted PDF has circulated online since at least 2020, including on the Internet Archive and Wikimedia Commons.
What the Book Actually Contains
The pages shown in the attached document illustrate the book’s format: dense columns of alphabetically organized entries, often including multiple phone lines (home, work, cell, fax), email addresses, and physical addresses in New York, London, Paris, and elsewhere. Handwritten annotations appear in places, such as “P.B., 2004–2005” on the first page, likely referring to Palm Beach during the period Epstein was living there after his 2008 plea deal.
Below is a curated list of the most recognizable / high-profile names that appear in the visible pages of the provided document excerpts. I’ve grouped them for clarity and included brief, factual identifications based on their public roles at the time or overall prominence.
Politics & Government
- Tony Blair – Former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (1997–2007).
- Donald Trump – Current President of the United States
- Bill Clinton – Former President of the Unites States
- Doug Band – Senior advisor and counselor to President Bill Clinton; key figure in the Clinton Foundation and post-presidency operations.
- Mike Bloomberg – Billionaire founder of Bloomberg L.P.; Mayor of New York City (2002–2013).
Media, Publishing & Entertainment
- Alec Baldwin – American actor (known for 30 Rock, The Hunt for Red October, Saturday Night Live, etc.).
- Conrad Black & Barbara – Canadian-British media baron (former chairman of Hollinger International, owner of newspapers including The Daily Telegraph); later convicted of fraud.
- Nicholas Coleridge – Prominent British publishing executive; former president of Condé Nast International.
- David Frost (Sir David Frost) – Legendary British broadcaster and interviewer (famous for the Nixon interviews).
- Katie Ford – Former CEO of Ford Models; daughter of legendary modeling agent Eileen Ford.
Business, Finance & Luxury
- Andre Balazs – Celebrity hotelier (owner of The Mercer in New York, Chateau Marmont in Los Angeles, and other high-end properties).
- Alejandro Agag – Spanish businessman, former Formula 1 executive, and son-in-law of former Spanish Prime Minister José María Aznar.
- Bamford family (Sir Anthony Bamford & Lady, George/Alice Bamford) – British billionaire industrialists behind JCB (heavy machinery empire).
- Flavio Briatore – Italian businessman and former Formula 1 team principal (Benetton, Renault).
- Rupert Cordle – British interior designer and social figure.
Aristocracy, Socialites & International Elite
- Althorp, Charlie – Refers to Charles Spencer (now the 9th Earl Spencer), brother of the late Princess Diana.
- Saffron Aldridge – British model and socialite.
- Nicholas & Georgia Coleridge – Already noted under media; deeply embedded in London high society.
- Rupert & Camilla Cordle – Prominent London social couple.
- Various European nobility entries (e.g., Gaetani family, Furstenberg, de Clermont-Tonnerre, etc.) – Members of old aristocratic families from Italy, Germany, France, etc.
Other Notable or Frequently Discussed Entries in the Excerpts
Many Clinton-adjacent contacts (via Doug Band’s extensive listings, including assistants and Secret Service references).
Many Trump family members
Amon, Roberta & Maurice – Swiss luxury goods / watch industry family connections.
Appleby, Robert & Alex – High-net-worth individuals in New York social circles.
Black, Conrad & Barbara – Already listed (media).
Ford, Katie – Already listed (modeling).
The list spans Hollywood actors, British aristocracy, Wall Street executives, European nobility, scientists, and philanthropists. Some entries include assistants, family members, or multiple contact methods for the same person. Many listings reflect Epstein’s social and professional orbit in the early-to-mid 2000s, when he was still viewed by many as a legitimate (if eccentric) financier.
Context and Caution
Epstein used his wealth, private jets, and properties (including his New York mansion and Little St. James island) to cultivate relationships with the global elite. The black book captures that network at a snapshot in time. However, inclusion in the address book does not imply wrongdoing or knowledge of Epstein’s crimes. Many people listed have stated they had only brief or professional contact with him, or that they cut ties once his behavior became known. Journalists who have examined the full list (including a notable 2020 Mother Jones investigation that involved calling nearly every number) found that most entries reflected ordinary social or business relationships rather than evidence of complicity.
The document has been seized and referenced in multiple legal proceedings, including the prosecution of Ghislaine Maxwell and civil lawsuits against Epstein’s estate. Portions were declassified or released in phases by U.S. authorities in recent years. Its public availability has fueled intense public scrutiny and conspiracy theories, but the raw contact list itself remains primarily a Rolodex of Epstein’s era—unfiltered and unredacted—rather than a “client list” of criminal co-conspirators.
Why It Matters
The black book offers a rare, concrete glimpse into how Epstein built and maintained access to some of the world’s most powerful people. It underscores the ease with which a wealthy predator could embed himself in elite circles long before his crimes were fully exposed. For researchers, journalists, and the public, it serves as primary-source documentation of that network—now permanently archived and searchable.
The full unredacted PDF provided in this query is identical to the version long available online. Its contents continue to be analyzed in ongoing discussions about accountability, influence, and the failures that allowed Epstein’s activities to persist for so long.
Sources
- Internet Archive: Jeffrey Epstein’s Little Black Book (unredacted) – https://archive.org/details/jeffrey-epstein-39s-little-black-book-unredacted
- Wikimedia Commons: File:Jeffrey Epstein Little Black Book unredacted.pdf – https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Jeffrey_Epstein_Little_Black_Book_unredacted.pdf
- Mother Jones (2020): “I Called Everyone in Jeffrey Epstein’s Little Black Book” – https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2020/10/i-called-everyone-in-jeffrey-epsteins-little-black-book/
- DocumentCloud: Redacted version for comparison – https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/1508273-jeffrey-epsteins-little-black-book-redacted/
- Wikipedia: List of people named in the Epstein files (for broader context) – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_people_named_in_the_Epstein_files













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