ELON Musk appears to have scheduled a visit to Jeffrey Epstein’s private Caribbean island in January 2014, according to DOJ emails.
The emails are among under a transparency law passed by Congress amid intense public interest in the Epstein case.
Elon Musk reportedly scheduled a visit to Jeffrey Epstein’s island in January 2014, according to emailsCredit: Reuters
The released documents do not confirm if Musk’s visit to the island ever actually occurredCredit: Reuters
The emails are part of millions of pages released by the Justice Department under a transparency law
But they do not confirm that the visit ever occurred and suggest the plans may have fallen through.
According to the emails, Elon Musk contacted the disgraced billionaire paedophile on December 13, 2013, saying his family would “be in the BVI/St Bart’s area over the holidays” and asking: “Is there a good time to visit?”
Epstein replied: “[A]ny day [Jan.] 1st-8th. [P]lay it by ear if you want. [A]lways space for you.”
After Musk responded, “probably the 1st then,” Epstein followed up: “[T]he 2 or 3 would be perfect. I will come and get you.”
The exchange suggests the two men tentatively agreed on a Jan. 2, 2014 visit to Little St. James – the island long associated with Epstein and widely referred to as “Paedo Island.”
However, the trip may not have been finalised.
On New Year’s Eve, Epstein’s longtime assistant Lesley Groff emailed him: “Just a reminder Elon Musk was asking about coming to your island Jan. 2…”
No confirmation of the visit appears in the emails cited, and later correspondence indicates the plans may have fallen through.
What we know so far…
- , including 180,000 pics and 2,000 videos
- Many of the materials contain commercial pornography and explicit images seized from Epstein’s devices
- DOJ officials said some images appear to have been taken by Epstein or people around him
- The release was mandated by the Epstein Files Transparency Act, signed into law by President Trump on November 19
- DOJ blamed delays on the volume of records and the need for sensitive redactions
- The files were pulled from multiple federal and state investigations, including Epstein’s criminal cases and probes into his death
- DOJ said 500 attorneys and reviewers were involved in vetting the materials
- Public access to the Epstein Library requires age verification due to explicit content
- The release includes unverified and incendiary allegations involving several high-profile figures, including Bill Gates
- Epstein in bombshell emails
In one message days later, Epstein wrote that he needed to remain in New York, adding: “I was really looking forward to finally spending some time together with just fun as the agenda.”
“No problem,” Musk replied.
The January 2014 exchange was not the only instance in which Musk was reportedly scheduled to visit the island.
A copy of Epstein’s daily agenda, released last September by Democrats on the House Oversight Committee, listed “ELON MUSK TO ISLAND DEC. 6TH” in December 2014 – though the same schedule showed Epstein was in New Mexico at the time.
A source close to Musk previously told the New York Post : “Elon never went. I can tell you that 100%,” and claimed the billionaire had “no social relationship” with Epstein “whatsoever.”
Musk has also publicly denied visiting the island.
Creepy photos reveal more about the disgraced financier’s island, Little St. JamesCredit: AP
Mysterious words seen scrawled on a chalkboard in Epstein’s study at his mansion in Little St James
One room in the late sex-offender’s mansion featured a dentist’s chair and strange masksCredit: AP
Images reveal lavish furniture at Epstein’s sprawling mansion, and a creepy chalkboardCredit: Reuters
In a social media post last September, he wrote that Epstein “tried to get me to go to his island and I REFUSED.”
Still, the newly released documents appear to show that Musk and Epstein exchanged multiple emails between 2012 and 2014, discussing possible meetings in Florida, California and the Caribbean.
In one 2012 email, Musk allegedly asked Epstein: “What day/night will be the wildest party on your island?”
A later email appears to show Epstein thanking Musk for “the tour” after a visit to SpaceX headquarters in California.
Musk is among dozens of high-profile business and political figures whose names appear in the Justice Department’s mass document release.
Attorney General Pam Bondi reignited public attention to the case last year when she appeared to suggest she was reviewing a client list, before later issuing a memo stating that “no further disclosure would be appropriate or warranted” and that no charges were justified beyond those already brought against Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell.
Musk himself has previously fueled speculation surrounding the files.
During a public feud with President Trump last year, he claimed on social media that “@realDonaldTrump is in the Epstein files,” a charge Trump has denied, saying he cut off his relationship with Epstein in the early 2000s.
What exactly are the Epstein Files?
The Epstein Files refer to the reams of evidence amassed by the Justice Department and FBI during a probe in Florida that led to his 2008 conviction for procuring a minor for prostitution and the investigation that led to his later indictment in New York.
The huge trove of documents has been sealed for years, and the object of frenzied speculation.
Only a sliver of the government material has ever been released publicly.
This includes tens of thousands of pages of evidence from federal investigations into Epstein and his accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell – known as the Epstein files – have been released to the public in stages over several years.
These documents, some released in redacted format, include Epstein’s flight logs, his contact book, email exchanges, court documents, and testimonies from victims and witnesses.
Names of many high-profile figures have appeared in them – but that does not mean they were aware of, or involved in Epstein’s crimes.
The Epstein Files Transparency Act, passed by the House and Senate and now signed by Trump, calls for the release within 30 days of “all unclassified records, documents, communications, and investigative materials” in the possession of the Justice Department, the FBI and US attorneys’ offices related to Epstein and his accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell.
Maxwell, 63, is serving a 20-year prison sentence for recruiting underage girls for Epstein.
She was the only person convicted in connection with the disgraced financier, but Trump’s MAGA supporters have thought for years that “deep state” elites were protecting Epstein associates in the Democratic Party and Hollywood.


