Deposition Will Reveal Who REALLY Enabled Epstein?

A brown folder with the name 'EPSTEIN' on it, partially illuminated by light and casting shadows
EPSTEIN BOMBSHELL

Jeffrey Epstein’s longtime accountant faces congressional questioning about the financial machinery that allegedly enabled one of the most notorious sex trafficking operations in American history, raising questions about who knew what and when.

Story Snapshot

  • Richard Kahn, Epstein’s accountant for over a decade, was deposed by the House Oversight Committee on March 11, 2026
  • Allegations claim Kahn helped structure bank accounts and financial infrastructure to facilitate sex trafficking operations
  • Despite his central role in managing Epstein’s finances, the FBI and DOJ never questioned Kahn during the original investigations
  • Kahn received $25 million in Epstein’s will and served as co-executor of the estate alongside Epstein’s lawyer
  • Congressional investigation shifts focus from celebrities to financial enablers who allegedly made the crimes possible

Following the Money Trail

Richard Kahn managed Jeffrey Epstein’s finances from the mid-2000s until the financier’s death in 2019, positioning him at the center of the money flows that allegedly sustained a sex trafficking enterprise. The House Oversight Committee subpoenaed Kahn in January 2026, seeking answers about how Epstein’s multimillion-dollar fortune financed criminal activities.

Class action complaints allege Kahn was “personally essential” to Epstein’s operations, helping structure bank accounts, manage cash withdrawals, and create the complex financial infrastructure that facilitated exploitation. This testimony promises to expose mechanisms that previous high-profile depositions of Bill Clinton, Hillary Clinton, and Leslie Wexner failed to reveal.

Unexplained FBI and DOJ Failures

Five Democratic senators raised serious concerns about investigative failures that allowed key figures to escape scrutiny. They wrote to Attorney General Pam Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel stating it was “inexcusable” that the DOJ and FBI never questioned Kahn or co-executor Darren Indyke during investigations into Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell.

Despite handling Epstein’s financial affairs for years and playing “outsize roles” in his personal and financial operations, these individuals avoided federal questioning.

This raises troubling questions about whether previous administrations deliberately avoided following the money, potentially protecting powerful individuals connected to Epstein’s network. The oversight represents either gross incompetence or something more sinister in federal law enforcement.

Estate Executors Face Accountability

Kahn and attorney Darren Indyke were named co-executors of Epstein’s estate, with Kahn designated to receive $25 million in the will. Both recently settled a lawsuit alleging they facilitated sham marriages for immigration purposes, though the settlement included no admission of wrongdoing and awaits federal judge approval.

Epstein survivors identified the pair as “critical cogs” in the financial operations that enabled trafficking. Kahn’s attorney, Daniel H. Weiner, defended his client by emphasizing that no victim accused either man of committing or witnessing sexual abuse, and both “did not socialize with Mr. Epstein.”

However, this defense misses the point entirely—the allegation is financial facilitation, not direct participation in abuse.

Congressional Investigation Expands Scope

The deposition of Kahn on March 11, 2026, marked a strategic shift in the congressional investigation. Rather than focusing exclusively on celebrities and high-profile associates, the committee now targets individuals with direct operational knowledge of Epstein’s financial systems.

Indyke is scheduled for deposition on March 19, 2026, continuing the pattern of public transparency established when the committee released video of Les Wexner’s deposition in February 2026. The Department of Justice previously released millions of documents—the “Epstein files”—revealing sophisticated webs of interconnected companies and financial arrangements.

These depositions aim to decode that complexity and establish accountability for those who allegedly made trafficking operations financially sustainable through professional services.

This investigation represents overdue accountability for professional enablers who may have profited from criminal enterprises. The American people deserve answers about how accountants and lawyers structured finances that facilitated exploitation.

If Kahn and Indyke knowingly participated in creating financial infrastructure for sex trafficking, their professional credentials provided no immunity from moral and legal responsibility.

The congressional record being established may finally expose the full scope of who enabled Epstein’s crimes and how the financial system was manipulated to sustain years of abuse. True justice requires following the money to its source and holding all facilitators accountable, regardless of their professional status or claims of ignorance.

Sources:

U.S. House Oversight Committee releases video of Les Wexner’s deposition concerning Epstein – WOSU

House Oversight Committee to depose Epstein’s longtime accountant – ABC News

Richard Kahn, Jeffrey Epstein accountant, House Oversight testimony – CBS News

Oversight Committee Releases Additional Epstein Estate Documents – House Oversight Committee