Video Taken Inside Jeffrey Epstein’s Palm Beach Mansion Reveals Shocking Photos of Nude Women and Meetings With High-Profile Figures
Jeffrey Epstein's Palm Beach home was filled to the brim with photos of nude women and snaps of his meetings with famous faces, according to police footage taken inside the infamous abode.
The video of the accused sex trafficker's property was shared by the House Oversight Committee on Sept. 2—after 33,295 documents relating to his case were handed over by the Justice Department.
Among those documents were several videos taken in 2005 that revealed a glimpse inside the 14,000-square-foot mansion, which has since been demolished, where Epstein was accused of molesting underage girls. He committed suicide in his jail cell at age 66 while awaiting trial and was never officially convicted.
The video revealed that the hallways, bedrooms, offices, and even Epstein's former personal gym were filled with images of women, as well as photos of his high-profile contacts and acquaintances.
Among the gallery of photos were several pictures of his right-hand woman and lover, Ghislaine Maxwell, including one snap of her lying naked on the beach.
There were also pictures of Esptein and Maxwell with Pope John Paul II and Cuban dictator Fidel Castro.
Just last month, while speaking with DOJ officials, Maxwell revealed that the infamous meetings took place in 2002 or 2003.



She confessed that she and Epstein jetted off to Cuba alongside former Colombian President Andres Pastrana, whom she claimed she met at a "pub in Dublin."
Maxwell claimed that she went to Colombia to fly a Blackhawk helicopter.
The remainder of the video revealed that the home offices included a desktop computer, with one featuring a sticky note that read, "Do Not Touch."
When Maxwell spoke with the DOJ, she alleged that one of the computers had been rigged by the Palm Beach police.
She also stated that Epstein got in touch with police officers in 2003 because he believed that someone was stealing money from his briefcase.
The video also revealed that the home gym featured an elliptical machine, Pilates reformer, stationary bike, weights, and nude photos on the walls.
The property also had two massage tables, one of which was inside a closet, while the other was located in a hallway outside a bedroom.


In addition to the photos of naked women, there were also snaps of Epstein himself.
The House Oversight Committee shared the files after a hearing with the Department of Justice.
After Epstein's home was demolished, the developer changed the address.
The disgraced financier had a waterfront mansion at 358 El Brillo Way. The address has since been changed to 360 El Brillo Way.
The "El" streets (El Brillo Way, El Bravo Way, and El Vedado Road) "are three of the nicest streets in Palm Beach," local agent Dana Koch of Corcoran tells Realtor.com®.
But not even one of the nicest streets in one of the world's nicest neighborhoods can overcome the shadow cast by the property's last resident.
The home, built in 1952, was designed in a West Indies style by Palm Beach architect John L. Volk. Epstein purchased the home in 1990 for $2.5 million.


After Epstein died by suicide in prison on Aug. 10, 2019, his estate sold the home in 2021 for $18.5 million to local developer Todd Michael Glaser.
One of the first things Glaser did was apply to the Town of Palm Beach to have the address changed. The request was approved, and the property became 360 El Brillo Way.
The 1-acre property, about 2 miles north of President Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago, is at the end of a private cul-de-sac overlooking Lake Worth Lagoon and Tarpon Island (also owned by Glaser). But crime aficionados apparently had no trouble finding the place.
"You can't imagine how many people drove down that dead-end street," Glaser says. "It was absolutely crazy—15 to 30 people a day going down that private street, doing U-turns, running over people's grass."
He says razing the house didn't stop the curiosity seekers.
"The vacant lot was even more alluring," he says. "It became even busier. The neighbors were going crazy."



So Glaser applied to change the address through the Planning, Zoning & Building Department, and it was approved within two weeks.
Despite owning another infamous house—the Al Capone house in Miami Beach (which was also torn down)—Glaser says this is the first time he's changed an address.
With Epstein's address no longer able to be plugged into search engines, word quickly spread that the house was no more.
"Word got out like wildfire. The drive-bys stopped within a week," Glaser says. "I became, like, a movie star in Palm Beach. Whenever the neighbors saw me, they were like, 'Thank God you made it stop.'"
Koch says an address change can be about more than thwarting looky-loos. It's also about purging the property of bad vibes.
"It's bad karma, bad juju," he explains of a tainted address. "If it's a house where serious crimes took place, then there are people who don't want to be associated with it. People are either superstitious or they just don't feel a comfort level being associated with an address that had bad things go down at it.
"They didn't change Bernie Madoff's address (410 North Lake Way, Palm Beach)," he notes. "But those were white-collar crimes—a little different."
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Stevan Stanisic
Real Estate Advisor | License ID: SL3518131
Real Estate Advisor License ID: SL3518131