The Reckoning Radar
The Reckoning Radar is an investigative intelligence platform built on primary source documents released by the U.S. Department of Justice as part of the Jeffrey Epstein case files.
It is not a news site. It does not publish allegations or speculation. Every person indexed, every relationship mapped, and every event documented is sourced directly to a primary document — court records, flight logs, FBI reports, deposition transcripts, financial consent orders, or congressional disclosures.
The goal is simple: make the public record searchable, navigable, and useful — for journalists, researchers, investigators, and anyone who wants to understand what the documents actually say.
- DOJ Epstein Files — justice.gov/epsteinCourt records, FBI disclosures, deposition transcripts, and the AG Bondi congressional letter released December 2025 and January 2026.
- Epstein Flight Logs — Pilot LogbooksPilot logbooks released in U.S. v. Maxwell documenting passengers aboard Epstein's aircraft.
- Epstein Little Black Book — Contact DirectoryEpstein's personal contact book released as part of the court record.
- JPMorgan Suspicious Activity ReportSAR filed post-Epstein death covering approximately $1 billion in flagged transactions.
- Deutsche Bank Consent Order — NYDFS 2020New York Department of Financial Services consent order detailing Deutsche Bank's Epstein accounts.
- MIT Internal Review — January 2020MIT's independent fact-finding report on Epstein donations to the Media Lab and other departments.
Every person in the database is assigned a confidence rating reflecting how strongly the evidence supports their documented connection to Epstein.
Anyone who appears in the Epstein files solely because they are famous — but has no documented direct connection to Epstein or his network — is not included. Being named on a broad government list of politically exposed persons is not sufficient. Being photographed near Epstein at a public event is not sufficient. Every person in this database has a documented, sourced connection.
Questions, corrections, tips, or source documents — get in touch.
We're also genuinely open to suggestions on how to improve the platform. If there's a feature that would make this more useful to your work, we want to hear it.