No official Jeffrey Epstein "client list" has been released or confirmed to exist by authorities, despite the Department of Justice publishing over 3.5 million pages of investigative files in January 2026 under the Epstein Files Transparency Act, naming prominent figures like Bill Gates and Elon Musk in emails and records but lacking a singular client roster. House Oversight Committee hearings, including contempt votes against figures like the Clintons and demands for full disclosure, drove earlier momentum, while a DOJ watchdog probe launched April 23 examines release procedures amid transparency pushback. A federal judge's recent unsealing of an alleged Epstein suicide note has revived speculation, but no developments in the past 30 days have advanced a list's emergence, leaving traders focused on DOJ, congressional, or court actions as potential catalysts.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · Updated$4,268,797 Vol.
June 30
2%
$4,268,797 Vol.
June 30
2%
To qualify, the files must contain names in a context equivalent to what is commonly referred to as Epstein’s “client list”—that is, a document that explicitly identifies a list or set of individuals as being directly connected to, participating in, facilitating, funding, soliciting, or otherwise being implicated in Jeffrey Epstein’s illegal activities.
A document may qualify even if it does not contain explicit incriminating language on its face, so long as credible reporting or accompanying official context confirms that the released document is an incriminating client list or functionally equivalent roster of individuals tied to Epstein’s illegal activity.
The following will not qualify:
- Flight logs, passenger manifests, visitor logs, or transportation records which merely show individuals traveling with, meeting with, or visiting Epstein without any explicit or contextual tie to criminal activity.
- Contact books, address lists, social calendars, guest lists, schedules, correspondence logs, or similar documents that include names solely due to social contact, proximity, acquaintance, or logistical interaction with Epstein.
- Any document listing individuals without accompanying language, context, or credible reporting that connects those individuals to Epstein’s illegal activity.
The primary resolution sources for this market will be the released files themselves and a consensus of credible reporting.
Market Opened: Dec 22, 2025, 7:54 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...To qualify, the files must contain names in a context equivalent to what is commonly referred to as Epstein’s “client list”—that is, a document that explicitly identifies a list or set of individuals as being directly connected to, participating in, facilitating, funding, soliciting, or otherwise being implicated in Jeffrey Epstein’s illegal activities.
A document may qualify even if it does not contain explicit incriminating language on its face, so long as credible reporting or accompanying official context confirms that the released document is an incriminating client list or functionally equivalent roster of individuals tied to Epstein’s illegal activity.
The following will not qualify:
- Flight logs, passenger manifests, visitor logs, or transportation records which merely show individuals traveling with, meeting with, or visiting Epstein without any explicit or contextual tie to criminal activity.
- Contact books, address lists, social calendars, guest lists, schedules, correspondence logs, or similar documents that include names solely due to social contact, proximity, acquaintance, or logistical interaction with Epstein.
- Any document listing individuals without accompanying language, context, or credible reporting that connects those individuals to Epstein’s illegal activity.
The primary resolution sources for this market will be the released files themselves and a consensus of credible reporting.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...No official Jeffrey Epstein "client list" has been released or confirmed to exist by authorities, despite the Department of Justice publishing over 3.5 million pages of investigative files in January 2026 under the Epstein Files Transparency Act, naming prominent figures like Bill Gates and Elon Musk in emails and records but lacking a singular client roster. House Oversight Committee hearings, including contempt votes against figures like the Clintons and demands for full disclosure, drove earlier momentum, while a DOJ watchdog probe launched April 23 examines release procedures amid transparency pushback. A federal judge's recent unsealing of an alleged Epstein suicide note has revived speculation, but no developments in the past 30 days have advanced a list's emergence, leaving traders focused on DOJ, congressional, or court actions as potential catalysts.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · Updated
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