Itinerary
Jan 07, 2026

The Undisclosed DEA Probe: Narcotics and Financial Anomalies

Thượng nghị sĩ Dân chủ bày tỏ 'mối quan ngại sâu sắc' về các hoạt động mật  của CIA. | Nhật Báo Calitoday

WASHINGTON, D.C. — A 69-page memorandum released as part of the ongoing Department of Justice (DOJ) disclosure has revealed that Jeffrey Epstein was the target of a five-year investigation by the Drug Enforcement Administration. The probe, which began in December 2010, focused on suspicious wire transfers totaling approximately $50 million potentially linked to illegal narcotics and international trafficking.

The 2010-2015 DEA Investigation

The unclassified documents show that the DEA utilized the Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Forces (OCDETF) to track a network of 15 individuals.

  • The "Drug Nexus": Investigators flagged illegitimate wire transfers tied to "illicit drug and/or prostitution activities" occurring in the U.S. Virgin Islands and New York City. 📑

  • Redacted Targets: While Epstein is explicitly named, the identities of 14 other targets remain heavily redacted, concealing the full scope of the suspected criminal organization. ⚖️

Inter-Agency Information Gaps

Pam Bondi updates: Senators question attorney general on Epstein, Comey -  BBC News

The document release has sparked concerns regarding the lack of intelligence sharing between the DEA, FBI, and the Southern District of New York (SDNY).

  1. Prosecutorial Blind Spots: Sources involved in the 2019 sex trafficking arrest confirmed to investigators that they were entirely unaware of the earlier five-year narcotics probe led by the DEA. 📉

  2. Global Surveillance: The files also list previously unknown investigations by ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement), including Operation Angel Watch in Paris (2013) and probes in Las Vegas and West Palm Beach.

  3. Accidental Disclosures: The DOJ reportedly neglected to redact the name of a Polish fashion model linked to $2 million in transfers, though her legal counsel maintains she was a victim of the network rather than a co-conspirator. 🛡️

Legislative Pressure and Financial Oversight

Blistering Wyden letter seeks review of federal court cybersecurity, citing  'incompetence,' 'negligence' | CyberScoop

Senator Ron Wyden and other lawmakers are utilizing these new findings to demand a full accounting of all unreleased Epstein files.

  • Broad Criminal Scope: Lawmakers argue that the DEA files suggest criminal activities that extended far beyond the initial trafficking charges, involving complex financial laundering and narcotics distribution. 🏛️

  • Critique of the DOJ: Senator Wyden has publicly criticized Attorney General Pam Bondi for the slow pace of the document release, noting that millions of pages remain under review despite the federal transparency mandate.

  • Holding Companies: The probe also scrutinized entities such as Hyperion Air and SLK Designs, businesses allegedly used to facilitate the movement of personnel and assets across international borders. 📌

Other posts