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The Epstein Files

File 124 - Epstein Served 13 Months in a County Jail. He Was Allowed Out 12 Hours a Day.

The Epstein Files

NBN.fm

History, True Crime, News

4.1743 Ratings

🗓️ 18 March 2026

⏱️ 29 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Under the terms described in contemporaneous reporting, Jeffrey Epstein served 13 months in the Palm Beach County Stockade with a work release arrangement that allowed him to be out of the facility for 12 hours per day, six days a week. He was driven by private car to his office on Royal Poinciana Way, where he had unsupervised access to visitors including young women. The work release was arranged by the Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office under terms that gave Epstein privileges no other sex...

Transcript

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0:00.0

3 million pages of evidence, thousands of unsealed flight logs,

0:10.0

millions of data points, names, themes and timelines connected.

0:16.0

You are listening to the Epstein files, the world's first AI-native investigation into the case

0:23.6

that traditional journalism simply could not handle.

0:31.0

Welcome to the Epstein Files.

0:33.5

Last time, we mapped Jeffrey Epstein's 17 documented visits to the Clinton White House official visitor logs, showing him inside West Wing offices while his abuse operation was already running.

0:44.4

Today, we are looking at what Epstein's sentence actually was, 13 months in a county jail with a work release arrangement that allowed him out for 12 hours a day, six days a week, driven by

0:54.8

private car to an unsupervised private office. As part of our ongoing investigation, as always,

1:00.6

every document and source we reference is available at Epsteinfiles.fm. So let us start with the

1:05.8

document. The Palm Beach County work release approval records released under the Epstein

1:10.4

Files Transparency Act, the exact daily schedule, the destination, and the visitor monitoring conditions that amounted to none.

1:17.1

The official story doesn't match the data. I mean, not even close. When federal prosecutors stood at that podium in 2008, they sold the public on a very specific narrative.

1:25.6

Right.

1:25.9

They sold this narrative of a tough, uncompromising prosecution.

1:30.2

They looked right into the cameras and emphasized that Jeffrey Epstein was going to jail, that he was registering as a sex offender, and that justice had fundamentally been served.

1:40.5

Yeah.

1:40.9

They wanted, you know, the public to feel that the system worked.

1:44.0

But that official narrative completely falls apart. They wanted, you know, the public to feel that the system worked. But that official narrative completely falls apart the exact moment you look at the primary

1:49.1

source documents from Palm Beach County.

1:51.5

Exactly.

1:52.3

And we need to establish the baseline of that 2008 non-prosecution agreement before we can

1:57.9

even begin to understand the work release because this document is, well, it's the absolute foundation of the entire arrangement.

...

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