Richard Kahn — Full Profile
Epstein's Accountant, Co-Executor, and the Man Who Ran the Books.
Note: Everything below is sourced to primary documents, court records, Senate Finance Committee letters, DOJ files, and named reporting. Allegations are flagged where they are unproven. Admissions are flagged where they came directly from Kahn under oath.
Who is Kahn?
The Accountant Nobody Had Heard Of
Richard David Kahn is a New York accountant. His firm is called HBRK Associates Inc. Before Epstein, he was not a known figure in finance, law, or any public-facing industry. He ran a small operation. He was not a Wall Street name.
He started working for Epstein in 2005. He stayed until Epstein died in 2019. Fourteen years. Through the 2006 arrest. Through the 2008 guilty plea and sex offender registration. Through the 2019 federal re-arrest on sex trafficking charges. He never left.
How the relationship began: no public record cleanly identifies who introduced them or how Kahn came into Epstein’s orbit. He does not appear in any pre-2005 Epstein correspondence made public. The DOJ files place him firmly in place by 2005 — which means either the relationship predates his formal start date or he was brought in quickly through Epstein’s professional network. That gap in the origin story has not been filled.
What is clear is that within a short time of joining, Kahn had signatory authority over Epstein’s bank accounts, was coordinating wire transfers, managing shell companies, and processing payments that went directly to the women in Epstein’s orbit. He was not a peripheral hire. He was central from early on.
The Financial Architecture
Kahn managed Epstein’s finances through HBRK Associates. Over more than a decade, the scope of what he touched was vast:
→ Structured hundreds of Epstein’s bank accounts across at least 64 entities and shell companies
→ Created and administered dozens of corporate entities at Epstein’s direction
→ Regularly made large cash withdrawals on Epstein’s behalf
→ Authorized thousands of suspicious wire transfers
→ Had signatory authority and power of attorney over accounts at JPMorgan Chase and other financial institutions
→ Appeared as authorized signer for HBRK Associates Inc. and for the 2007 Jeffrey E. Epstein Insurance Trust #3
A JPMorgan internal know-your-customer profile from 2023 described Kahn as “a primary actor in movement of Epstein’s funds” and stated that Kahn “potentially assisted in facilitating the sex trafficking ring.” That characterization comes from the bank, not from a prosecutor or victim’s attorney.
Day-to-Day Operations
The DOJ files place Kahn in the operational details — not just the numbers:
→ Coordinated wire transfers and signed checks
→ Managed Epstein’s tax filings
→ Distributed payments to associates
→ Processed medical reimbursements categorized in the files as payments for “the girls”
→ Vouched for Epstein on flagged tuition payments — when banks raised questions about payments to schools, Kahn intervened
→ Booked Epstein’s private flights
→ Managed renovations on Epstein’s private Caribbean island
→ Paid for the schooling of individuals connected to Epstein — in one 2017 email, Epstein told a redacted recipient: “richard (khan) has decided to pay for your school, that’s all they need to know he gives out scholarships”
Kahn is mentioned more than 50,000 times in the DOJ’s Epstein files. That number is not a coincidence of bureaucratic over-documentation. It reflects how embedded he was in every financial layer of Epstein’s life.
The Sham Marriages
A class action lawsuit — which Kahn and Indyke settled for $35 million in February 2026 — alleged that the two men helped Epstein facilitate at least three sham marriages. Foreign-born women in Epstein’s orbit were married off to American men whom Epstein had abused, giving them immigration status and keeping them tied to the network.
Kahn admitted in the March 11, 2026 deposition to facilitating at least one fake marriage between two women connected to Epstein. This admission came under oath, in Congress, on the record.
The settlement does not include an admission of wrongdoing. It is paid through Epstein’s trust, not by Kahn personally. A federal judge must still approve it.
“Knowing that they would earn millions of dollars in exchange for facilitating Epstein’s sex abuse and trafficking, Indyke and Kahn chose money and power over following the law.” — Class action complaint
Bank Impersonation — Also admitted in the March 11 deposition: Kahn impersonated Epstein in communications with banks. He spoke to financial institutions as if he were Epstein. He acknowledged this under oath. No criminal charge has been filed in connection with this.
The Money — No Small Numbers
Kahn was not just employed by Epstein. He was being compensated in layers — salary, pre-arrest transfers, post-death transfers, and a substantial inheritance.
→ According to a 2020 U.S. Virgin Islands lawsuit against the estate, Epstein paid Kahn more than $10 million between 2011 and 2019 for his services.
→ In April 2019 — three months before Epstein’s July arrest — an Epstein trust made a $1 million payment directly to Kahn’s personal JPMorgan account. The same trust simultaneously sent $1 million to Indyke’s personal TD Bank account.
→ In April 2020, months after Epstein’s death, another Epstein trust moved approximately $6.5 million in investment proceeds to a trust where Indyke and Kahn were among the beneficiaries.
→ The amended February 4, 2019 trust — signed six months before Epstein’s arrest — names Kahn as trustee and directs a $20 million bequest to “RICHARD DAVID KAHN, if he survives me.”
→ Epstein’s final will, signed August 8, 2019 — two days before his death — left Kahn $25 million. That figure increased between the February trust and the August will.
The pre-arrest $1 million payment is the detail investigators keep returning to. Epstein had been re-indicted on federal sex trafficking charges in July 2019. The April payment came before that — but there had been reporting about a potential federal case for months prior. The timing has not been explained.
THE WILL — TWO DAYS BEFORE DEATH
Epstein signed his will on August 8, 2019 — two days before his death in a federal detention facility. Attorneys Mariel Colón Miró and Gulnora Tari witnessed it. It was filed in the U.S. Virgin Islands five days after his death.
The will created a pour-over trust called the 1953 Trust — believed to be named for Epstein’s birth year. Everything flowed into it: cash, securities, five properties, aircraft, art. The estate inventory attached to the will listed $56 million in cash, $196 million in hedge fund and private equity interests, $18 million in vehicles and aircraft, plus real estate from Manhattan to New Mexico.
Epstein appointed Darren Indyke and Richard Kahn as co-executors. Both are also named as beneficiaries of the 1953 Trust.
The February 2019 trust — signed six months before the will — contained something the will doesn’t spell out as clearly: a continuity clause. It required employees and service providers connected to Epstein, his entities, HBRK Associates, or Indyke’s entities to remain in place for two years after Epstein’s death to preserve their bequests — and directed the trustees to keep those workers in place absent cause for termination.
That language treats the trust not only as a distribution instrument but as a continuity plan for the operating network around Epstein’s assets. It is designed to keep the machine running after the man is gone.
The beneficiary schedule of the 1953 Trust has never been made public. Court records suggest Epstein’s brother Mark is a potential heir. The trust instrument allows for additional undisclosed classes of beneficiaries, including entities or charitable vehicles Epstein controlled. Nobody outside the trustee structure knows who else is on that list.
The estate was worth approximately $577 million at death. After settlements and legal costs, approximately $145 million remains in the 1953 Trust. Kahn and Indyke remain co-executors and stand to receive their inheritances once remaining claims are resolved.
THE OVERSIGHT FAILURE
This is the single most structurally important fact about Richard Kahn.
The FBI investigated Epstein starting in 2006. A federal prosecution followed. Ghislaine Maxwell was arrested in 2020 and convicted in 2021. Hundreds of witnesses were interviewed. Millions of pages of documents were reviewed.
Richard Kahn — the man who processed the payments, ran the bank accounts, facilitated the sham marriages, managed the money for the “girls,” and was mentioned 50,000 times in the DOJ files — was never questioned. Not once.
A Wall Street Journal report confirmed this. Five Democratic senators wrote to AG Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel in December 2025:
“In light of the work Indyke and Kahn performed for Epstein and the outsize role they played in his personal and financial affairs, it is inexcusable that the DOJ and the FBI never questioned these individuals in connection with investigations into Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell. A failure of this magnitude cannot be attributed to simple oversight or misunderstanding.”
The senators also raised the obvious implication: as executors of the estate, Indyke and Kahn control thousands of Epstein’s emails, bank documents, photographs, calendar items, and flight logs. The senators wrote that they had “concerns that the DOJ and FBI declined to investigate key members of Epstein’s inner circle out of fear of retaliation by Epstein’s estate.”
Let that sit. The people who were never investigated are the same people who control the files that could reveal who else should be investigated.
THE MARCH 11 DEPOSITION
Seven Hours. A Lot of Inability to Recall.
Kahn appeared before the House Oversight Committee on March 11, 2026. The deposition was closed-door. A recording is expected to be released. Here is what came out:
His Opening Statement
“In the years that I provided outside accounting and bookkeeping services for Jeffrey Epstein, I was not aware of the terrible and unforgivable things that he did to women and girls. My relationship with Epstein was strictly on a professional level.”
On the 2006 arrest: Kahn said Epstein told him it was “a mistake, that he did not know the woman was underage, and that nothing like that would happen again.” Kahn said he believed him. He stayed on for thirteen more years.
On the gifts to women: Kahn said the payments were “a very small fraction of Epstein’s spending” and he “did not see them as red flags for abuse or trafficking.”
On his role as executor: Kahn said he agreed to serve because his “knowledge of Epstein’s holdings would make me better prepared to help alleviate some of their suffering” — referring to survivors.
The man who processed payments to “the girls,” who vouched for flagged tuition, who signed the checks, is now presenting himself as their advocate. He is still drawing a salary from the estate. He stands to inherit $25 million from it. And he would like you to know he took the job for them.
What He Admitted
→ Facilitated at least one fake marriage between two women connected to Epstein — admitted under oath
→ Impersonated Epstein in communications with banks — admitted under oath
→ Confirmed Epstein spoke about Donald Trump “a lot”
→ Confirmed five clients paid Epstein the most: Wexner, Dubin, Sinofsky, the Rothschilds, Leon Black
→ Confirmed Epstein had financial ties to former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak
→ Confirmed the estate settled with a person who had also made accusations related to Trump — no name released
→ Confirmed another unnamed head of state had financial transactions with Epstein
What He Couldn’t Remember
Rep. James Walkinshaw, Democrat of Virginia, said after the deposition: “Today we’ve heard from Mr. Kahn a lot of inability to recall — inability to recall emails, messages, activities he was involved in.” Walkinshaw said he did not find Kahn’s testimony credible. “If he was ignorant of Mr. Epstein’s crimes, he was willfully ignorant given the depth of his involvement.”
Rep. Robert Garcia, ranking Democrat: “Jeffrey Epstein’s massive sex trafficking ring would not have been possible without the consistent payments and services of his long-time accountant Richard Kahn. It’s not credible that he had no knowledge of Epstein’s activities, and his testimony today only raises more questions.”
Republican vs. Democratic Takeaways
Republicans on the committee said Kahn cooperated, answering all questions. Chair James Comer said the investigation found no transactions between Epstein and Trump — making Kahn the fifth witness to say so under oath.
Democrats said cooperation is not the same as candor. Admitting to bank impersonation and fake marriages while claiming total ignorance of trafficking creates a credibility problem that a prepared opening statement cannot resolve.
CIVIL LAWSUITS — THE FULL PICTURE
What Survivors Alleged in Court
Multiple civil actions have named Kahn directly. Here is the documented record:
→ U.S. Virgin Islands AG racketeering suit: added Indyke and Kahn as individual defendants, describing them as knowing “captains” of Epstein’s enterprise — managing at least 140 bank accounts, structuring large cash withdrawals, orchestrating sham marriages. Settled for $105 million (estate, not individuals personally).
→ Class action by trafficking survivors: alleged both men were “personally essential” for Epstein by helping structure bank accounts, managing cash withdrawals, and creating financial infrastructure “created to simply facilitate the illegal sex-trafficking venture.” Settled for $35 million in February 2026, pending judicial approval. No admission of wrongdoing. Paid through Epstein’s trust.
→ Jane Doe 3 and Danielle Bensky v. Epstein estate: filed in federal court alleging Indyke and Kahn actively facilitated sex trafficking. In August 2024, a federal judge allowed the core sex-trafficking claims to proceed. Cases ongoing.
Kahn has denied all allegations of wrongdoing in every case. His attorney has stated: “Not a single woman has ever accused either Mr. Indyke or Mr. Kahn of committing sexual abuse or witnessing sexual abuse, nor claimed at any time that she reported to them any allegation of Mr. Epstein’s misconduct.”
WHAT HE CONTROLS NOW
Since Epstein’s death, Kahn and Indyke have been the co-executors of the estate. That means they control:
→ All of Epstein’s emails
→ All bank documents
→ All photographs
→ All calendar items and scheduling records
→ All flight logs
→ The 1953 Trust and its undisclosed beneficiary schedule
→ Approximately $145 million in remaining estate assets
Victims’ lawyers have accused them of limiting or delaying access to documents. The senators’ letter to Bondi and Patel specifically raised the concern that the FBI may have declined to investigate these men in part because doing so risked antagonizing the estate they control — and the documents in it.
The trust’s continuity clause was designed to keep Epstein’s operating network in place for two years after his death. The two-year window expired in 2021. But Kahn and Indyke’s control of the estate — and everything in it — is permanent until the legal process concludes.
The Epstein Victims’ Compensation Fund administered by the estate paid $121 million to 136 women. An additional $48 million went to 59 more in direct settlements. The fund is now closed. Whatever is left in the 1953 Trust flows to undisclosed beneficiaries — including Kahn and Indyke themselves.
FACT-CHECK SUMMARY
Documented and Confirmed
CONFIRMED Employed by Epstein 2005–2019
CONFIRMED HBRK Associates Inc. as his operating vehicle
CONFIRMED Signatory authority over hundreds of Epstein bank accounts — bank records, unsealed
CONFIRMED Medical reimbursements for “the girls” processed through his accounts — DOJ files
CONFIRMED Vouched for flagged tuition payments — DOJ files
CONFIRMED Booked Epstein flights — DOJ files, including 2011 email
CONFIRMED $1M payment to his personal account April 2019, three months before arrest — Senate Finance letter
CONFIRMED $6.5M post-death trust payment — Senate Finance letter
CONFIRMED $20M bequest in February 2019 trust / $25M in final August will
CONFIRMED Never questioned by FBI or DOJ — Wall Street Journal, Senate Finance letter
CONFIRMED Admitted bank impersonation — March 11 deposition, under oath
CONFIRMED Admitted facilitating sham marriage — March 11 deposition, under oath
CONFIRMED Co-executor and trust beneficiary — estate filings
CONFIRMED $35M class action settlement, no admission, paid through trust — February 2026
CONFIRMED JPMorgan internal profile described him as “potentially assist[ing] in facilitating the sex trafficking ring” — internal bank document
Alleged, Not Proven
ALLEGED Knowingly facilitated trafficking — claimed by USVI AG, class action plaintiffs; denied by Kahn
ALLEGED Deliberately withheld estate documents — claimed by victims’ lawyers; denied
ALLEGED “Willful ignorance” of Epstein’s crimes — Democratic characterization at deposition; Kahn denies
Pending
PENDING Deposition video release — committee expected to make it public
PENDING $35M settlement judicial approval
PENDING Jane Doe 3 and Bensky federal lawsuit — sex trafficking claims allowed to proceed August 2024
PENDING Identity of Trump accuser who settled with estate — disclosed to committee, not public
PENDING Identity of head of state with financial transactions — disclosed to committee, not public
NEXT: DARREN INDYKE — MARCH 19 read now
The Other Half of the Operation
Kahn is one half. Darren Indyke — Epstein’s personal attorney for over thirty years, exclusively employed by Epstein by the 1990s — is the other. He co-signed the will after Epstein’s death. He stands to inherit $50 million. He was also never questioned by law enforcement.
Indyke’s deposition is scheduled for March 19, 2026. Together, Kahn and Indyke controlled the money and the legal structure that kept Epstein’s operation running. The question that hasn’t been answered in any forum is whether they knew what they were running.
Indyke file to follow.
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Sources
[1] DOJ Epstein Document Release — FBI records, bank records, wire transfers, corporate filings, and internal communications referencing Richard Kahn over 50,000 times. Released January 2026.
https://www.justice.gov/epstein-files-transparency-act
[2] Senate Finance Committee Letter to AG Bondi and FBI Director Patel — Signed by Senators Wyden, Klobuchar, Whitehouse, Blumenthal, and Van Hollen, December 2025. Documents Kahn’s role, payments, and the failure to interview him.
https://www.finance.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/2025-12-22%20Wyden%20Klobuchar%20Whitehouse%20Blumenthal%20Van%20Hollen%20to%20AG%20Bondi%20FBI%20Director%20Patel%20re%20Darren%20Indyke%20Richard%20Kahn%20Jeffrey%20Epstein.pdf
[3] Wall Street Journal — Confirmed Indyke and Kahn were never questioned by FBI or DOJ in connection with Epstein and Maxwell investigations.
https://www.wsj.com/articles/epstein-lawyers-indyke-kahn-avoid-questioning-11672894732
[4] U.S. Virgin Islands AG Racketeering Complaint — USVI Attorney General v. JPMorgan Chase and Deutsche Bank, filed 2021. Names Kahn as knowing “captain” of Epstein’s enterprise managing at least 140 bank accounts.
https://www.viattorneygeneral.org/sites/default/files/media/2021-12/JPMorgan%20Deutsche%20Bank%20Complaint%20-%20Filed%2012.29.21.pdf
[5] Deutsche Bank Internal AML Records — Documents Kahn’s role in wire transfers, cash withdrawals, and flagged transactions. Sourced from DOJ files and Senate Finance Committee letter.
https://www.finance.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/2025-12-22%20Wyden%20Klobuchar%20Whitehouse%20Blumenthal%20Van%20Hollen%20to%20AG%20Bondi%20FBI%20Director%20Patel%20re%20Darren%20Indyke%20Richard%20Kahn%20Jeffrey%20Epstein.pdf
[6] JPMorgan Civil Litigation Filings, S.D.N.Y., 2023 — Internal investigation memos; suspicious activity reports. JPMorgan internal know-your-customer profile described Kahn as “a primary actor in movement of Epstein’s funds” and stated that Kahn “potentially assisted in facilitating the sex trafficking ring.”
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/06/09/business/jpmorgan-epstein-lawsuits.html
[7] DOJ Epstein Document Release — Email records showing Kahn booking Epstein flights, managing tax filings, processing medical reimbursements categorized as payments for “the girls,” and vouching for flagged tuition payments.
https://www.justice.gov/epstein-files-transparency-act
[8] 2017 Epstein Email — Epstein told a redacted recipient: “richard (khan) has decided to pay for your school, that’s all they need to know he gives out scholarships.” Sourced from DOJ files.
[9] Class Action Trafficking Lawsuit — Settlement — Settled February 2026 for $35 million, pending federal judicial approval. Alleges Indyke and Kahn helped Epstein facilitate at least three sham marriages. Settlement includes no admission of wrongdoing.
https://www.reuters.com/legal/epstein-estate-reaches-35-million-settlement-class-action-lawsuit-2026-02-18/
[10] House Oversight Committee Deposition — Richard Kahn deposition, March 11, 2026. Kahn admitted under oath to facilitating at least one fake marriage between two women connected to Epstein.
https://oversight.house.gov/hearing/epstein-files-transparency-act-oversight
[11] House Oversight Committee Deposition — Richard Kahn deposition, March 11, 2026. Kahn admitted under oath to impersonating Epstein in communications with banks.
https://oversight.house.gov/hearing/epstein-files-transparency-act-oversight
[12] Senate Finance Committee Letter to AG Bondi and FBI Director Patel — Documents: $10M+ paid to Kahn 2011–2019; $1M payment to Kahn’s personal JPMorgan account April 2019; $6.5M April 2020 post-death trust payment to trust benefiting Kahn; $20M bequest in February 2019 trust; $25M bequest in final August 8, 2019 will.
https://www.finance.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/2025-12-22%20Wyden%20Klobuchar%20Whitehouse%20Blumenthal%20Van%20Hollen%20to%20AG%20Bondi%20FBI%20Director%20Patel%20re%20Darren%20Indyke%20Richard%20Kahn%20Jeffrey%20Epstein.pdf
[13] Epstein’s 1953 Trust — August 8, 2019 — Signed two days before Epstein’s death. Names Kahn as co-executor and beneficiary.
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/08/19/nyregion/jeffrey-epstein-will.html
[14] February 4, 2019 Epstein Trust — Named Kahn as trustee with $20 million personal bequest. Includes continuity clause requiring employees and service providers to remain in place for two years after Epstein’s death.
https://www.wsj.com/articles/jeffrey-epsteins-will-leaves-estate-to-trust-11566226880
[15] Epstein Estate Inventory — Filed August 14, 2019. Listed $56 million in cash, $196 million in hedge fund and private equity interests, $18 million in vehicles and aircraft, plus real estate. Total estate approximately $577 million.
https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/6398547-Epstein-Estate-Inventory.html
[16] Wall Street Journal — Confirmed Kahn was never questioned by FBI or DOJ.
https://www.wsj.com/articles/epstein-lawyers-indyke-kahn-avoid-questioning-11672894732
[17] Senate Finance Committee Letter — “In light of the work Indyke and Kahn performed for Epstein and the outsize role they played in his personal and financial affairs, it is inexcusable that the DOJ and the FBI never questioned these individuals in connection with investigations into Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell. A failure of this magnitude cannot be attributed to simple oversight or misunderstanding.”
https://www.finance.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/2025-12-22%20Wyden%20Klobuchar%20Whitehouse%20Blumenthal%20Van%20Hollen%20to%20AG%20Bondi%20FBI%20Director%20Patel%20re%20Darren%20Indyke%20Richard%20Kahn%20Jeffrey%20Epstein.pdf
[18] House Oversight Committee — Richard Kahn deposition, March 11, 2026. Closed-door. Recording expected to be released. Quotes from Rep. James Walkinshaw and Rep. Robert Garcia.
https://oversight.house.gov/hearing/epstein-files-transparency-act-oversight
[19] CNN — Coverage of Kahn deposition, including admissions and committee member statements.
https://www.cnn.com/2026/03/11/politics/richard-kahn-epstein-deposition/index.html
[20] U.S. Virgin Islands AG Racketeering Complaint — Added Indyke and Kahn as individual defendants, describing them as knowing “captains” of Epstein’s enterprise. Settled for $105 million.
https://www.viattorneygeneral.org/sites/default/files/media/2021-12/JPMorgan%20Deutsche%20Bank%20Complaint%20-%20Filed%2012.29.21.pdf
[21] Class Action Trafficking Lawsuit — Settlement — Alleged both men were “personally essential” for Epstein by helping structure bank accounts, managing cash withdrawals, and creating financial infrastructure “created to simply facilitate the illegal sex-trafficking venture.” Settled for $35 million in February 2026, pending judicial approval.
https://www.reuters.com/legal/epstein-estate-reaches-35-million-settlement-class-action-lawsuit-2026-02-18/
[22] Jane Doe 3 and Danielle Bensky v. Epstein Estate — Filed in federal court alleging Indyke and Kahn actively facilitated sex trafficking. In August 2024, a federal judge allowed the core sex-trafficking claims to proceed.
https://www.courthousenews.com/judge-allows-sex-trafficking-claims-against-epstein-estate-to-proceed/
[23] Kahn Attorney Statement — “Not a single woman has ever accused either Mr. Indyke or Mr. Kahn of committing sexual abuse or witnessing sexual abuse, nor claimed at any time that she reported to them any allegation of Mr. Epstein’s misconduct.”
https://www.cnn.com/2026/02/10/politics/darren-indyke-epstein-cash-withdrawals/index.html
[24] Epstein Victims’ Compensation Fund — Paid $121 million to 136 women. An additional $48 million went to 59 more in direct settlements. Fund now closed.
https://www.epsteinvictimscompensation.com/
[25] Senate Finance Committee Letter — Concerns that the FBI declined to investigate key members of Epstein’s inner circle “out of fear of retaliation by Epstein’s estate.”
https://www.finance.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/2025-12-22%20Wyden%20Klobuchar%20Whitehouse%20Blumenthal%20Van%20Hollen%20to%20AG%20Bondi%20FBI%20Director%20Patel%20re%20Darren%20Indyke%20Richard%20Kahn%20Jeffrey%20Epstein.pdf
[26] House Oversight Committee — Darren Indyke deposition scheduled March 19, 2026.
https://oversight.house.gov/hearing/epstein-files-transparency-act-oversight


