New Website Lets You Browse All of Jeffrey Epstein’s Emails, Documents, and More Inside a Gmail Clone
A developer named Luke Igel and a creator Riley Walz rebuilt Jeffrey Epstein’s email inbox as a fully functional Gmail clone , and it changes how the document dump from the department of justice reads.
The site, called Jmail, mirrors Gmail’s interface so closely that browsing it feels like you’ve logged into Epstein’s actual jeevacation@gmail account. You can search by name, keyword, or contact, filter between sent and received messages, and browse a crowdsourced “starred” folder of the most damning exchanges. There’s even a sidebar that functions as a contact list of every notable person who appeared in the correspondence.
It matters because of the sheer scale of what’s been released. The latest DOJ dump included roughly three million pages, around 180,000 images, and over 2,000 videos — a volume of material that’s essentially impossible to navigate on your own through scattered PDFs and raw text files.
That’s exactly what makes Jmail so intense. Reading these exchanges inside a familiar inbox layout, threaded and formatted the way any normal email would be, strips away the abstraction of what is going on. There are no scanned documents to squint at, no imagination required to remind yourself these are real messages between real people.