NEWS
BOMBSHELL in the Epstein Files: Ghislaine Maxwell Linked to Secret “Shadow Commission” on 9/11
In the latest chaotic release from the U.S. Department of Justice’s massive Epstein document dump—part of ongoing disclosures under the Epstein Files Transparency Act—startling new details have emerged tying Ghislaine Maxwell directly to shadowy discussions around the September 11 attacks.
According to reports from multiple outlets, including WION and DNA India, newly uncovered emails show that in January 2003—roughly 18 months after the Twin Towers fell—investigative journalist Edward Jay Epstein (known for his critical 1966 book Inquest on the Warren Commission and JFK assassination) invited Ghislaine Maxwell to join a secretive group dubbed the “Shadow Commission on 9/11.”
The invitation reportedly highlighted that the membership list was classified and kept under wraps. Maxwell, Jeffrey Epstein’s longtime associate and convicted accomplice (currently serving a 20-year sentence for sex trafficking), politely declined the offer.
But the intrigue doesn’t stop there.
Another eyebrow-raising exchange surfaced: Just one week after the 9/11 attacks, former Miami Beach Mayor Philip Levine—who appears over 600 times in Epstein’s contacts and was described by Maxwell under oath as a “very good friend”—sent her a cryptic email. The body contained only six words:
“Where is the real pilot?”
The context remains ambiguous amid the DOJ’s unstructured PDF avalanche, with no full thread or indexing provided. Levine had multiple phone numbers in Epstein’s infamous black book, yet he has publicly downplayed deep ties to Epstein.
These revelations come amid broader speculation fueled by Maxwell’s family background—her father, Robert Maxwell, had alleged Mossad connections—and her proximity to Epstein’s elite network of powerful figures. Other released materials include Maxwell’s post-9/11 email to dozens of contacts (including billionaires like Thomas Pritzker) imagining a dystopian future with the “eradication of all ‘the Arabs'” by 2032.
Critics argue the files represent only a fraction—potentially as little as 2%—of the total data seized by the FBI from Epstein’s properties. The sheer volume and redactions have turned the release into a digital scavenger hunt, with researchers, journalists, and online sleuths piecing together connections that raise more questions than answers.
Why would a figure like Maxwell, already deep in Epstein’s orbit, be courted for a clandestine review of America’s most traumatic modern event? Who else was approached for this “shadow” group? What discussions were they meant to have—and why the secrecy?
The public deserves clarity. These snippets, buried in millions of pages, demand full transparency: unredact the rest, release complete contexts, and let the facts speak.
As the Epstein saga continues to unravel layers of elite entanglement, one thing is clear—this isn’t just about one financier’s crimes. It’s about power, secrecy, and the uncomfortable intersections that keep surfacing.
The world is watching. The truth can’t stay hidden forever.