Jmail
Browser-based archive of the Epstein files
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jmail is a browser-based archive of the Epstein files, which were released by the United States House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform under the Epstein Files Transparency Act (EFTA).[1][2] The website is stylized in a Gmail-based, and later in the interfaces of other sites (Facebook, Google Drive, YouTube, Spotify, Google Photos, Google Flights, Amazon, Wikipedia), with the goal of making the EFTA releases easier to access and browse.[3][4][5]
Screenshot of the website in November 2025 | |
Type of site | Archive |
|---|---|
| Created by | Riley Walz, Luke Igel |
| URL | jmail |
| Registration | None |
| Users | ≥18.4 million |
| Launched | November 2025 |
| Current status | Online |
By late February 2026, the website is projected to have amassed 450 million visits.[6]
Content
The site is from the viewpoint of financier and sex offender Jeffrey Epstein's personal email inboxes, jeevacation@gmail.com and jeeproject@yahoo.com,[7][8] and contains text conversations up to 2019.[9] Jmail incorporates "Jemini", an artificial intelligence and parody of Gemini that searches through EFTA text releases in order to counter the DOJ's claims that searching through the releases is impractical due to "technical limitations".[10] The site uses Reducto to parse and extract text from each EFTA document.[11][12] A "people" tab highlights prominent individuals mentioned in the emails.[13]
Development
Jmail was started by Riley Walz, an internet artist, and Luke Igel, co-founder of Kino AI.[3][14][15] The website was first unveiled via a Twitter post by Walz, which noted that "we cloned Gmail, except you're logged in as Epstein and can see his emails".[16][17] Igel stated that "I think the craziest, most meta [part] is that you're reading his private emails of him trying to clean up his own reputation".[15] The site was publicly launched in November 2025;[10] it took five hours in total to develop.[18] Later, Walz and Igel's friends developed JPhotos, an image database of EFTA releases; JFlights, a flight tracking website of Epstein's flights;[19] and Jamazon, a website similar to Jmail that tracks Epstein's Amazon orders.[20][21] Drop Site News later announced a collaboration with the Jmail team to help add and vet content to the archive.[22] In February 2026, the developers added Jwiki, a Wikipedia parody detailing people associated with Epstein.[23] According to the project's official credits page, different additional contributors for different parts of the project include Diego Rodriguez, Cora Kyler, Melissa Du, Ricardo de Arruda, Aidan Dunlap, Advait Paliwal, Molly Cantillon, Will Depue, Jason Liu, and Watcher.[24]