Democrats on the US House Oversight Committee have made public a series of previously unseen photographs and videos from inside the private island home of the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. The release provides a disturbing new glimpse into the environment of the notorious paedophile on Little St. James Island in the US Virgin Islands.
Eerie Discoveries Inside the Mansion
The collection of images, shared on social media platform X by the Oversight Dems account, includes several unsettling scenes. Among them is a photograph of what appears to be a dentist's operating room within the property. The walls of this room are adorned with an array of creepy masks that bear resemblances to various well-known figures.
Other interior shots reveal a bathroom containing a large number of towels, stored in multiple boxes alongside a stack of pillows. A separate image shows a landline telephone with a speed dial list featuring names including 'Darren' and 'Mike', though four other entries were blurred prior to release.
The Blackboard and Blurred Details
Perhaps one of the most intriguing items documented is a substantial blackboard wall covered in handwritten words. However, in a move that has sparked further questions, five separate entries on the chalkboard have been deliberately blacked out before the images were made available to the public.
The set of eight images also depicts various other rooms within the luxury Caribbean mansion, including several bedrooms, a bathroom fitted with two chairs positioned in front of a bath, and a space with four plush armchairs arranged around the mysterious chalkboard.
A Continued Push for Justice
In a statement accompanying the release, the Oversight Dems declared the photos offered a "harrowing look behind Epstein’s closed doors." They urged the public to view the materials directly, stating, "We won’t stop fighting until we end this cover-up and deliver justice for the survivors."
The release of these never-before-seen materials on 3 December 2025 represents the latest effort by congressional investigators to shed light on the full extent of Epstein's activities and network. The images serve as stark visual evidence from the epicentre of the international scandal that continues to provoke legal and political repercussions years after Epstein's death.