The Epstein Chronicles podcast

Mega Edition: Deutsche Bank And Their Golden Goose Jeffrey Epstein (9/21/25)

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Deutsche Bank’s relationship with Jeffrey Epstein is one of the clearest examples of how global finance happily rolled out the red carpet for a predator as long as the money kept flowing. After JPMorgan finally dumped Epstein in 2013, Deutsche Bank scooped him up as a client — not because they didn’t know who he was, but precisely because they did. The bank knew his reputation, knew he was radioactive, yet still chose to pocket his millions while turning a blind eye to the glaring red flags. Epstein shuffled suspicious payments to “models” and “cash withdrawals” through their accounts, and Deutsche executives treated it all like business as usual. In other words, the bank wasn’t duped — it was complicit, preferring fees over morality.

That complicity came with a price tag, though hardly one that will dent their empire: in 2020, New York’s Department of Financial Services fined Deutsche Bank $150 million for its “significant compliance failures” in monitoring Epstein’s accounts. The fine was damning, a public acknowledgment that the bank chose to look the other way while Epstein moved money in patterns consistent with trafficking and abuse. Yet even that penalty feels like a slap on the wrist when weighed against the years of protection and credibility Deutsche gave him. They didn’t just keep Epstein afloat financially — they gave him institutional legitimacy, and for a man like him, that was priceless. The fine may have made headlines, but the damage of enabling a predator can’t be tallied on a balance sheet.


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