Long after his 2008 Florida conviction registered him as a sex offender, Jeffrey Epstein continued to cultivate ties with elite scientific institutions and individual researchers. Donations flowed to MIT, Harvard, and a network of academics in computer science, evolutionary biology, and theoretical physics. The arrangements became a public controversy in 2019 after detailed reporting and an internal MIT inquiry, raising questions about how institutions weigh reputational risk, donor anonymity, and the gatekeeping role of senior administrators.
The MIT Media Lab and Joi Ito’s resignation
In September 2019, The New Yorker published an investigation by Ronan Farrow detailing efforts at the MIT Media Lab to accept Epstein’s donations while concealing his involvement, with internal emails describing him as “Voldemort” or “he who must not be named.” The Lab’s director, Joi Ito, resigned within days, as did several affiliated researchers. A subsequent report commissioned by MIT and conducted by the law firm Goodwin Procter, released in January 2020, concluded that the Media Lab had accepted approximately $850,000 from Epstein between 2002 and 2017, that senior administrators including the president were aware of the donations, and that Lab leadership had agreed to keep Epstein’s name off public records. The report found procedural failures rather than financial gain, but the picture of institutional decision-making it painted was unflattering.
Marvin Minsky, Harvard, and the broader academic network
Epstein’s connections extended well beyond MIT. Reporting documented decades of relationships with figures including the late AI pioneer Marvin Minsky (who was named in court testimony from victim Virginia Giuffre, allegations Minsky’s family disputed and which he died in 2016 unable to address), evolutionary biologist Martin Nowak at Harvard, and various physicists and computer scientists whose research he funded or whose conferences he sponsored. Harvard’s own internal review, released in 2020, found that Epstein donated roughly $9 million to the university between 1998 and 2007 and continued to maintain office space and key card access at Nowak’s program after his 2008 conviction. The university barred Nowak from supervising the program for two years and tightened donor-screening protocols. Several other universities and researchers conducted their own reviews with varying degrees of public disclosure.
What the controversy revealed about institutional gatekeeping
The pattern across investigations was consistent: senior administrators understood the reputational risk, weighed it against the perceived value of the funding and the relationships, and structured arrangements to minimize visibility. Anonymous gift policies โ designed originally to protect modest donors from solicitation โ were used to obscure problematic ones. Internal emails showed staff raising concerns that were overruled or rerouted. The Goodwin Procter report on MIT, the Harvard internal review, and journalism by Farrow, Julie K. Brown, and others established that the issue was not isolated to one bad actor at one institution but reflected systemic weaknesses in how universities evaluate gifts, particularly when the donor offers access to elite networks alongside money.
Bottom line
The documented record shows that Epstein leveraged philanthropy to maintain proximity to scientific elites long after his conviction made that proximity ethically untenable. The institutions involved have made varying degrees of policy changes since 2019, but the structural questions about donor screening, anonymity, and the price of access to research networks remain only partially answered.
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