In Jeffrey Epstein's e-mails: Jmail, the web project that allows you to explore files
A new digital tool that organises and makes available Epstein's emails, photos, flights and court documents with a Gmail-like interface.
The interface resembles that of Google Mail, the difference being that instead of a G there is a J and that this service allows one to navigate within the correspondence of Jeffrey Epstein.
It is called Jmail the project realised by Kino AI CEO Luke Igel and Riley Walz, a software engineer whom the New York Times called "The tech jester who makes fun of San Francisco".
Behind Jmail, however, there is not only a taste for irony. For those familiar with the Google suite, the site looks just like a Gmail mailbox: Epstein's profile picture is at the top right, in the box all the mails that can be consulted but also searched, as one does with one's own e-mail.
For each message opened, there is of course the possibility of downloading the original file. Then there is a section replicating Drive, the storage space, where all documents released by the US Department of Justice are stored.
And a space for the photos, which can also be searched by subject: a function that very quickly makes it possible to view the (many) photos of former president Bill Clinton and the (few) of the current Donald Trump in the Epstein Files.

