An investigation by The Telegraph reveals how Jeffrey Epstein allegedly used a sham science foundation office during work release to maintain his lifestyle, host associates and continue abusing women despite being behind bars.

Jeffrey Epstein was meant to be serving an 18-month prison sentence in Florida after pleading guilty to state charges involving solicitation of prostitution and solicitation of a minor in 2008.
Instead, according to a detailed investigation by The Telegraph, the ex-financier spent much of his sentence outside jail walls — working from a private office suite complete with sofas, a kitchen, entertainment systems and a steady stream of visitors.
The arrangement, centred around an organisation called the Florida Science Foundation, has returned to public scrutiny amid renewed examination of Epstein’s treatment in custody and fresh congressional testimony.
What emerged, according to records reviewed by The Telegraph, was a system that critics say allowed Epstein to preserve his lifestyle, maintain elite connections and continue interacting with women while technically serving jail time.
THE ‘SCIENCE FOUNDATION’ THAT WASN’T
The Florida Science Foundation was presented to authorities as a long-running non-profit organisation focused on funding scientific research.
Epstein told court officials he had worked there for years and needed access to continue supporting scientific programmes.
But documents reviewed by The Telegraph suggested otherwise.
The organisation had reportedly been registered only months before Epstein entered prison in 2008. His attorney filed the paperwork shortly before his incarceration began.
The office occupied nearly 4,000 square feet at 250 South Australian Avenue in Palm Beach — a modern glass-fronted building located near the county stockade.
According to photographs published by The Telegraph, the suite looked less like a research office and more like an executive workspace.
Inside were couches, framed photographs, premium furnishings, speakers, a television, decorative artwork and even a large kitchen.
Investigators later found little evidence that meaningful scientific work had actually taken place there.
WORK RELEASE OR PRIVILEGED FREEDOM?
Epstein secured access to a work-release programme that allowed him to leave jail for long periods each day.
Records reviewed by The Telegraph indicated that he was often outside prison for roughly 12 hours — and sometimes longer.
Emails and internal communications later revealed concern among prosecutors and officials over whether the arrangement had been properly scrutinised.
Questions were reportedly raised early on about whether the Florida Science Foundation existed primarily to create a legal pathway for Epstein to spend most of his sentence outside custody.
Despite those concerns, Epstein was approved.
The arrangement allowed him to commute between prison and the office while maintaining access to personal comforts unusual for an inmate.
Documents reviewed by The Telegraph showed deliveries of personal possessions, including electronics, luxury items and materials linked to renovations at his private properties.
Epstein also redirected subscriptions and correspondence to the office address.
WOMEN’S TESTIMONY RAISES NEW QUESTIONS
Among those connected to the office was Roza, who told Congress that she first met Epstein as an 18-year-old after travelling from Uzbekistan following promises of modelling opportunities.
She later alleged she was abused while working out of the Florida Science Foundation office.
Her testimony forms part of a wider pattern of allegations connected to Epstein’s time on work release.
Other women later claimed the office became a setting where inappropriate conduct and exploitation continued even while Epstein was officially incarcerated.
Court filings and FBI records cited by The Telegraph included allegations that women were brought to the office, where interactions occurred in private rooms containing couches and sleeping arrangements.
One woman alleged she visited Epstein repeatedly during his work-release period and later transported him back to jail.
Another lawsuit described the office as a mechanism that enabled continued abuse despite incarceration.
Epstein died in prison in 2019 while awaiting federal sex trafficking charges. He denied wrongdoing before his death.
ELITE CONTACTS AND LIFE BEYOND JAIL
The office also allowed Epstein to remain connected to his influential network.
According to The Telegraph, visitors and communications linked to the office included public figures, lawyers, business associates and long-time acquaintances.
The publication reported that Sarah Ferguson, former Duchess of York, visited the premises during this period and that Lord Mandelson communicated with Epstein while serving in government.
Phone records and shipping documents reviewed by the newspaper also pointed to continued social and business interactions.
The office reportedly hosted gatherings, received packages and continued operating in ways that critics say blurred the distinction between imprisonment and ordinary life.