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Epstein files spark boardroom resignations, and the fallout is spreading

For decades, Jeffrey Epstein’s Manhattan townhouse functioned as an unofficial annex to some of the world’s most powerful boardrooms.

Association with the financier was once treated as a marker of access and influence. That calculus has now reversed sharply.

The unsealing of millions of pages of Epstein-related court records and federal filings has transformed old connections into acute reputational risks.

Politicians, diplomats, financiers and corporate leaders are facing investigations, investor revolts and forced exits as fresh details of their ties to Epstein — a convicted sex offender who died in jail in 2019 — come into public view.

What was once dismissed as peripheral or historical contact has, in many cases, become career-ending.

DP World rocked by leadership exit

The latest high-profile casualty emerged on Friday, when Dubai-based logistics giant DP World announced the resignation of its group chair and chief executive, Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem.

Bin Sulayem came under intense pressure following the publication of private messages exchanged with Epstein.

Sulayem sent an email to Jeffrey Epstein in September 2015 regarding a personal encounter with a woman he had met two years prior in Dubai.

In the message, Sulayem used highly graphic and objectifying language to describe her physical appearance and their intimate experience.

He noted that although she had been engaged, she had returned to him, and he characterized the encounter as the most significant of its kind he had ever experienced.

The fallout was swift.

Two of DP World’s largest international partners — Canada’s La Caisse pension fund and Britain’s development finance institution, British International Investment — said they would pause future investments with the group while reviewing governance concerns.

On Friday, post the resignation announcement, British International Investment said it would resume projects.

Bin Sulayem’s resignation underscores how swiftly institutional investors are now acting when reputational risk intersects with governance standards.

Goldman Sachs loses top lawyer

Just a day earlier, Goldman Sachs confirmed that its chief legal officer and general counsel, Kathy Ruemmler, would step down at the end of June.

Ruemmler’s decision followed revelations in the latest tranche of Epstein files showing extensive communication between the two from 2014 to 2019, long after Epstein’s 2008 guilty plea related to the exploitation of a minor.

The emails suggested a close personal relationship and included references to expensive gifts.

The disclosures also showed that Ruemmler had advised Epstein on responding to media inquiries in 2019 concerning allegations that he had received preferential legal treatment because of his connections.

While there is no suggestion that Ruemmler was involved in Epstein’s crimes, the optics proved untenable for a bank that has spent years reinforcing its governance and compliance credentials.

Barclays and the fall of Jes Staley

Perhaps the most prominent corporate casualty remains Jes Staley, the former chief executive of Barclays.

Staley, once regarded as one of the most influential figures in global banking, was forced to step down in late 2021 after UK regulators investigated how he had characterised his relationship with Epstein.

Staley maintained that he had no knowledge of Epstein’s criminal conduct, but thousands of emails exchanged between the two raised serious questions about the accuracy of disclosures made to regulators.

Barclays told the Financial Conduct Authority in 2019 that the pair did not have a close relationship and had not been in contact for years.

A subsequent investigation, drawing on around 1,200 emails obtained from JPMorgan, concluded that the bank had been misled.

More recent reporting by The Guardian has added to the controversy, citing documents that describe Staley as a trustee of Epstein’s estate until 2015 and outlining allegations of sexual misconduct.

There is no indication that prosecutors pursued those claims. Staley has denied wrongdoing and has not responded to repeated requests for comment, according to the newspaper.

Apollo and the price of proximity for Leon Black

The ripple effects of the Epstein disclosures have extended deep into the private equity world.

At Apollo Global Management, co-founder Leon Black stepped down as chairman in 2021 after an independent review revealed that he had paid Epstein $158 million for tax and estate planning advice after Epstein’s 2008 conviction.

While the review found no evidence that Black was involved in Epstein’s criminal conduct, the size of the payments triggered a backlash from institutional investors, underscoring how, in the ESG era, association alone can carry severe consequences.

Black’s exit as chairman came as a surprise.

When Apollo Global Management published an independent report in January 2021 examining his financial ties to Epstein, the firm said Black would remain chairman even after stepping down as chief executive upon turning 70 that July.

That plan changed months later, after Black told Apollo’s board in a March letter that the public scrutiny surrounding his dealings with Epstein had taken a toll on his health.

The external review, conducted by the law firm Dechert, detailed how Black had paid Jeffrey Epstein $158 million in fees and extended loans of nearly $30 million.

According to the report, Epstein — who died in August 2019 while facing federal sex trafficking charges — provided Black with advice on trust and estate planning, tax matters and issues linked to Black’s extensive art collection.

The review estimated that Epstein’s guidance may have saved Black up to $2 billion in taxes, a figure that intensified investor unease even as the inquiry cleared him of criminal wrongdoing.

JPMorgan’s settlement and questions facing Jamie Dimon

Banks that retained their leadership have not escaped unscathed.

JPMorgan Chase agreed to a $290 million settlement with Epstein’s victims, effectively acknowledging failures in its internal controls.

Epstein maintained more than 50 accounts at the bank between 1998 and 2013, holding hundreds of millions of dollars even after his 2008 conviction.

According to a New York Times investigation drawing on thousands of pages of internal bank records, sealed deposition transcripts, court documents, financial data, and interviews with people familiar with the relationship, JPMorgan officials spent more than a decade voicing concerns about Epstein’s frequent wire transfers and large cash withdrawals.

Despite repeated warnings to senior management — and even as the bank processed more than $1 billion in such transactions for him — top executives overrode those objections on at least four occasions over five years and kept Epstein as a client.

A JPMorgan report filed late with the Treasury Department identified about 4,700 Epstein-linked “suspicious activity” transactions worth roughly $1.1 billon, including payments to women in post-Soviet countries.

The issue has now taken on political dimensions.

President Donald Trump has called for prosecutors to examine Epstein’s ties to JPMorgan, raising questions over the legacy of the bank’s chief executive, Jamie Dimon.

“There’s got to be more accountability from the top on down,” the Democratic senator Ron Wyden, the powerful ranking member of the Senate Finance Committee, told The Guardian.

Epstein was not an anonymous customer with a few thousand bucks in his checking account; he was a high-value, high-profile client of white-glove private banks and a known criminal. It’s simply not good enough for leaders at those banks to say they never had an inkling that something was off.

The renewed scrutiny suggests the fallout from the Epstein disclosures is far from over.

As more documents are examined, the standard for acceptable proximity to disgraced figures is being redrawn — with profound consequences for corporate leadership and governance.

The post Epstein files spark boardroom resignations, and the fallout is spreading appeared first on Invezz

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