The release of thousands of court documents has long promised to shed light on the dark corners of Jeffrey Epstein’s network, but few expected the trail to lead to the bedrock of cryptocurrency. Fresh revelations from a massive cache of emails and legal filings suggest the disgraced financier was not just a passive observer of the digital asset revolution but an active participant.
These documents put Epstein in the same room as key architects of the blockchain world, raising strange questions about who really influenced Bitcoin during its early years.
Epstein’s £2.4 Million Coinbase Investment
Epstein is usually associated with traditional high finance, but the files show he saw the crypto boom coming before it went mainstream. In 2014, long before most people knew what a wallet address was, Epstein put about £2.4 million ($3 million) into Coinbase.
Crypto entrepreneur Brock Pierce and his firm, Blockchain Capital, facilitated this deal. It valued the startup at roughly £315 million ($400 million) at the time. By 2018, Epstein had reportedly sold half his stake for £11.8 million ($15 million) as the company’s value skyrocketed.
The documents suggest that, despite his 2008 sex offence conviction, prominent figures at Coinbase were aware he was involved. He didn’t stop there. The paper trail shows he also had a stake in Blockstream, a major blockchain tech company founded by Adam Back, cementing his financial hold on the infrastructure of the sector.
Bitcoin founder Satoshi Nakamoto was found in Epstein’s files
The internet is going crazy over a single page in the US Department of Justice archives. An email from Jeffrey Epstein explicitly states that he communicated with the creators of Bitcoin.
Document (File… pic.twitter.com/zV6n6zTqmB
— Kirill (@kirillk_web3) February 1, 2026
Manhattan Townhouse Meetings
It went deeper than just writing cheques. Emails from the estate describe private gatherings at Epstein’s Manhattan townhouse where the future of digital currency was the main topic.
One specific meeting featured Brock Pierce and former US Treasury Secretary Larry Summers. Pierce, who co-founded the stablecoin Tether, reportedly introduced himself to Summers as the ‘most active investor in Bitcoin’.
Epstein appears to have positioned himself as the intermediary between the chaotic, unregulated realm of early cryptocurrency and the established institutions of traditional finance. These sit-downs happened back when Bitcoin was still struggling to shake off its image as a tool for online drug markets.
By connecting these tech pioneers with powerful figures like Larry Summers, Epstein was doing the job of a corporate lobbyist long before the sector had any of its own. The emails show he was hyper-aware of the legal traps. He even went as far as pestering Steve Bannon about crypto tax implications, suggesting his endgame was to help clear the regulatory brush so these assets could be embraced by the mainstream economy.
The CIA Connection and Satoshi’s Disappearance
Then there is the matter of the CIA. Perhaps the oddest link in the chain involves Gavin Andresen, one of the original developers who built Bitcoin’s core.
The files reveal Epstein was emailing Andresen just days before the developer visited CIA headquarters in June 2011. This timeline is eerie because it lines up almost exactly with the disappearance of Satoshi Nakamoto. Bitcoin’s anonymous creator stopped communicating right after Andresen met with intelligence officials.
Epstein’s proximity to these events has reignited theories that he might have known about the origins of the project. Despite the lack of conclusive evidence proving Epstein’s identity as Satoshi, the pieces seem to align uncomfortably. He had deep ties to cryptographers, a known interest in the maths behind the sector, and he funded research through channels like the MIT Media Lab. These connections are too substantial to just be a coincidence.
