EpsteinScan

Building a usable map of one of the most buried scandals in modern history

The Problem

There is no shortage of information about Epstein on the internet. Court documents, flight logs, depositions, lawsuits, investigative reporting, FOIA dumps, timelines. The problem is not access. The problem is usability.

If you are a normal person trying to understand what actually happened, the experience is awful. You open a 300 page court filing with no context. You click through articles that quote each other instead of the source. You end up drowning in noise before you ever touch the facts.

The information exists. The interface to browse it does not.

What EpsteinScan Is

EpsteinScan is me trying to take a massive, messy archive of real documents and turn it into something a normal user can browse without needing to already be deep in the case.

The core idea is simple:

  • every claim links to a primary source
  • every person, case, and event is grounded in documents
  • you can move through timelines instead of clicking random PDFs
  • you can actually open the filings that people reference online

This is not about telling you what to think. It is about making it possible to see the source material without spending hours digging through broken links and poorly formatted court sites.

What Makes This Different

Most Epstein related sites optimize for engagement. The louder and messier the framing, the better they perform. EpsteinScan is built around navigation and verification.

Everything points back to original sources. No private addresses. No personal targeting. No turning victims into content. If something is not documented, it does not belong on the site.

The goal is not to create a scandal browser. The goal is to create a usable archive that lets people see what is actually in the record.

Why Build This

I spend a lot of time building crypto, agent, and AI stuff. That world is fun. It is creative. But building more tools for builders does not fix the fact that normal people cannot browse primary source information anymore.

We have more data than ever. We have worse interfaces for truth than ever.

So instead of shipping another cool demo for people who already live on the internet, I am building something that solves a real browsing and information problem.

Proof I Ship Things

If you want to see the stuff I have built before, it is all public at proofofchandler.com. It is not polished marketing. It is just a log of things I have shipped, abandoned, rebuilt, and learned from.

EpsteinScan is intentionally product first. No token. No hype loop. Just something that works.

What Success Looks Like

Success is someone landing on the site with zero background and leaving with:

  • a timeline they understand
  • documents they can open themselves
  • names with context instead of screenshots
  • claims they can verify without trusting me

If you can check the source yourself, the product did its job.

This is not finished. The dataset will grow. The structure will change. The UI will evolve. Building it in public because broken information systems do not get fixed in private.