A new online tool is drawing heavy attention after repackaging parts of the latest Jeffrey Epstein document release into a set of familiar, consumer-style web interfaces, including a searchable “Amazon order history” view that lets users browse more than 1,000 purchases linked to receipt emails associated with Epstein.
The interface, called “Jamazon”, sits inside a wider “Jmail” suite that mimics the look and feel of Google products. It presents order receipts and item lists in a format similar to an Amazon account page, allowing users to search terms and filter through transactions that appear to be extracted from purchase-confirmation emails.
The renewed scrutiny follows a major release of Epstein-related materials by the US Department of Justice, which the department said was carried out under the Epstein Files Transparency Act signed into law in November 2025. A letter from the Deputy Attorney General’s office dated 30 January 2026 described the Act as directing the department to produce, with limited exceptions, records tied to the investigations and prosecutions of Epstein.
News coverage of the release has described it as a disclosure running into the millions of pages, alongside large quantities of images and videos, with significant portions redacted. The Guardian reported that the release included more than three million pages and referenced survivor concerns about redaction choices, including complaints that some victim identities were exposed while other names remained obscured.
Within that context, LADbible reported that Jamazon reproduces Epstein’s Amazon account “order history” and allows users to search through “over 1000 purchases” themselves, including items that have prompted alarm online. The outlet said searches for terms such as “baby”, “toddler”, and “infant” surface children’s clothing and toys, and it noted that Epstein “was never known to have any children”, adding that the purchases have been viewed as “slightly sinister”.
The LADbible report also said Jamazon users can spot “worrying trends” beyond a handful of items already circulating widely online, and it listed examples including multiple books about Donald Trump’s White House, Vladimir Nabokov’s “Lolita”, and an item described as a “sonic prostate massager”. It also described “multiple school girl’s uniforms and sex tablets” appearing in the purchase history, and said the account showed “numerous copies” of James Patterson’s 2017 book “Filthy Rich: The Shocking True Story of Jeffrey Epstein” being ordered.
On the Jamazon page itself, the site states: “These are Jeffrey Epstein’s real Amazon orders, extracted from receipts sent to his email,” and it displays an order count and individual order entries with dates, order numbers, product names and, in some cases, totals.
LADbible attributed the tool’s existence to what it called the “Jmail team”, describing it as “an online group of coders” who have built websites replicating what it is like to be signed into accounts linked to Epstein. According to LADbible, the suite includes JPhotos, described as containing photos from the releases that can be filtered, JDrive, described as a searchable database of files, and JFlights, described as tracking journeys by Epstein’s private jet.
Separate reporting has described the broader project in similar terms. NDTV said “Jmail” resembles Gmail and includes linked tools for photos, documents, flight tracking and audio, and it described Jamazon as an Amazon-like view that “tracks Epstein’s Amazon orders.”
As users dig through the material, lawmakers have continued to clash over what the document releases show and how they are being handled. LADbible reported that House Democrat Jamie Raskin, the ranking member of the House Judiciary Committee, said Epstein’s “youngest victim referenced in the documents was nine years old”, after viewing unredacted versions of files. The article quoted Raskin describing a document with “18 redactions”, adding: “You read through these files, and you read about 15-year-old girls, 14-year-old girls, 10-year-old girls. “I saw a mention of a 9-year-old girl today. I mean, this is just preposterous and scandalous.”
The LADbible piece also quoted Raskin accusing the Justice Department of being in “cover-up mode” and saying: “I went over there, and I was able to determine, at least I believe, that there were tons of completely unnecessary redactions, in addition to the failure to redact the names of victims, and so that was troubling to us.”
The Guardian, reporting on the same dispute, said Raskin alleged “mysterious redactions” that appeared to obscure the identities of alleged abusers, alongside concerns that victim names were not consistently protected.
The rise of Jamazon and similar tools has been fuelled by the scale and complexity of the underlying releases, which include material spanning investigations and prosecutions connected to Epstein and his associate Ghislaine Maxwell. The Guardian has reported that survivors criticised aspects of how information was handled, arguing that the way names were protected or exposed could discourage victims from coming forward.
LADbible said the Jmail suite “has been widely praised online” for making the files easier to browse and added that the project had “raised almost $30,000.”
Epstein, a financier who socialised with powerful figures and was accused of trafficking and abusing underage girls, died in federal custody in 2019 while awaiting trial, after earlier legal cases in Florida and later federal proceedings in New York brought renewed scrutiny to his network. The latest release of files and the tools built around them have reopened debates about transparency, accountability, and the ethics of disseminating sensitive material, as well as more practical questions about what public audiences can reliably infer from email-based records and heavily redacted investigative documents.




