Newly surfaced emails from Jeffrey Epstein's files from 2018 mention potential discussions about cryptocurrency with Gary Gensler, before he became SEC Chair. The documents suggest Epstein planned to speak with Gensler, who was then a professor at MIT, but no evidence confirms any meeting occurred. The revelations also highlight Epstein's investments in early crypto projects like Coinbase.
In 2018, emails from Jeffrey Epstein's files surfaced, referencing possible cryptocurrency discussions with Gary Gensler, who at the time was a professor at MIT teaching blockchain and digital currency courses. The emails indicate Epstein mentioned plans to speak with Gensler about crypto and informed former U.S. Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers that Gensler would arrive early for such talks. Summers reportedly described Gensler as “pretty smart.”
However, there is no confirmed evidence that a meeting between Epstein and Gensler took place. These references predate Gensler's appointment as SEC Chair in 2021, during which he served until January 2025 under the Biden administration. As of early 2026, Gensler has returned to MIT as Professor of the Practice at the Sloan School of Management and CSAIL.
The files also detail Epstein's financial ties to early cryptocurrency ventures. Reports state he invested around $3 million in Coinbase in 2014. Emails mention projects like XRP and Stellar, sparking speculation about possible early positions in those networks, though no concrete proof is provided. Epstein was reportedly linked to stablecoin initiatives, including Circle, the issuer of USDC, potentially through Brock Pierce, and there are suggestions of indirect involvement in Tether's early ecosystem, but documentation is limited.
Additionally, allegations suggest Epstein funded research related to U.S. central bank digital currency (CBDC) pilot programs via MIT and certain Federal Reserve Banks. These connections place him near academic and regulatory discussions on digital currencies, but occurred before Gensler held any regulatory authority at the SEC.
The disclosures raise questions about transparency in overlapping networks of academia, policy, and investors during crypto's formative years. No public evidence ties Epstein to Gensler's later regulatory decisions at the SEC. For the crypto industry, the matter underscores ongoing needs for clarity amid increasing oversight.