Why was pedophile Jeffrey Epstein in Newfoundland & Labrador?
- Helen Escott

- 3 days ago
- 2 min read
Did you know Pedophile Jeffrey Epstein was in Newfoundland and Labrador several times?
He even applied for a Temporary Resident Permit but was denied because he was convicted of at least one offence that constitutes an indictable offence.

I once worked in the media with a news director who always said to look for the Newfoundland connection in every big story.
So, I searched the U.S. Department of Justice’s Epstein files. I was surprised to see four pages listing Newfoundland and Labrador.
What I found out was very interesting.
On Thursday, Mar.16, 2017, someone in media relations at AJC Media sent Epstein an email about "Come From Away,” a Broadway play that celebrates Newfoundland’s response during 911, but I could not find a response from him.
On Friday, Jan 26, 2018, Epstein’s personal pilot wrote: Paris to New York via Goose Bay, Newfoundland, to refuel. We will depart Paris at 07:45 am tomorrow, Saturday, Jan 27th. Arrive in Goose Bay, Newfoundland, for a tech stop to refuel. Epstein replies: Got it, thanks!
I found the flight passenger manifest, and Epstein was the only passenger. So we know he was in Goose Bay to refuel his plane, which is nothing big.
There is a report in the files, dated 31 May 2015, titled "Integrated Oil". There’s a chart that shows Hebron/Ben Nevis, a major offshore oil development in Newfoundland, but it looks like he had stats on many oil developments.
The most interesting item I found was that Epstein was in Gander, NL, on May 14, 2004, for another fuel stop. He was coming from Paris, arrived at 7:15 AM, and left at 7:56 AM.

But here’s the thing: when his plane arrived, there were four passengers, including Epstein, listed on the passenger manifest. Three of the names were redacted; Epstein’s name was not. But when the plane left for Palm Beach, there were only 3 passengers. Epstein and 2 redacted names.
Where did the fourth passenger go? Who

was it? A person getting off a private plane in Canada has to clear customs and border services and present their passport. Private planes have to provide detailed passenger information.
Once cleared, the person is free to leave.
Which means there has to be a record of who this person was. I could request that information from Canada Border Services by an Access to Information request, but the person’s name was redacted.
Maybe someone working at the Gander International Airport remembers who was there on May 14th, 2004.
Someone in Gander knows something that they don’t even know they know!



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