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AI Roundtable Poll · 6 models

Did Epstein work for mossad

Result: Unanimous — No (6/6 votes)

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Model Responses

GPT-5.4

Vote: No

There is no publicly verified evidence establishing that Jeffrey Epstein worked for Mossad. This claim has been widely speculated about, but speculation and association are not proof. Epstein had unusual connections, wealth, and access, which naturally fuel intelligence-related theories. But the available public record does not meet the standard needed to confidently answer "Yes." Given the choices, the more defensible answer is "No" in the sense that it has not been demonstrated. If new credible evidence emerged, that judgment could change, but based on known facts, "Yes" is unsupported.

Sonar Pro

Vote: No

There is no definitive evidence proving Jeffrey Epstein worked for Mossad; all claims are speculative, based on allegations, unverified sources, and circumstantial ties.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7] Key points include: an FBI report citing an unnamed source calling Epstein a 'co-opted Mossad agent,' but FBI reports do not confirm this as fact.[3] Ari Ben-Menashe, a former Israeli officer, alleges Epstein ran a Mossad honeytrap, yet his credibility is disputed and unverified by Israeli authorities.[3][5][6] Epstein's associate Steven Hoffenberg claimed Mossad ties before dying, but this is hearsay without corroboration.[6] Circumstantial evidence like Ehud Barak's visits, Robert Maxwell's alleged Mossad links, and Acosta's 'intelligence' comment suggest possible connections but do not prove employment by Mossad.[1][2][3][6] Sources like Drop Site News and TRT World highlight ties and speculation, explicitly noting uncertainty (e.g., 'not sure for which intelligence').[1][3] Recent 2025 reporting renews speculation but provides no smoking gun; Rep. Luna said it's 'possible,' not confirmed.[5][6] Intelligence affiliations are often denied or unprovable, and Mossad has never acknowledged Epstein. Voting 'Yes' would overstate unproven theories as fact.

Claude Opus 4.6

Vote: No

There is no verified, credible evidence that Jeffrey Epstein worked for Mossad (Israel's intelligence agency). While there have been various allegations and conspiracy theories linking Epstein to intelligence agencies — including claims made by former Israeli intelligence officer Ari Ben-Menashe — these claims remain unsubstantiated and have not been confirmed by any official investigation or credible journalistic source. Epstein was a financier and convicted sex offender whose wealth and connections were extensive, but the leap from suspicious connections to confirmed intelligence work requires evidence that simply does not exist in the public record. Speculation, no matter how widespread, does not constitute proof. Without concrete, verified evidence, the responsible answer is that we cannot confirm Epstein worked for Mossad.

Grok 4.1 Fast

Vote: No

There is no credible, verified evidence that Jeffrey Epstein worked for Mossad. Allegations stem primarily from unconfirmed claims by Ari Ben-Menashe, a self-proclaimed former Israeli intelligence officer with a history of disputed statements, and speculation tied to Ghislaine Maxwell's father, Robert Maxwell, whose own Mossad links remain unproven rumors. Extensive investigations by the FBI, media outlets, and court documents into Epstein's network reveal ties to U.S. elites, politicians, and billionaires across nationalities, but no declassified intelligence, whistleblower testimony, or official acknowledgment links him directly to Mossad operations. While Epstein's blackmail-style activities could theoretically align with intelligence tradecraft, this is speculative conjecture, not fact. Absent concrete proof—like financial records, communications, or agency admissions—claims of Mossad employment are conspiracy theory, not history. Voting 'Yes' requires evidence; we have none.

Gemini 3.1 Pro

Vote: No

There is no verified, credible evidence to support the claim that Jeffrey Epstein worked for Mossad or any other official intelligence agency. While speculation and conspiracy theories frequently link him to international intelligence networks—often pointing to his association with Ghislaine Maxwell, whose father Robert Maxwell had rumored ties to Israeli intelligence—these claims remain entirely unproven. Without corroborated documentation, official acknowledgment, or conclusive proof from credible investigative bodies, assertions of Epstein being a Mossad asset are speculative. Therefore, based strictly on established public records and verified facts, the most accurate answer is no.

Kimi K2.5

Vote: No

There is no definitive, publicly available evidence proving Jeffrey Epstein worked for Mossad. While allegations have circulated—particularly claims from former Israeli intelligence asset Ari Ben-Menashe and speculation about Epstein's connections to figures like Ghislaine Maxwell (whose father had alleged intelligence ties)—these remain unverified claims rather than established facts. No official investigation by U.S. federal agencies or credible international intelligence bodies has confirmed Epstein's employment by Israeli intelligence. The allegations largely rely on circumstantial connections and the nature of Epstein's activities (compromising powerful individuals), which, while suspicious, do not constitute proof of Mossad affiliation. Until concrete evidence emerges—such as declassified documents, verified testimony from credible intelligence officials, or confirmed financial trails—the answer must remain that he did not work for Mossad, despite the persistent rumors and conspiracy theories.

Final Summary

The AI Roundtable reached a swift and unanimous consensus, with every model rejecting the claim that Jeffrey Epstein worked for Mossad due to a total lack of verified evidence. While participants like Sonar Pro and Grok 4.1 Fast meticulously cataloged the many suspicious ties and allegations surrounding the financier, the group collectively refused to bridge the gap between 'circumstantial suspicion' and 'documented fact.' GPT-5.4 and Claude Opus 4.6 led the charge in asserting that even the most widespread speculation cannot substitute for credible, official proof.

No agreement after 1 rounds of discussion. Final vote: No: 6

Strongest Arguments

  • No: The distinction between intelligence tradecraft and actual intelligence employment is critical; while Epstein's activities mirrored certain behaviors, the absence of declassified records, financial trails, or agency admissions means the claim remains a conspiracy theory rather than established history.