EVIDENCE STANDARD NOTICE: Every record on this site carries an evidence tier label. Being named in this database does not constitute an accusation of criminal wrongdoing. Read the tier definitions before drawing conclusions. All descriptions are original paraphrases of public court records and verified journalism.
Named in Sworn Proceedings   Named in Legal Proceedings

Richard Kahn

Epstein's Accountant / Estate Executor  ·  American  ·  Active — named in DOJ documents

Richard Kahn served as a financial adviser and close professional associate of Jeffrey Epstein for an extended period. He was named as co-executor of Epstein's estate alongside Darren Indyke following Epstein's death in August 2019, placing him at the centre of complex legal proceedings over the disposition of Epstein's substantial assets.

The Epstein estate became the subject of sustained litigation from victims' advocates and individual plaintiffs seeking to maximise victim compensation. A victim compensation programme was ultimately established and administered separately from the estate itself.

Kahn was named in civil proceedings by victims of Epstein's network, with allegations that his professional role gave him knowledge of aspects of Epstein's operation. He has denied these allegations. No criminal charges have been brought against him.

His long professional association with Epstein and his role as estate co-executor place him in the documented inner circle of Epstein's financial arrangements.

▶ What the Evidence Shows -- Tier 2: Named in Sworn Proceedings

Identified in the same DOJ inner circle diagram as Indyke and Maxwell. He serves as estate executor and has not been charged.

Named in sworn deposition testimony, civil court filings, or victim statements entered into legal evidence.
▷ Public Denials & Counter-Statements

No formal denial on public record.

Documented Connections

Named in Sworn Proceedings
Jeffrey Epstein financial associate
Kahn was Epstein's accountant for many years; named in DOJ inner circle diagram.
Source: DOJ memo 2019