Epstein’s Secret Amazon Purchases Revealed as Pam Bondi Claims Complete File Disclosure Sparks New Questions
So, it turns out Jeffrey Epstein’s Amazon cart was less a collection of mundane everyday goods and more a chilling peek into the mind of a man whose darkest compulsions are now fully exposed. Between late 2025 and early 2026, the U.S. Department of Justice unleashed what they call the “Epstein files,” revealing a bizarre and disturbing assortment of items he purchased—from child-coded clothing and provocative literature like Lolita and Justine, to intimate massage tools and odd medications designed to tighten certain body parts. It’s like someone made a playlist of creepy novels and suspicious grooming gadgets, then hit “buy” without a second thought. What’s truly alarming—and quite frankly, gut-wrenching—is how experts say this shopping list maps directly onto predatory behavior patterns. So, whether you’re a true crime aficionado or just someone wondering how deep the rabbit hole goes, this exposé offers a stark—and unsettling—lesson in the company we keep on our online wishlists. Curious to see how profound—or bizarre—his shopping sprees really were? LEARN MORE.
Jeffrey Epstein’s Amazon order has been exposed in the Epstein files released by the U.S. Department of Justice between late 2025 and early 2026.
The pe**phile’s shopping list included items such as clothing, massage tools, controversial books, and medication used for the tightening of certain body parts, as per the disclosure.
- Epstein’s Amazon orders included items such as child-coded clothing, intimate tools, dietary supplements, and controversial books like Lolita and Justine.
- An expert explained that the items Epstein purchased reflect his predatory psychology.
- The disgraced financier’s shopping list has taken the spotlight amid U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi’s confirmation that all files related to him have been released.
In a press interaction dissecting Epstein’s orders, a trauma psychologist called the purchases alarming and revealing of Epstein’s state of mind.
“The presence of these child-coded items alongside these s**ual tools is so clinically alarming,” the expert expressed.
According to an expert, Jeffrey Epstein’s Amazon purchases reflect his predatory behavior
Image credits: DOJ
Epstein’s Amazon order history, dated between 2014 and 2019, includes Russian author Vladimir Nabokov’s book Lolita, which follows a man who becomes disturbingly infatuated with a 12-year-old girl.
Pictures released as part of the Epstein files show women with quotes from the book written over their bodies. Epstein’s private jet was notably named the “Lolita Express.”
Image credits: DOJ
Epstein also purchased the Marquis de Sade’s 1791 book Justine, which contains graphic descriptions of sadistic acts, and The Stranger Beside Me, the 1980 true crime book by Ann Rule, who knew psychopath Ted Bundy.
In 2017, Epstein bought a pack of Gerber Baby Girls sleeper suits, following it up with two sets of girls’ school uniforms, one beige and the other black and white with a polo neck, in 2018.
Image credits: DOJ
The Epstein files also document a receipt for a $61.50 Sonic prostate massager and $64.95 Vagifirm pills, used to tighten female private parts, especially due to childbirth and aging.
Relational trauma psychologist Desiree Nazarian addressed Epstein’s purchase history in a New York Post interview.
“Everything on this list is really common in predatory profiles. It is marked by coercion, entitlement, dominance, and control of narrative,” she added.
Image credits: Getty/Kypros
Epstein also purchased a black-and-white prisoner’s costume in 2018, an FBI costume, and a pair of Israel Defence Force combat pants.
“It is all about eroticized hierarchy,” Nazarian said, explaining, “It is role play around dominance, punishment, impunity; it is like this oscillation between being the authority and staging the persecution.”
Epstein’s shopping list has drawn attention as Bondi confirmed DOJ released all records concerning him
Image credits: Getty/Anadolu
Millions of pages of email correspondence, images, and videos were released by the DOJ on December 30, calling them the last tranche of investigative material concerning Epstein.
At the time, U.S. Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said a significant number of pages were not released to keep graphic depictions of child violation and personal medical files safe.
In their Saturday, February 14 letter to Congress, however, Blanche, alongside Attorney General Bondi, wrote:
Image credits: DOJ
“In accordance with the requirements of the [Epstein Files Transparency] Act and as described by various Department submissions to the courts of the Southern District of New York assigned to the Epstein and [Ghislaine] Maxwell prosecutions and related orders, the Department released ‘all records, documents, communications, and investigative materials’ in the possession of the Department.”
Image credits: DOJ
No records were kept from the DOJ’s release “on the basis of embarrassment, reputational harm, or political sensitivity,” the letter added.























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