
Kim Jong Un
Kim Jong Un is the Supreme Leader of North Korea, serving since 2011. The third generation of the Kim dynasty to rule the country, he oversees one of the world's most secretive and authoritarian regimes.
Why Kim Jong Un Appears in the Documents
Kim Jong Un is mentioned in 11 documents within the Epstein file corpus, consisting of 7 emails, 2 articles, 1 chat, 1 data, originating from the House Oversight Committee.
These documents include titles such as "Trump says he has foreign policy experience because he ran the Miss Universe pageant in Russia", "Policy Analyses on Iran Nuclear Issue, Sanctions, and Global Governance (2013)", "Kim-Trump border meeting: History or photo-op?" among others. Kim Jong Un's name appears across these documents in various contexts. The document corpus contains a wide range of materials including media coverage, government records, and legal proceedings where many public figures are mentioned.
Disclaimer: Appearing in the Epstein document corpus does not imply wrongdoing, guilt, or any form of association with criminal activity. Many public figures are mentioned incidentally in these documents due to the broad scope of the released materials.
Documents (11)
Trump says he has foreign policy experience because he ran the Miss Universe pageant in Russia
An email summarizing Hillary Clinton’s speech in San Diego in which she labels Donald Trump’s foreign policy as “dangerously incoherent,” contrasts his claim of experience from running Miss Universe in Russia with her own qualifications, and outlines Trump’s hardline proposals—reinstating waterboarding, renegotiating trade deals, a Muslim ban, and pressuring NATO—while also criticizing his stance on Benghazi and the Iraq War.
Source: House Oversight Committee
Trump says he has foreign policy experience because he ran the Miss Universe pageant in Russia
An email summarizing Hillary Clinton’s speech in San Diego in which she labels Donald Trump’s foreign policy as “dangerously incoherent,” contrasts his claim of experience from running Miss Universe in Russia with her own qualifications, and outlines Trump’s hardline proposals—reinstating waterboarding, renegotiating trade deals, a Muslim ban, and pressuring NATO—while also criticizing his stance on Benghazi and the Iraq War.
Source: House Oversight Committee
Policy Analyses on Iran Nuclear Issue, Sanctions, and Global Governance (2013)
This collection of policy essays from February 2013 surveys the volatile landscape of nuclear diplomacy and global governance, arguing that blunt sanctions and “final deal” rhetoric are unlikely to resolve Iran’s or North Korea’s programs and that a measured, incremental approach—grounded in verifiable steps, credible deterrence, and multilateral engagement—offers a better path, while urging reform of international institutions to reflect a rising Asia and a shifting world order; it also presents a sobering portrait of the Israel–Palestine conflict, showing growing Palestinian fatigue with the peace process and rising support for resistance, underscoring the urgency of renewed, realistic diplomacy.
Source: House Oversight Committee
Kim-Trump border meeting: History or photo-op?
Flipboard’s Sunday Edition is a curated, cross‑section of politics, science, and culture: it asks whether the Kim–Trump border meeting was history or a photo-op, probes Myanmar-like aims in Putin’s world politics, features science stories on capuchin monkeys’ ancient tools and dogs’ expressive eye muscles, and includes investigative pieces on medical-debt lawsuits by a nonprofit hospital, tech nostalgia about Myspace, Woodstock archaeology, and human-interest profiles from Alanis Morissette to the 100 coolest people in food and drink, all linking to major outlets for deeper reading.
Source: House Oversight Committee
Fire and Fury
Source: House Oversight Committee
Clinton attacks Trump's foreign policy as 'dangerously incoherent'
In the 2016 campaign, Hillary Clinton derides Donald Trump’s foreign policy as dangerously incoherent in a San Diego speech, while Trump defends his so-called experience—mocked by Clinton as running the Miss Universe pageant in Russia—as he advocates hardline moves on NATO, waterboarding, and a Muslim entry ban, highlighting a fierce policy clash over issues from Benghazi and the Iraq War to North Korea and broader national security.
Source: House Oversight Committee
U.S. celebrates Fourth of July, Trump-Kim DMZ meeting and Hong Kong protests
Flipboard’s week-in-review delivers a concise, high‑impact snapshot of the past week’s top headlines across politics, diplomacy, and culture—from Trump’s Fourth of July spectacle and census citizenship questions to North Korea‑U.S. tensions and Iran warnings, the Hong Kong protests and related arrests, and the Democrats’ fight over Trump’s taxes—while also highlighting standout moments in sports and leadership news, including Coco Gauff’s Wimbledon breakthrough, the U.S. women’s World Cup run, and Ursula von der Leyen’s emergence as the first female European Commission president.
Source: House Oversight Committee
iMessage Archive Entry – February 25, 2019
This document is a dated iMessage chat log from February 25, 2019 between user jee and another participant, mixing travel updates (Abu Dhabi, Dubai, NYC) with sharp political commentary and references to public figures (Trump, Michael Cohen, Kim) and a note about House Oversight, all time-stamped and showing read/unread status.
Source: House Oversight Committee
Email chain on regional security and US leadership comments
This is a high-priority 2019 internal email exchange in which Anas Alrasheed and a colleague discuss rising regional tensions under the Trump administration: Maduro mocks Trump, Kim Jong Un tests Trump in North Korea negotiations, and Iran threatens the U.S. amid the maximum-pressure campaign, raising the question of whether a regional war is looming; the thread includes confidentiality notices and references to HOUSE OVERSIGHT and JEE.
Source: House Oversight Committee
Re: Kim Jong Un's visit to China
This 2018 email thread analyzes potential Western reactions to a sequence of high-level visits—Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi to the Kremlin and a possible Kim Jong Un meeting—hinting at a perceived convergence of socialist-aligned powers, while also commenting on a YouTube video of Xi Jinping meeting Kim and noting its theatrical tone, with the message labeled as HOUSE OVERSIGHT 029497.
Source: House Oversight Committee
Re: Kim Jong Un's visit to China
This 2018 email thread analyzes potential Western reactions to a sequence of high-level visits—Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi to the Kremlin and a possible Kim Jong Un meeting—hinting at a perceived convergence of socialist-aligned powers, while also commenting on a YouTube video of Xi Jinping meeting Kim and noting its theatrical tone, with the message labeled as HOUSE OVERSIGHT 029497.
Source: House Oversight Committee