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The U.S. Department of Justice’s recent release of more than three million Jeffrey Epstein‑related records has thrust New York Giants co‑owner Steve Tisch into the spotlight after his name appeared roughly 440 times in the documents.
Emails from 2013 published in the disclosure show Epstein exchanging messages with Tisch that included descriptions of women and facilitation of introductions; in some exchanges Tisch asked whether women were “pro or civilian” and whether one was “fun.” Tisch has said the association was brief, that they exchanged emails about adult women, movies, philanthropy and investments, and that he never went to Epstein’s island.
The NFL said it is aware of the reports and will “look into the facts,” with Commissioner Roger Goodell saying the league will determine whether the material falls under its personal conduct policy before opening any formal investigation.
League officials have previously fined owners after misconduct probes; the DOJ has cautioned inclusion in the files does not by itself indicate criminal conduct.
Other NFL owners have also been named in the broader disclosures, intensifying scrutiny of ownership conduct.
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Published records show Epstein reached out to place legal counsel for Kraft and that many public figures’ names appear in the disclosures. Legal constraints and prior court findings mean appearance in the files is not equivalent to guilt, but reputational and regulatory scrutiny for implicated NFL owners is likely to increase.




















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