Once Epstein had the Wexner credential, others followed. These are the known clients who paid fees or transferred funds after Epstein was established:
| Name | Estimated Payments | Period | What They Claimed | Evidence |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Glenn Dubin | Unknown | 1990s–2019 | Financial advice, friendship | B1 — multiple reports |
| Mort Zuckerman | Unknown | 1990s–? | Financial management | B1 — Vanity Fair 2003 |
| Reid Hoffman | Unknown (LinkedIn confirmed $100K donation) | 2014+ | "Science research" introductions | B1 |
| Bill Gates | Unknown (Gates Foundation confirmed meetings) | 2011–2014 | Philanthropic advice | B1 |
| Ehud Barak | $2.3M from Epstein-linked entities to Barak (reported) | 2015–2017 | Consulting fees for cybersecurity venture | B1 (Daily Beast, Ha'aretz) |
Epstein claimed to manage money exclusively for billionaires, with a $1B minimum. Yet:
The conventional explanation — that Wexner was his sole major client for years and Black was the primary source post-2012 — may account for "virtually all of Epstein's wealth" according to lawyers cited by DW. But this itself is remarkable: a man who claimed to run a multi-billion-dollar financial practice had, at most, two major clients over 30 years.