[GRADE B — Public court records, news reporting, corporate filings]
Alon and Oren Alexander are identical twins born on October 2, 1988, to Israeli immigrant parents Shlomo and Orly Alexander. Tal Alexander, their older brother, was born in 1985. The family settled in Miami, where parents Shlomo and Orly built Kent Security Services into a major South Florida security firm with Florida government contracts. Uncle Gil Neuman manages the company.
Alon — who holds a law degree — managed the family security business before joining his brothers in luxury real estate. The three brothers became top-producing agents at Douglas Elliman, representing ultra-high-net-worth clients including Leon Black (Apollo Global Management co-founder, who paid Jeffrey Epstein $158M+ over multiple years). In 2022, the brothers founded "Official" (later Official Partners), their own real estate brokerage.
[GRADE B — Federal court filings (SDNY), news reporting]
| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| Dec 11, 2024 | Oren Alexander arrested in Miami on federal sex trafficking charges |
| Dec 12, 2024 | Alon and Tal Alexander arrested |
| Jan 15, 2025 | First superseding indictment — additional victims |
| Jan 30, 2026 | DOJ inadvertently releases FBI NTOC tip sheet naming all three brothers at Epstein parties |
| Feb 3, 2026 | Second superseding indictment — 12 felony counts |
| Feb 4, 2026 | Trial begins in SDNY before Judge Valerie Caproni |
| Feb 13, 2026 | Defense seeks mistrial over Epstein file exposure; Judge Caproni denies |
| Feb 14, 2026 | Week 3 concludes — Avishan Bodjnoud testifies; video evidence presented |
| Feb 17, 2026 | Trial ongoing — resumes Feb 24 |
The federal indictment alleges a pattern of sex trafficking spanning 2008–2021, with 60+ alleged victims across New York, Miami, the Hamptons, and Aspen. All three brothers have pleaded not guilty. Defense counsel Marc Agnifilo argues consensual encounters.
[GRADE C — NTOC tip: unverified anonymous complaint, not confirmed FBI finding]
On January 30, 2026, the Department of Justice inadvertently released an FBI National Threat Operations Center (NTOC) tip sheet during the Alexander brothers' trial proceedings. The tip documents the following allegations:
The defense moved for a mistrial on the grounds that jury exposure to the Epstein connection was prejudicial. The presiding judge denied the motion but ordered prosecution to withhold Epstein-linked material during trial. The prosecution characterized the release as accidental.
WHAT THIS SHOWS AND DOES NOT SHOW: The NTOC tip sheet establishes that at least one complainant placed all three Alexander brothers at Epstein's Manhattan mansion and alleged sexual assault. It is Grade C evidence — an anonymous tip received by the FBI, not a verified investigative finding. The FBI's Child Exploitation and Human Trafficking Task Force subsequently requested the "full NTOC report" for interview purposes (EFTA01660679), indicating the tip was taken seriously enough to trigger follow-up investigation. The tip does NOT constitute proof that the alleged events occurred.
[GRADE B — News reporting, court proceedings]
Trial developments through Week 3 (Feb 4–14, 2026):
WHAT THIS SHOWS AND DOES NOT SHOW: Trial testimony and evidence presented by the prosecution describe patterns consistent with the NTOC tip's allegations. However, these are prosecution presentations in an ongoing trial. The defense disputes all allegations. No verdict has been reached. The corpus does not contain trial evidence — trial developments are sourced from news reporting (Grade B).