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Aaron Indyk tells House Oversight he cooperated with investigators, says he had no personal knowledge of Epstein's crimes
Summary
Aaron Indyk, co-executor of Jeffrey Epstein's estate, testified the estate cooperated with DOJ and the committee, described over $121 million paid through the estate's victim program, acknowledged large cash withdrawals and multimillion-dollar loans to himself, and said private investigators possessed hard drives but he had no personal knowledge of their provenance.
Aaron Indyk, the co-executor of Jeffrey Epstein's estate, testified under subpoena to the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform on March 4, 2026, saying he and co-executor Richard Khan have cooperated with the committee and with the Department of Justice but that he had no personal knowledge of Epstein's criminal conduct.
Indyk read an opening statement into the record describing the estate's responses to subpoenas and its compensation program for alleged victims. "The EVCP awarded more than a $121,000,000 to 136 women," he said, and added that the estate had settled additional claims, bringing total estate payouts he cited to "more than $200,000,000." He told the committee the estate funded the program and said it was administered independently by experts in victim compensation.
The committee pressed Indyk on his role and on specifics about money that flowed through Epstein's accounts. In response to questioning about cash withdrawals that a bank's consent order flagged, Indyk said he made routine cash withdrawals and handed the funds to…
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