Named in Documents

Mick Jagger

Co-founder and lead vocalist of the Rolling Stones

Mick Jagger — Co-founder and lead vocalist of the Rolling Stones — is named in connection with the Jeffrey Epstein files. DOJ-released Epstein files document a substantive social connection spanning at least 2003 to 2010. A 2003 FedEx receipt shows Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell sent a package to Jagger's UK home address. A 2010 email from Epstein's personal secretary asked whether Jagger should be invited to an upcoming dinner party; a follow-up email records Jagger's assistant responding that "Mick had received a message and would love to come." Multiple DOJ-released photographs — part of a folder labelled "Epstein Library" and seized by the FBI during searches of Epstein's New York and U.S. Virgin Islands properties — show Jagger at a dinner seated between Epstein and former U.S. President Bill Clinton, and separately photographed with Ghislaine Maxwell. The photographs are undated. No wrongdoing is alleged against him. This profile is auto-generated from public reporting and is pending editorial review; inclusion does not imply guilt or wrongdoing.

Also known as: Michael Phillip Jagger, Sir Mick Jagger

Auto-generated profile pending review. This entry was compiled from public reporting because Mick Jagger is named in connection with the Epstein files. It has not yet been editorially expanded.

Is Mick Jagger in the Epstein files?

Yes. Mick Jagger (Co-founder and lead vocalist of the Rolling Stones) is named in connection with the Jeffrey Epstein files. DOJ-released Epstein files document a substantive social connection spanning at least 2003 to 2010. A 2003 FedEx receipt shows Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell sent a package to Jagger’s UK home address. A 2010 email from Epstein’s personal secretary asked whether Jagger should be invited to an upcoming dinner party; a follow-up email records Jagger’s assistant responding that “Mick had received a message and would love to come.” Multiple DOJ-released photographs — part of a folder labelled “Epstein Library” and seized by the FBI during searches of Epstein’s New York and U.S. Virgin Islands properties — show Jagger at a dinner seated between Epstein and former U.S. President Bill Clinton, and separately photographed with Ghislaine Maxwell. The photographs are undated. No wrongdoing is alleged against him.

Being named in the files is not evidence of any crime or wrongdoing. People appear in these documents in many contexts — correspondence, flight logs, contact books, scheduling, photographs, or passing references. See the sources below for the specific, documented context, and the note at the bottom of this page.

People most often named alongside Mick Jagger in coverage, plus documented connections. Counts reflect shared articles, not verified relationships.