Pusha T and Jay-Z named in resurfaced FBI Epstein intake report


Pusha T and Jay-Z

Jay-Z and Pusha T have been named in an FBI crisis intake report included in a newly released cache of documents linked to the Jeffrey Epstein investigation, prompting renewed online scrutiny.

The documents form part of more than three million pages related to the Epstein case that were made public by the United States government this week. Many of the files are crisis intake reports submitted to the FBI’s National Threat Operations Center in 2019, when authorities opened a public tip line seeking information from alleged victims following Epstein’s arrest.

One report, now circulating widely on social media, contains allegations referencing the two hip-hop artists alongside disgraced film producer Harvey Weinstein. The report was submitted by an unnamed individual and has not been independently verified.

Crisis intake reports are unvetted tips submitted directly to the FBI and do not constitute evidence, criminal charges, or confirmed investigations. Authorities have not disclosed whether the allegations were followed up or substantiated.

According to the document, the individual alleges they were assaulted during encounters connected to Epstein’s alleged network. The report includes claims involving Weinstein and alleges that Jay-Z was present during one of the incidents. Publicly available records do not indicate that Jay-Z and Weinstein were in Miami together at the time cited, a detail that has raised questions about the accuracy of the account.

The report also alleges that the individual was drugged on multiple occasions over several years and claims to have had so-called handlers, identifying Pusha T as one of them. These allegations, like others contained in the intake reports, remain unproven.

Neither Jay-Z nor Pusha T has commented publicly on the claims as of publication.

The resurfacing of the intake report comes amid renewed attention on Epstein-related files, several of which include accusations involving prominent political figures and celebrities. Legal experts have cautioned that the presence of a name in an intake report does not imply wrongdoing, as anyone could submit information during the 2019 tip-line process.

Epstein, a convicted sex offender, died in a New York jail in 2019 while awaiting trial on federal sex trafficking charges. His case continues to fuel public debate over accountability, transparency, and the handling of allegations involving powerful individuals.

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