Jeffrey Epstein's plane is still sitting in a Georgia boneyard – engines stripped, rotting since 2016 – with everything still inside.
Reporters finally got a look inside it.
What they found hidden in the bedroom nightstand is the detail that's going to make your stomach drop.
Inside Epstein's Rotting Boeing 727 in Brunswick, Georgia
The Lolita Express – tail number N908JE, the last two digits Epstein's own initials – has been parked on a concrete slab at Stambaugh Aviation in Brunswick, Georgia since its final flight in July 2016.
No engines or power. No one's touched it.
Step inside today and the smell hits you first – a decade of rot baked into polished wood, high-pile carpet, and the red crushed velvet that still covers the walls, couch, and armchairs of Epstein's main sitting room.
The luxury details are still all there – stacks of crisp black-and-white linen placemats in the galley, a long wooden table flanked by mirrored walls, plush couch-style benches in the forward lounge.
The king-size bed in the lone bedroom is still neatly made with a white comforter.
Three emergency air masks dangle from the ceiling above it.
And tucked inside the nightstand right next to that bed – a disassembled satellite phone.
Not a regular phone. A satellite phone – the kind that bypasses normal communication channels, the kind you'd want if calls made at 30,000 feet to stay hidden.
Prosecutors say Epstein used this plane to shuttle trafficking victims across the globe for years. Virginia Giuffre told prosecutors she was raped aboard this aircraft.
Baby Powder in the Cabinets and a Satellite Phone in the Nightstand
The nightstand wasn't even the most disturbing find.
Inside the bathroom cabinets, reporters found Johnson's baby lotion and baby powder – just sitting there, exactly where they were left.
Not a hotel. Not a home. A private jet where, according to prosecutors, underage girls were trafficked between countries.
Also scattered through the cabin: used toothbrushes, orange-and-yellow hair ties, moldy shaving cream cans, dirty towels, and paper napkins monogrammed with the plane's own tail number.
In the cockpit, a black landline phone had its cord ripped from the wall and shoved into a drawer.
Someone did that in a hurry. Someone didn't want that phone working.
The cabin has been without power since July 2016 – insects and mildew now coating surfaces that once passed for luxury. The stacks of linen placemats and the neatly made bed tell you exactly what kind of operation this was: dressed up on the outside, rotten all the way through.
Bill Clinton Flew on This Plane at Least 26 Times
Flight logs put Bill Clinton on at least 26 individual legs aboard this aircraft – with Secret Service absent on at least five of them.
Logs placed him onboard with Ghislaine Maxwell and unidentified women.
The powerful men who flew on the Lolita Express spent years assuming it would eventually get scrapped and the whole thing would quietly disappear.
The boneyard owner told the Post that was the original plan – destroy it, done.
Those plans changed. Nobody will say why.
Instead it just sat there – storage fees accumulating for a decade, title eventually passing to a Wyoming company nobody will discuss – while the baby powder stayed in the cabinet and the satellite phone stayed in the nightstand.
They Thought It Would Just Disappear
The plane is nearly 60 years old. It has no engines, no power, no future.
The owner says he looks forward to the day he can finally scrap it.
But here's what Epstein's network never counted on: a reporter walking up that rear staircase with a camera.
Every hair tie in that cabin belonged to someone. Every monogrammed napkin was handled by hands Epstein controlled. That satellite phone didn't disassemble itself.
The powerful men who rode this jet spent two decades believing money and influence were enough to make certain things disappear.
The Lolita Express has been rotting in a Georgia field for ten years – and it's still telling the story they tried to bury.
Sources:
- Georgia Worrell, "Inside the Rotting Skeleton of Jeffrey Epstein's 'Lolita Express' Plane," New York Post, February 22, 2026.
- House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, "Chairman Comer Subpoenas Bill and Hillary Clinton," August 2025.

