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WHEN A LEGEND IS TARNISHED: MICK JAGGER AND THE INFAMOUS TYCOON PARTIES. It’s no longer just a rumor. The bombshell files released on February 6, 2026, have officially named Mick Jagger. From lavish dinner invitations and private jet travels to “networking” rendezvous in New York… The Rock & Roll legend appears to have lived a high life deeply intertwined with a notorious criminal underworld.

  • byJasmin
  • February 6, 2026
  • 3 minute read
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REVEALED How Naomi Camp­bell and Mick Jag­ger lived the high life with Epstein

YACHT FUN Party: Naomi Campbell in St Tropez in 2001 with a guest thought to be Epstein, in lilac, and Virginia Giuffre

SUPERMODEL Naomi Camp­bell was in repeated con­tact with Jef­frey Epstein before and after his 2008 con­vic­tion for sex offences with an under­age girl.

Bomb­shell doc­u­ments in the latest tranche of Epstein files released by the US Justice Depart­ment last week appear to show Camp­bell repeatedly invit­ing him to high-pro­file fash­ion parties, and to her blo­wout 40th birth­day party in Cannes.

 

DINNER BASH Jun­ket: Mick Jag­ger sits between Bill Clin­ton and Epstein

There are also a series of mes­sages relat­ing to Camp­bell request­ing a lift on his private jet, and call­ing him repeatedly.

‘Please call Naomi right away,’ runs one mes­sage from 2015. ‘She says she really needs to speak to you.’ Another from the same year from Camp­bell reads: ‘I want to see Jef­frey… is he going to Morocco?’

Some of the meet­ings appear to relate to pos­sible busi­ness advice from the late fin­an­cier.

Camp­bell asks if he will look at her ‘swim­wear col­lec­tion’ for Vic­toria’s Secret in an early mes­sage in 2005. By 2010 the rela­tion­ship looks more like a friend­ship than a busi­ness arrange­ment as Camp­bell appears to have invited him to three parties: her ‘Fire and Ice’ birth­day Gala in Cannes, a char­ity fash­ion gala she was organ­ising, and to a Dolce & Gab­bana salute to her in Paris.

REVEALED: How Naomi Campbell and Mick Jagger lived the high life with  Epstein | Daily Mail Online

Her name is also men­tioned in the accounts of two alleged Epstein vic­tims, one of whom says she first met Epstein at a party at his New York man­sion at which Camp­bell was present. The other says Epstein would tell her that he could get her work with the lingerie label Vic­toria’s Secret because ‘he knew Naomi Camp­bell’.

An email sent by a third party in 2012 invited Camp­bell to join Epstein and film­maker Woody Allen for din­ner in Paris.

It runs: ‘Hi Naomi. Jef­frey and I are in Paris with Woody Allen and wondered if you are in town if you would like to have din­ner with us all tomor­row night? Best!’

It has been pre­vi­ously repor­ted that Camp­bell was on Epstein’s plane mani­fests and that her phone num­ber was in his ‘black book’.

The mater­ial in the files appears to show con­tact from 2003 to 2016 and com­prises 25 pages of files.

In 2016 there is a flurry of con­tact as Camp­bell appar­ently seeks to get a lift on Epstein’s private plane, recor­ded by the fin­an­cier’s PA.

Camp­bell has pre­vi­ously described Epstein’s beha­viour as ‘indefens­ible’, say­ing: ‘When I heard what he had done, it sickened me to my stom­ach… I stand with the vic­tims.’

Her team was approached for com­ment yes­ter­day.

New Epstein files include photos, documents with redactions as DOJ releases  initial trove of records

Last year, a pic­ture emerged show­ing Liz Hur­ley with Ghis­laine Max­well at a party for Robert Han­son in New York in 1996. Fel­low party­goer Sean Borg says that both Epstein and Camp­bell were there that night.

Mean­while, Rolling Stone Mick Jag­ger is also in the Epstein files. A pic­ture show­ing him sit­ting next to Epstein in a res­taur­ant was pub­lished last week among the tranche.

And in an email from 2010 the mes­sage is passed: ‘Mick Jag­ger’s assist­ant rang say­ing Mick rec’d my mes­sage and would love to come to your din­ner party but is in France at the moment. She said he will be in NY in the New Year and would love to con­nect then.’

It was pre­vi­ously repor­ted that Jag­ger was in Epstein’s con­tacts book and had flown on his private plane.

Mean­while, emails sug­gest that Brit­ish social­ite Anna­belle Neilson, who died in 2018 aged 49, was among the women who pro­cured ‘girls’ for Epstein. She emailed the pae­do­phile fin­an­cier on many occa­sions call­ing him ‘babe,’ ‘honey’ and ‘darling’.

Their cor­res­pond­ence dates from between 2010 and 2012, dur­ing which time Neilson offered to set Epstein up with a num­ber of women.

In Septem­ber 2010, an indi­vidual who signed off as Anna­belle wrote to Epstein: ‘So I am put­ting a little group of girls together. Hope­fully one of them will have all the right qual­it­ies you desire.’

Source: dailymail.co.us

 

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— Previous article

“AT 79, HE CAME BACK AFTER 8 YEARS — BUT NOT FOR FAME.” Peter Criss walked onto a New York stage again, not for a reunion or headlines, but for his brother, Ace Frehley. No makeup. No spectacle. Just a green drum kit, fragile songs like Beth, and memories that felt heavier than noise. When old 1977 footage lit up behind him and Rock and Roll All Nite returned, it didn’t feel like a comeback — it felt like a promise kept. And when Peter looked up and said, “You’re still out there, brother,” the night felt less like a concert… and more like a goodbye that wasn’t finished.

Next article —

THEY TOLD HIM TO SIT DOWN AND SHUT UP. HE STOOD UP AND SANG LOUDER. He wasn’t your typical polished Nashville star with a perfect smile. He was a former oil rig worker. A semi-pro football player. A man who knew the smell of crude oil and the taste of dust better than he knew a red carpet. When the towers fell on 9/11, while the rest of the world was in shock, Toby Keith got angry. He poured that rage onto paper in 20 minutes. He wrote a battle cry, not a lullaby. But the “gatekeepers” hated it. They called it too violent. Too aggressive. A famous news anchor even banned him from a national 4th of July special because his lyrics were “too strong” for polite society. They wanted him to tone it down. They wanted him to apologize for his anger. Toby looked them dead in the eye and said: “No.” He didn’t write it for the critics in their ivory towers. He wrote it for his father, a veteran who lost an eye serving his country. He wrote it for the boys and girls shipping out to foreign sands. When he unleashed “Courtesy of the Red, White and Blue,” it didn’t just top the charts—it exploded. It became the anthem of a wounded nation. The more the industry tried to silence him, the louder the people sang along. He spent his career being the “Big Dog Daddy,” the man who refused to back down. In a world of carefully curated public images, he was a sledgehammer of truth. He played for the troops in the most dangerous war zones when others were too scared to go. He left this world too soon, but he left us with one final lesson: Never apologize for who you are, and never, ever apologize for loving your country.

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