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Debunking the False Satoshi Pseudonym Claims in Epstein Files
Following the release of sensitive court documents related to Jeffrey Epstein, a false claim spread through cryptocurrency communities early this year. The hoax centered on an alleged email supposedly found in the Epstein files, purporting to contain discussions about Bitcoin’s creator under a pseudonym. However, official verification has thoroughly disproven this misinformation.
The Fabricated Email and Its Claims
According to reports from Jinse Finance, the false narrative suggested that Epstein had written to Ghislaine Maxwell in 2008 referencing “the pseudonym Satoshi” and mentioning “our small digital gold mine” being prepared for public release. This fictional correspondence was designed to create a conspiracy narrative linking major figures to Bitcoin’s origins, exploiting public curiosity about the mysterious pseudonym behind Bitcoin’s creation.
Official Verification Exposes the Hoax
A direct search of the U.S. Department of Justice’s official Epstein files repository reveals that no such email exists. The correspondence referenced in the rumor is completely fabricated and absent from all authenticated documents. This official confirmation demonstrates that the entire narrative connecting the pseudonym Satoshi Nakamoto to Epstein and Maxwell was entirely fictional.
Why This Matters
The rapid spread of this false claim highlights how misinformation about Bitcoin’s origins and the pseudonym used by its creator continues to circulate within cryptocurrency communities. Despite Satoshi Nakamoto’s pseudonym remaining one of crypto’s greatest mysteries, unverified claims like these underscore the importance of verifying information through official sources before accepting narratives about cryptocurrency’s founding figures.