Jeffrey Epstein got an intern at a high-powered law firm to write up a mock legal contract promising “full-body massages” and “sexual games” — and to supply him with “beautiful women” among her friends and acquaintances.
The Paris-based trainee, whose name is redacted in the latest drop of Epstein files, started emailing him in the summer of 2011, when she was 21 and he was 58 — and after she had Googled his name, showing he was a convicted pedophile.
“Well, maybe your passion is young girls as snowboarding is mine,” she wrote to him in an email in August 2011. “Im not scared anyway.”

In October that year, Epstein shared a copy of an apparent contract the trainee lawyer drew up in which she was the “apprentice” providing her beneficiary, Epstein, a series of kinky “benefits” to help fulfill his “amusements.”
The “favors” included “swimming naked” with him, “stripping … slowly,” “posing naked” and giving him “full-body massages.”
Epstein also got her to agree to let him teach her “new sexual games to which she has never been exposed before,” which she would embrace with “good humor and playfulness.”
Epstein even promised to take his apprentice “to the United Nations building in New York for an excursion and a live conference during which the Favors can be provided to the Beneficiary,” the contract stated, suggesting a disturbing plan for sex in the important building.

However, his first “favor” was for her to “find beautiful women among her … acquaintances,” adding that “their appearance, age and ethnical origins are subject to oral discussion.”
“Oh i dont like sharing, would like to keep you all for me ;),” the woman replied in a thread about the contract, after Epstein asked is he had found his “new girlfriend.”
“There might be two candidates if you want, russian and austrian girls, both smart and blond,” the woman replied, seemingly begrudgingly.
The messages referred to the woman working at Clifford Chance, the high-powered UK law firm where she was an intern in its Paris office, according to RollOnFriday, a UK site covering legal news.
The woman stopped working there in 2012, but continued communicating with Epstein until at least 2019, just months before he was arrested on federal sex trafficking charges after flying back from Paris, according to the report.
“Thank you for bringing so much joy, inspiration and care in my life,” she wrote in one of the last known emails released in the tranche of millions of docs.
Her attorneys, Boies Schiller Flexner, told RollOnFriday that she “was a victim of Jeffrey Epstein.”
Clifford Chance, meanwhile, told the Times of London that it “never acted for Epstein” and any messages were “not related to the business of the firm.”


