Philanthropy in science has little oversight. Jeffrey Epstein exploited that

NPR
by Katia Riddle
March 30, 2026
1 min read

Quick Insights

The Bottom Line

Private philanthropy funding science lacks legal oversight, allowing bad actors like Epstein to influence research.

How This Affects You

Science research priorities may be distorted by wealthy donors with personal interests rather than public health needs, affecting medical breakthroughs and drug development.

AI Summary

Philanthropic funding for scientific research operates with minimal legal oversight or public scrutiny, creating conditions that allowed Jeffrey Epstein to cultivate relationships with scientists and improve his public image. The lack of regulation in private science funding meant Epstein could direct money to researchers and institutions without the transparency that typically accompanies government grants or corporate donations. This gap in accountability enabled him to use philanthropy as a reputation-laundering tool while maintaining influence in the scientific community.

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