Viral TikTok Exposes 'Zombie Porn' Email Among Epstein Files' Most Disturbing Finds — and It Is Far From the Only One
A viral TikTok video sheds light on disturbing email exchanges within the Epstein files

A TikTok video published by the account @theparanormalfiles has gone viral after highlighting one of the more unsettling email chains buried within the Epstein files—a 2013 exchange in which Jeffrey Epstein was CC'd on a thread where two unidentified individuals openly referenced something they called 'Zombie Porn.' In the email, sent on 22 September 2013 at 5:45 am, the sender wrote: 'Yes, my 2nd great idea after Zombie Porn! They say these things come in 3's... So we should all cash in on the next one!' Epstein did not respond to the thread, but his inclusion on the CC line stopped the TikTok creator in his tracks. The video, tagged under #epstein #truecrime, had already surpassed 21,000 likes and 5,400 shares at the time of writing.
The creator described the exchange as deeply disturbing, noting he could not determine whether 'Zombie Porn' was an inside joke or a coded reference to something more sinister. What concerned him most, he said, was the broader pattern—that throughout the Epstein files, sexual references, lewd language and unsettling exchanges appear with alarming frequency, often in correspondence where Epstein was either a participant or a silent recipient.
A Pattern Hiding in Plain Sight
The 'Zombie Porn' email is far from an isolated find. Being a trusted associate of Epstein's appeared to have come with private communications covering topics including arrangements with masseuses, sexual encounters with women, escort and prostitution services, lewd comments and jokes, and pornography. An example comes from the email exchanges between Epstein and Emirati businessman Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem, referencing a 'torture video.'
Among the most scrutinised emails in the files was a 2017 message in which a redacted sender told Epstein he had met someone and described her as 'like Lolita from Nabokov, femme miniature,' before asking whether he should 'send you her type of candidates only.' In another, a redacted sender emailed Epstein in 2015 about teenage girls, writing: 'the key are the 14 to 15 year old girls — i am a sexual pervert because i say they are now of a reproductive age?' These emails were among those flagged as carrying some of the most questionable redactions in the entire release.
Millions of Pages, More Questions
The Department of Justice published over 3 million additional pages responsive to the Epstein Files Transparency Act, signed into law by President Trump on 19 November 2025. More than 2,000 videos and 180,000 images were included in the release. Despite the scale of the disclosure, critics have noted that the DOJ itself acknowledged identifying up to six million potentially responsive pages—meaning only roughly half have been made public.
UN independent human rights experts described the files as containing 'disturbing and credible evidence' of what they called a possible global criminal enterprise involving systematic sexual abuse, trafficking and exploitation of women and girls. In a statement published through the UN Human Rights Council, the experts warned that the patterns documented in the files may meet the legal threshold of crimes against humanity, and called for a full, impartial investigation.
Social Media as a New Frontier for Accountability
What the viral TikTok from @theparanormalfiles underscores is something investigators have noted separately—that citizen researchers and social media users are surfacing material from the files that has yet to receive wider coverage. As of 19 February 2026, Jmail, a browser-based archive dedicated to the Epstein files, had archived a total of 1,412,250 files, 2,474,242 pages, and over one million additional records—giving the public access to a searchable database that continues to yield new and troubling material daily.
The 'Zombie Porn' email may never be fully explained without the unredacted identities of those involved. But for the hundreds of thousands who have now seen the clip, it has become a symbol of something larger—the sense that for every headline-grabbing name in the Epstein files, there are thousands of quiet, coded, deeply troubling exchanges still waiting to be found.
The Epstein files are not a closed chapter. With congressional oversight ongoing, unredacted reviews still being conducted, and social media continuing to surface new material, the full scope of what Epstein's correspondence contained remains unknown. The 'Zombie Porn' email—unverified in terms of context but confirmed as part of the released documents—is one data point in what UN experts have described as evidence of a sprawling criminal enterprise. For survivors still seeking accountability, every unanswered email thread is another reminder of how much remains unresolved.
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