On Tuesday, Lesley Groff brings Congress closer to the part of the Jeffrey Epstein story that matters most for accountability: the calendars, calls, travel plans, and recurring appointments that kept his private world running.
Groff, Epstein’s longtime executive assistant, is testifying before the House oversight and reform committee as lawmakers continue probing the late convicted sex offender, according to Guardian World. She worked for Epstein for almost 20 years, from 2001 until his July 2019 arrest. That makes her a different kind of witness from the celebrity names that usually dominate Epstein coverage.
Her own reported description to the FBI gives Congress its frame.
A headhunter told Groff there “was a job to organize one man’s life”.
That phrase sounds administrative. In this case, it may be evidentiary.
Tuesday’s Testimony Puts Epstein’s Daily Machinery Under the Microscope
Groff was not an occasional visitor. She was not an outside financier, political contact, or social acquaintance. The records cited by the Guardian say her responsibilities included scheduling meetings, making phone calls, and managing much of his daily schedule and appointments.
That matters because Epstein’s abuse allegations and criminal cases have always raised a second question beyond what he did: who helped create the conditions that allowed him to keep doing it?
The source material does not establish that Groff committed a crime. Her lawyers have consistently denied that she knew about Epstein’s crimes or engaged in misconduct, and no criminal charges have been brought against her.
Still, access is not a small thing.
XOOMAR analysis: A long-serving assistant can be valuable to investigators even if she is not a defendant. She can help explain patterns in calendars, identify names in records, describe routine practices, and tell lawmakers which requests were normal, unusual, urgent, or concealed. In a case built across years of documents, those distinctions can matter.
From 2001 to July 2019, Groff Sat Near the Control Panel
The FBI interview notes described in the Guardian say Groff told investigators that “from the beginning, massage was a part of Epstein’s day; they were normal appointments”.
The notes add:
“Groff’s job was to make appointments”
They also state that, to Groff, making massage appointments “was just another appointment she had to make for Epstein”. According to the notes, Epstein would call Groff “in the morning and say something like, ‘Call and see if she can do a massage at 4.’”
That is the core tension Congress is likely to test. Groff’s position gave her administrative visibility. Her defense is that visibility did not equal knowledge of criminal conduct.
The committee will probably want to know how massage appointments were arranged, who requested them, how names appeared in schedules, whether travel and appointments overlapped, and how much of Epstein’s daily life was documented versus handled informally. Those are not side questions. They are the map.
A useful comparison is simple:
| Issue before lawmakers | Why Groff may matter | Limit of the evidence |
|---|---|---|
| Scheduling | She handled appointments and daily logistics | Scheduling does not itself prove knowledge |
| Travel | Her lawyers addressed allegations about travel arrangements | They deny she knowingly arranged travel for anyone under 18 |
| Documents | Her account can be compared with DOJ records | Memory can conflict with records or omit context |
| Patterns | Nearly 20 years of work may reveal routines | Routine may be explained as ordinary office work |
Millions of DOJ Documents Create Volume, Not Clarity
The Department of Justice released millions of documents related to Epstein earlier this year, according to the Guardian. ABC News, citing the Justice Department’s Epstein files, reported that a search for Groff’s name returns more than 160,000 results.
That scale cuts both ways.
A huge archive can bury the point. Names repeat. Calendars fragment. Emails and phone records may show activity without intent. A witness who lived inside the operation can make the archive more legible, but only if lawmakers ask disciplined questions and cross-check every answer.
Groff told the FBI she signed a non-disclosure agreement. She also said she interviewed for the job with several people, including Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell, who is serving a 20-year prison sentence for sex trafficking crimes.
That hiring detail gives the committee another lane: how Epstein staffed his operation, who had authority, and how duties were divided. The more Congress can reconstruct the workflow, the less the inquiry depends on spectacle.
This is where XOOMAR’s broader public-accountability lens matters. In cases far outside elite circles, including our coverage of the Belfast stabbing attempted murder investigation, the public record often turns on basic questions: who was present, who knew what, and what investigators can prove from records rather than suspicion.
The 2007 Plea Deal Still Shadows the 2026 Inquiry
Groff’s name has carried public scrutiny because she was one of four women listed as potential “co-conspirators” in Epstein’s controversial 2007 non-prosecution agreement with federal prosecutors in Florida, according to ABC News.
That history remains central without resolving the underlying questions. Groff has denied wrongdoing through her lawyers. The provided record also indicates she was listed in the agreement, later interviewed, and would have invoked the Fifth Amendment if called before a grand jury.
Those facts explain why this hearing is not only about Epstein. It is about process. Who was named in agreements? Who was investigated? Who was not charged? Which decisions were documented? Which victims were heard, and when?
XOOMAR analysis: The House probe is most useful if it treats Groff’s testimony as one piece of a process audit. The weaker version is a made-for-cameras hunt for viral exchanges. The stronger version tests how prosecutors, law enforcement, staff, and records interacted across years.
Survivors, Lawmakers, Groff, and DOJ Are Pulling in Different Directions
The Guardian reports that Groff’s name appeared in a 2020 FBI interview with a survivor whose name is redacted. That person said they felt Groff “knew what was going on” and “knew the massage appointments were sexual”, while also acknowledging that they “never said anything to Lelsey about the massages”.
That spelling appears in the source record. The substance is more important: survivor perception and legal proof are not the same. Congress has to handle both without flattening either.
Groff’s attorney Michael Bachner has said she never engaged “in any misconduct and never knowingly made travel arrangements for anyone under 18”. He also told the Guardian that after Epstein’s 2008 conviction, Epstein “continuously lied to Lesley and other members of the staff,” insisting he had been blackmailed and set up.
For survivors, insider testimony may be a route to long-delayed public accounting. For Groff, it is a chance to defend her conduct under oath or in a formal interview setting. For lawmakers, it is a test of whether the committee can build a record instead of just producing another round of accusations. For the Justice Department, every document release answers one transparency demand while raising fresh questions about redactions, charging decisions, and what remains unavailable.
The Next Phase Turns on Follow-Up, Not Tuesday’s Headlines
Groff was subpoenaed in March by committee chair Representative James Comer, whose letter said the committee believed she had information that would assist its investigation because of public reporting, DOJ documents, and records obtained by the committee.
Last month, another former Epstein assistant, Sarah Kellen, testified before the panel. Kellen denied being Epstein’s accomplice and said she was “sexually and psychologically abused” by him during her employment.
Groff’s appearance could now lead to follow-up testimony, additional subpoenas, fights over transcripts, or pressure for more Epstein-related records to be made public. Any gaps between her account and the documents will likely become the committee’s next trail.
The useful test is narrow: can lawmakers turn logistics into evidence?
If Groff’s testimony helps authenticate appointment patterns, clarify travel arrangements, or identify who controlled access to Epstein, the inquiry gains traction. If it collapses into partisan theater or celebrity name-chasing, it will miss the administrative system that made Epstein’s world function.
Impact Analysis
- Groff’s testimony could help lawmakers understand how Epstein’s daily operations were organized and maintained.
- Her long tenure may make her a key source for interpreting calendars, calls, travel plans, and recurring appointments.
- The hearing shifts attention from high-profile names to the administrative systems that may have enabled Epstein’s conduct.
Originally published on XOOMAR. For more news and analysis, visit XOOMAR.
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