Former Obama Official Steps Down Over Email He Was Epstein ‘Wing Man’

Former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers is stepping down from his teaching posts at Harvard University as renewed scrutiny intensifies over his past ties to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
Harvard announced that Summers will resign from his faculty positions at the end of the academic year and relinquish his University Professorship, the institution’s highest academic honor. According to the Harvard Crimson, Summers described the decision as “difficult” but did not publicly cite a specific reason for stepping down.
The timing of his departure coincides with heightened attention following the release of Justice Department documents by House lawmakers that shed additional light on Epstein’s network and associates. Among the materials were emails indicating that Summers remained in contact with Epstein up until Epstein’s 2019 arrest — years after Epstein had already pleaded guilty in 2008 to state charges related to soliciting minors.
The correspondence reportedly referenced political matters and personal relationships. Lawmakers highlighted one email in which Summers asked Epstein for advice about pursuing a romantic relationship with a woman he had previously described as a mentee.
“I dint [sic] want to be in a gift giving competition while being the friend without benefits,” Summers wrote in one exchange. Epstein responded at one point that he was a “pretty good wing man.”
Among the emails highlighted by lawmakers was one in where Summers asked Epstein for advice on “getting horizontal” with a woman that he had earlier described as a mentee.
The disclosures have reignited questions about the judgment of prominent political and academic figures who maintained contact with Epstein after his 2008 conviction.
Previously disclosed flight logs and travel records show that Summers and his wife, Lisa New, visited Epstein’s private island, Little Saint James, in December 2005. At the time, Summers was serving as president of Harvard. The trip occurred shortly after their wedding.
A spokesperson for Summers has previously defended the visit, stating that the couple spent their honeymoon in St. John and Jamaica and made only a brief stop — less than a day — on Epstein’s island. The spokesperson also emphasized that the trip took place before Epstein’s first arrest in 2006 and subsequent conviction in 2008.
Still, Palm Beach police had begun investigating Epstein months before the 2005 visit, a detail that has drawn renewed scrutiny.
Harvard confirmed to The New York Times that Summers’ resignation is “in connection with the ongoing review by the University of documents related to Jeffrey Epstein that were recently released by the government,” according to spokesman Jason Newton.
Summers has been on leave from Harvard since November. During that period, he has not taught classes or taken on new students for advisement. The university stated that arrangement will continue until his resignation becomes effective.
Summers, who served as Treasury secretary under former President Bill Clinton, has long been a prominent figure in Democratic politics and economic policymaking. Beyond his Cabinet role, he previously served as director of the National Economic Council under President Barack Obama and has remained an influential voice on fiscal and monetary policy debates.
His ties to Epstein have been examined before. In 2021, reports indicated that Epstein had donated to Harvard and that Summers met with Epstein multiple times after Epstein’s conviction. Summers later expressed regret for maintaining contact, saying he deeply regretted the association and acknowledging that he had “underestimated” the damage caused by Epstein’s actions.
The renewed attention follows broader congressional efforts to review Epstein-related records and associations across political, academic, and business circles. Epstein died in federal custody in 2019 while awaiting trial on federal sex trafficking charges. His death was ruled a suicide.
Summers has not issued a detailed public statement addressing the newly released emails. Harvard has said it will continue reviewing the documents in coordination with its internal processes.
With his departure, one of the Democratic Party’s most influential economic thinkers exits formal academic life under a cloud of revived questions — even as the broader reckoning over Epstein’s associations continues to unfold.
SHE THOUGHT KICKING A PREGNANT WIFE IN THE HOSPITAL WOULD END THE MARRIAGE — UNTIL THE BILLIONAIRE HUSBAND SAW THE TRUTH WITH HIS OWN EYES.

The low, vibrating chime of Marcus’s phone seemed to echo in the sudden, absolute silence of the VIP hospital suite. Outside the large glass windows, the distant murmur of the charity fundraiser gala continued, a stark contrast to the thick, suffocating tension that had gripped the room.
Marcus slowly pulled the phone from his tuxedo pocket. His eyes never left Isabella as his thumb swiped across the screen, playing the high-definition security footage sent directly by his head of security.
On the screen, there was no ambiguity. There was no "self-defense." The footage clearly showed Isabella lunging at me, her face twisted in a mask of pure malice as she shoved my seven-month-pregnant body into the side table. It showed the champagne glass shattering, and most horrifying of all, it captured the exact second her pointed red heel drove brutally into my abdomen while I lay helpless on the floor.
A muscle ticked violently in Marcus’s jaw. The cold, calculated billionaire who ran Thorne Enterprises—the man who prided himself on being five steps ahead of every competitor, every investor, and every enemy—looked completely paralyzed by the sheer weight of his own blindness.
"Marcus, honey, you can't believe whatever she's trying to play at," Isabella stammered, her voice rising an octave as she took a tentative step toward him, her hands reaching out to touch his lapel. "Khloe has been unstable for weeks. She’s jealous because she knows you don't love her. She staged this! She threw herself into that table just to make me look like a monster!"
"Get away from her," Marcus whispered.
The words were so quiet, so devoid of emotion, that Isabella froze mid-step.
"What?" she blinked, her polished, glamorous facade cracking completely.
"I said," Marcus raised his head, his piercing dark eyes locking onto hers with a lethal, suffocating intensity that made the gala coordinator behind him take a step back into the hallway, "get your hands off me, and step away from my wife."
"Marcus—"
"Michael!" Marcus roared, his voice cutting through the room like a physical blow.
Instantly, three burly men in dark suits and communication earpieces pushed past the coordinator into the room. The leader, Michael, looked at the blood on the floor near my maternity gown and his expression hardened into stone.
"Sir?" Michael asked, his hand resting near his holster.
"Secure Isabella Rossi," Marcus commanded, his voice trembling with a terrifying blend of absolute authority and suffocating rage. "Take her to the holding room in the basement. If she attempts to leave, if she attempts to make a single phone call, use whatever force is necessary. Notify the Chief of Police that I am filing charges for attempted murder and felony assault on a pregnant woman."
"Attempted murder?!" Isabella shrieked as Michael and another guard gripped her upper arms, effortlessly pinning her arms behind her back. Her expensive red dress twisted around her frame as she struggled against their grip. "Marcus, you can't do this to me! My father is your primary investor! If you lock me up, the Rossi Group will liquidate every single share of Thorne Enterprises by midnight! You'll be ruined!"
Marcus didn't even look at her as she was dragged out of the room, her high heels scuffing loudly against the hardwood floor, her screams fading down the private VIP corridor.
The moment the doors hissed shut behind her, Marcus dropped to his knees on the carpet, completely ignoring the shards of broken glass that sliced into the expensive fabric of his tuxedo. His hands were shaking violently as he reached out toward me, but he stopped short of touching me, as if terrified that his very presence would cause me more pain.
"Khloe..." he breathed, his voice raw, stripped entirely of the smooth arrogance he usually carried. "Khloe, look at me. I’m here. I’m right here. Don't close your eyes."
A searing, blinding pain tore across my lower abdomen, making me gasp for air. I tightly curled into a ball on the floor, my fingers digging into my white maternity gown, which was rapidly staining with a terrifying, deep crimson hue.
"The... the baby," I choked out, a tear spilling over my eyelid and mixing with the sweat on my forehead. "Marcus... he’s not moving. Please... help him."
"Medical team!" Marcus screamed toward the door, his composure breaking entirely as he saw the blood. "Get the Chief of Obstetrics up here right now! If anyone hesitates, I will burn this entire hospital to the ground!"
Within seconds, the room was swarmed by medical staff in blue scrubs. A gurney was pushed to my side, and I was carefully lifted onto it. As the world began to blur around the edges from the sheer agony and blood loss, I felt a strong, calloused hand wrap tightly around mine.
Marcus was running alongside the gurney as they pushed me toward the emergency operating theater. His face was pale, his eyes wide with a horrific realization that had come far too late.
"I've got you, Khloe," he pleaded, his voice cracking as he squeezed my hand. "I’m sorry. I’m so sorry. Just hold on. Please, just hold on for our son."
I looked up at the harsh fluorescent lights of the ceiling as the heavy double doors of the operating room swung open. Our son, he had called him. For months, Marcus had treated this pregnancy like a corporate obligation, a cold arrangement to secure his family’s legacy while he allowed Isabella to whisper poison in his ear. But as the darkness finally rushed in to swallow me whole, I knew one thing with absolute certainty: if my baby didn't survive this night, there would be nothing left of Marcus Thorne’s world to salvage.