Jeffrey Epstein’s schedule might help users learn the truth about the Epstein Files

The creators of Jmail just dropped a new feature that may help users decipher the Epstein files.
The people who brought you Jmail, a clone of Gmail that includes all of Jeffrey Epstein’s emails, have just developed JCal.
JCal is a clone of Google Calendar that uses information from the disgraced financier and convicted sex offender's emails to track his movements over the years.
Epstein’s schedule is neatly organized into colour-coded buckets, which range from travel to social events.
When accessing the calendar, Epstein’s schedule for the week starting May 30th, 2016, opens.
You can see that this week, Epstein had travel plans, including flying to and from Palm Beach, and supposedly breakfasting with philanthropy and academic advisor Barnaby Marsh.
The calendar is meticulously built to reflect Epstein and co.'s plans, detailed in his emails released by the Department of Justice, partly in December 2025 and then again in January 2026.
While many of the meetings seem menial and mundane, certain events are mysterious.
For example, on the 25th of June, 2016, Epstein and his team supposedly attended a CPR training session that lasted three hours.
Many X users had their own theories, from Epstein being a hypochondriac to the first aid training being used for tax purposes. None of these theories seemed to be backed by any other sources or knowledge.
JCal was created by Swedish software engineer Matheus Mendes, who currently works at Midjourney.
The document processing for this project was done with the help of the AI company Reducto, and a person affiliated with the company known only as “omeeze” on X.
Interest in the Epstein Files has only grown since the delayed release of the second round.
JMail, which was the first project in the “JSuite” created by Riley Walz and Luke Igel, quickly received around 450 million hits, according to Piunki Web.
This didn’t come without its issues, as the pair racked up server costs of roughly $46,000.
However, the CEO of the cloud application company, Vercel, replied to the post, saying that he would personally cover the costs.
“You guys have the 609th highest-traffic app on Vercel. It'd be my pleasure to share best practices, given this is what only the largest enterprises & scale-ups can usually pull off,” CEO of Vercel, Guillermo Rauch, said in a post on X.
The “JSuite” has since become its own app ecosystem for everything Epstein.
There’s JWiki, a Wikipedia clone for all Epstein File-related facts, there’s Jotify, which holds all Epstein’s audio recordings, and there’s even Jamazon, an Amazon clone that lets users see what Epstein and his team once purchased.
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