Explosive new documents just dropped a bombshell on the NFL: New York Giants co-owner Steve Tisch was swapping creepy emails with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein—treating young women like birthday gifts while the world already knew Epstein’s monstrous history.
The Jaw-Dropping Epstein Connection No One Saw Coming
In 2013—years after Epstein’s 2005 investigation, his 2010 conviction, and endless headlines about trafficking underage girls—Giants co-owner and Hollywood mogul Steve Tisch was happily emailing the predator. Epstein offered up Russian, Ukrainian, and Tahitian women as “my present” or “my surprise.” Tisch even asked if they were “pro or civilian.” He invited Epstein to Giants games, including his luxury suite for a showdown against the Eagles.
This wasn’t some secret. Epstein’s crimes were public knowledge. Yet Tisch, then 63 and dripping in wealth and power, kept the conversation going like it was normal.
Tisch’s Tone-Deaf Statement That Backfired Hard
After the emails surfaced, Tisch released a statement that left jaws on the floor: “We had a brief association where we exchanged emails about adult women… and discussed movies, philanthropy, and investments.” He insisted he never took Epstein up on invitations or visited the infamous island—and now “deeply regrets” the connection.
Fans and critics erupted: If this is what a “brief” relationship looked like, what did deeper ones involve? And why was a powerful NFL owner even talking “presents” with a known monster?
Victims Paid the Price—Will the NFL Finally Step Up?
Epstein preyed on vulnerable young women, many from impoverished backgrounds, trafficking them to powerful men. Every celebrity or billionaire who gave him legitimacy helped him lure more victims. Tisch’s casual emails didn’t happen in a vacuum—they fed the machine.
- Epstein was convicted in 2010—yet Tisch emailed him in 2013 like nothing happened.
- He called women “presents” and “surprises”—then claimed it was just about “adult women.”
- The NFL’s own conduct policy demands owners be held to a HIGHER standard.
Commissioner Roger Goodell has investigated owners before—Jerry Richardson, Dan Snyder. Will he dare touch a legacy name like Tisch, whose family has owned half the Giants since 1991?
The Clock Is Ticking—What Will Goodell Do?
This isn’t just gossip. It’s a gut punch to every fan who believes the shield stands for something. The league that punishes players for far less now faces its biggest ownership scandal yet. Will Tisch face real consequences, or will money and legacy protect him again?









