BOOM. The NFL just got hit with its darkest scandal yet. New York Giants co-owner Steve Tisch’s name appears more than 400 times in freshly unsealed Jeffrey Epstein files—and Commissioner Roger Goodell just promised the league will dig into every single one.
The Bombshell That Rocked Super Bowl Week
Just days before Super Bowl LX, the U.S. Justice Department dropped thousands of pages under the Epstein Files Transparency Act. Buried inside: Steve Tisch, Hollywood producer and billionaire co-owner of the Giants, linked repeatedly to the convicted sex trafficker.
Goodell didn’t mince words in San Jose: “Absolutely we will look at all the facts,” he declared. “We’ll look at the context… and how that falls under the personal conduct policy.” Translation? The league’s most powerful owner could be in real trouble.
Tisch’s Chilling Admission
Last week, the 76-year-old Tisch broke his silence: Yes, he knew Epstein. Yes, they “exchanged emails about adult women.” They also talked movies, philanthropy, and investments. But Tisch swears he never visited Epstein’s infamous island and was never charged with anything.
Epstein died by suicide in 2019 while facing federal sex-trafficking charges. Now, years later, his shadow is threatening to swallow one of the NFL’s most storied franchises.
Will the NFL Actually Act?
History says owners rarely face real punishment. But with public outrage still burning over Epstein’s network of enablers, Goodell might have no choice. Fans are already asking: Can you own an NFL team when your name is tied 400+ times to a monster?
- Over 400 mentions in official Epstein files
- Admitted emails about “adult women”
- Goodell vows full investigation under conduct policy
- Giants legacy on the line
The clock is ticking. The league says it wants facts first—but the court of public opinion is already delivering its verdict. This could be the biggest ownership crisis since… well, ever.
Stay locked—the next revelation could change everything.









