Urban explorers from Urbex Specialist have recorded themselves walking through Jeffrey Epstein’s infamous private jet — and the abandoned aircraft looks exactly as unsettling as its reputation suggests.
The plane is N908JE (with “JE” matching Epstein’s initials), a Boeing 727 that later became one of the world’s most notorious jets after it was used to transport wealthy and well-known figures — including trips to Epstein’s private island in the US Virgin Islands.
Today, it sits deteriorating at Brunswick Golden Isles Airport in Glynn County, Georgia.
For years, names drawn from flight logs have continued to cast a shadow over politicians, celebrities, and members of royalty.
Originally built in 1969 for TWA, the aircraft was later refitted for private travel before being purchased in 2001 by JEGE Inc., a company connected to Epstein and his alleged associate Ghislaine Maxwell.
After that, Epstein is said to have logged more than 600 flight hours per year on the jet — a number that highlights just how frequently it was used.
Department of Justice material tied to the Epstein files lists passengers who reportedly included former President Bill Clinton and Prince Andrew.

Legal filings and witness accounts also state that a number of Epstein’s sexual assault victims were on the same aircraft.
Among the images included in the files is a photo of Clinton seated at the plane’s office-style desk with an unidentified woman next to him. Clinton has denied any wrongdoing.
One of the explorers says to the camera in the video: “Once the final owner learned about the sex‑trafficking operation Epstein allegedly ran using the plane, anything of value was stripped from it, and it was left to sit, awaiting demolition, hidden among the trees.”
What was once presented as a luxury interior now appears severely degraded. On the side of the fuselage that gets less sun, mold and rust have spread, and the exterior paint is flaking and worn away.

Inside, the cockpit is in disarray, littered with rubbish and scattered wiring.
Elsewhere, parts of the jet look as though they were barely disturbed after it was abandoned, with coffee equipment still in place and the galley largely intact.

According to the explorers, the most disturbing area is the sleeping quarters. A queen-size bed remains at the rear of the plane, still fitted with a mattress and linens.
In the bathroom, toiletries left on the sink appear not to have been moved since the aircraft’s last landing.
That final trip reportedly took place on July 11, 2016, flying from Palm Beach International Airport to Brunswick Golden Isles Airport in Glynn County, Georgia — and it never returned to service.

Epstein sold the jet not long before his 2019 arrest on federal sex trafficking charges. He later died in a Manhattan jail cell the following month, in circumstances that continue to be debated.
Maxwell was found guilty in 2021 and is serving a 20-year prison sentence.
Since then, the aircraft has remained in the same scrapyard, unregistered since 2019, stripped of remaining valuables, and still awaiting demolition.
Urbex Specialist have been approached for comment.

