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Christina Pryor

FBI Special Agent on the 2006 federal Epstein investigation; early reports documented "ample proof" of crimes; later reviewed Alfredo Rodriguez's victim journal; referenced in EFTA01326139.

Court Filing

Christina Pryor is an FBI Special Agent who was assigned to the bureau's investigation of Jeffrey Epstein's sexual abuse of minors, beginning with the Palm Beach federal probe in 2006. The FBI opened its investigation, codenamed "Operation Leap Year," in July 2006 following referral from the Palm Beach Police Department's earlier inquiry. Internal DOJ records released in the 2026 document dump, as reviewed by the Associated Press, show that Pryor and other FBI agents documented substantial evidence of Epstein's crimes against minors. Pryor's early reports indicated the investigation had assembled what she characterized as "ample proof" of Epstein's abuse. This assessment stood in tension with how the case was ultimately characterized: as having "scant evidence," a description that appeared in later internal documents and contributed to the decision by then-U.S. Attorney Alex Acosta to negotiate the non-prosecution agreement in 2008 rather than proceed with the 53-page, 60-count federal indictment that prosecutor Marie Villafana had drafted.

Pryor is also referenced in document EFTA01326139 in connection with a 2010 case involving Epstein's former house manager, Alfredo Rodriguez, who had secreted away a contact journal documenting Epstein's victims and associates. Pryor reviewed the journal and confirmed it contained information that would have been "extremely useful" in investigating and prosecuting Epstein. The discrepancy between the "ample proof" characterization in early investigative reporting and the "scant evidence" conclusion used to justify the 2008 plea deal is one of the central questions raised by the files regarding how the federal investigation was managed and ultimately curtailed.

Nationality
Notable Positions
FBI Special Agent
Black Book
Not listed
law-enforcementinvestigation
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Christina Pryor is mentioned in documents or reporting related to the Epstein case. Being mentioned does not imply any wrongdoing, criminal conduct, or inappropriate behavior.

At a Glance

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0
Flight appearances
Document mentions
Various sources
0
Known connections
No
Black book entry
Evidence Types
Court Filing

External Cross-Check

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Document Mentions

About Christina Pryor

Who is Christina Pryor?

Christina Pryor is an FBI Special Agent who was assigned to the bureau's investigation of Jeffrey Epstein's sexual abuse of minors, beginning with the Palm Beach federal probe in 2006. The FBI opened its investigation, codenamed "Operation Leap Year," in July 2006 following referral from the Palm Beach Police Department's earlier inquiry. Internal DOJ records released in the 2026 document dump, as reviewed by the Associated Press, show that Pryor and other FBI agents documented substantial evidence of Epstein's crimes against minors. Pryor's early reports indicated the investigation had assembled what she characterized as "ample proof" of Epstein's abuse. This assessment stood in tension with how the case was ultimately characterized: as having "scant evidence," a description that appeared in later internal documents and contributed to the decision by then-U.S. Attorney Alex Acosta to negotiate the non-prosecution agreement in 2008 rather than proceed with the 53-page, 60-count federal indictment that prosecutor Marie Villafana had drafted. Pryor is also referenced in document EFTA01326139 in connection with a 2010 case involving Epstein's former house manager, Alfredo Rodriguez, who had secreted away a contact journal documenting Epstein's victims and associates. Pryor reviewed the journal and confirmed it contained information that would have been "extremely useful" in investigating and prosecuting Epstein. The discrepancy between the "ample proof" characterization in early investigative reporting and the "scant evidence" conclusion used to justify the 2008 plea deal is one of the central questions raised by the files regarding how the federal investigation was managed and ultimately curtailed.

What is Christina Pryor's connection to Jeffrey Epstein?

Christina Pryor appears in 106 case documents, 0 flight logs, and 0 emails from the Epstein investigation files.

Is Christina Pryor in the Epstein files?

Yes. Christina Pryor is referenced in 106 documents from the Epstein case files, including court filings, FBI reports, and DOJ releases.

This dossier on Christina Pryor was compiled from court records, flight logs, and public documents. 100% free, ad-free, and independent.

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