
Ezra Cohen-Watnick
Former NSC intelligence director removed for alleged leaks; named in FBI witness interview (EFTA00259527) in connection with Steve Bannon and political operative Arthur Schwartz.
Also known as: Ezra Cohen, Ezra Watnick
Ezra Cohen-Watnick is a U.S. intelligence official who served as Senior Director for Intelligence Programs on the National Security Council under President Trump's first term, before being removed by National Security Advisor H.R. McMaster in 2017 amid controversy over his handling of sensitive intelligence material. He subsequently served as National Security Advisor to Attorney General Jeff Sessions, and later as acting Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence and as acting Assistant Secretary of Defense for Special Operations.
His name appears in the DOJ-released Epstein files in the context of an FBI interview (document EFTA00259527). Witness Charles Johnson told FBI agents that Cohen-Watnick had been fired from the NSC for leaking classified or sensitive material, that he worked closely with Steve Bannon, and that Arthur Schwartz -- a political operative -- had bragged about receiving information directly from Cohen-Watnick. Cohen-Watnick was also at the center of the 2017 "unmasking" controversy, in which he and fellow NSC staffer Michael Ellis were alleged to have shared intelligence reports with House Intelligence Committee Chairman Devin Nunes to support the claim that Obama administration officials had unmasked the identities of Trump associates in surveillance intercepts. Cohen-Watnick's appearance in the Epstein files is through third-party witness testimony about his alleged conduct rather than through direct contact with Epstein or Maxwell.
Large reports can take 10 to 30 seconds. Your download will start automatically.
Ezra Cohen-Watnick 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
Click values for sourcesExternal Cross-Check
Search ICIJ Offshore Leaks, OFAC Sanctions, SEC EDGAR, and Federal Courts
Document Mentions
About Ezra Cohen-Watnick
Who is Ezra Cohen-Watnick?
Ezra Cohen-Watnick is a U.S. intelligence official who served as Senior Director for Intelligence Programs on the National Security Council under President Trump's first term, before being removed by National Security Advisor H.R. McMaster in 2017 amid controversy over his handling of sensitive intelligence material. He subsequently served as National Security Advisor to Attorney General Jeff Sessions, and later as acting Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence and as acting Assistant Secretary of Defense for Special Operations. His name appears in the DOJ-released Epstein files in the context of an FBI interview (document EFTA00259527). Witness Charles Johnson told FBI agents that Cohen-Watnick had been fired from the NSC for leaking classified or sensitive material, that he worked closely with Steve Bannon, and that Arthur Schwartz -- a political operative -- had bragged about receiving information directly from Cohen-Watnick. Cohen-Watnick was also at the center of the 2017 "unmasking" controversy, in which he and fellow NSC staffer Michael Ellis were alleged to have shared intelligence reports with House Intelligence Committee Chairman Devin Nunes to support the claim that Obama administration officials had unmasked the identities of Trump associates in surveillance intercepts. Cohen-Watnick's appearance in the Epstein files is through third-party witness testimony about his alleged conduct rather than through direct contact with Epstein or Maxwell.
What is Ezra Cohen-Watnick's connection to Jeffrey Epstein?
Ezra Cohen-Watnick appears in 7 case documents, 0 flight logs, and 0 emails from the Epstein investigation files.
Is Ezra Cohen-Watnick in the Epstein files?
Yes. Ezra Cohen-Watnick is referenced in 7 documents from the Epstein case files, including court filings, FBI reports, and DOJ releases.
This dossier on Ezra Cohen-Watnick was compiled from court records, flight logs, and public documents. 100% free, ad-free, and independent.