Larry Visoski


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Larry Visoski and Jeffrey Epstein: The Pilot–Employer Relationship in the Public Record

Fast facts

  • Who is Larry Visoski?
    Larry (Lawrence) Visoski Jr. is a professional pilot who spent decades flying private jets for wealthy clients. He is best known publicly as Jeffrey Epstein’s longtime pilot.

  • Role in Epstein’s world:
    Court testimony and news reporting describe Visoski as Epstein’s chief or primary pilot. He began working for Epstein in the early 1990s and flew him on hundreds of trips over roughly three decades.

  • Where his name appears in the “Epstein files”:
    Visoski’s name shows up mainly in flight logs for Epstein’s aircraft and in court records where he appeared as a witness. His name can also appear in email archives in routine scheduling or travel-logistics messages.

  • Type of relationship:
    The documented connection is an employment relationship: pilot and employer. There is no public evidence that Visoski was a business partner, investor, or co-owner with Epstein.

  • Legal status:
    Visoski has appeared as a witness, including at the Ghislaine Maxwell criminal trial, where he described his work and passengers he flew. He has not been charged with Epstein’s crimes.

  • Why his name matters in research:
    As Epstein’s longtime pilot, Visoski had detailed knowledge of flight routes, regular passengers and the general pattern of Epstein’s travel. That makes his testimony and the flight logs important to anyone studying the case.


Who is Larry Visoski?

Larry Visoski Jr. is an American pilot whose career has focused on private aviation. Public reporting describes him as a long-time captain of Epstein’s private jets, including the Boeing 727 that became widely known in the press as Epstein’s “private jet.”

Before Epstein became notorious, Visoski’s work would have looked like a classic private-aviation job: maintaining currency as a pilot, managing long-range flights, and handling the logistics of moving a wealthy client, staff, and invited guests between homes and destinations around the world.

The documented relationship: pilot and employer

The clearest, most consistent description of the relationship between Larry Visoski and Jeffrey Epstein is simple:

  • Epstein owned and controlled a small fleet of private aircraft.

  • Visoski worked as one of his pilots, and eventually as the primary or chief pilot.

  • This employment relationship lasted for many years, stretching from the early 1990s into the 2010s.

In court testimony, Visoski has described how the job worked: he flew Epstein, household staff, associates, and invited guests between properties in New York, Florida, New Mexico, the U.S. Virgin Islands and international destinations. He also flew trips for other clients when directed to do so by Epstein or by the company that operated the planes.

From a documentation standpoint, there is no evidence that Visoski was a partner in Epstein’s financial structures, a co-owner of his companies, or a decision-maker in his businesses. The record instead shows a long-term employer–employee relationship centered on aviation.

What the flight logs show about Larry Visoski

Flight logs are among the most discussed “Epstein files.” They record:

  • Aircraft tail number

  • Date and route of the flight

  • Pilot or pilots

  • Listed passengers (where recorded)

In those logs, Visoski appears regularly as the pilot or co-pilot. Over time, this creates a picture of:

  • How often he flew for Epstein: regularly over many years.

  • Where he flew: routes connecting Epstein’s properties and major cities.

  • Who else was on some of the planes: a mix of staff, associates, and well-known figures, including politicians, business leaders and celebrities.

For researchers, the key point is that the logs document flights, not motives. A name in a flight log tells us that a person was scheduled or recorded as being on a particular plane at a particular time. It does not by itself tell us why they were there or what happened during the flight.

The logs therefore show in detail that:

  • Epstein relied on Visoski as one of his main pilots.

  • Visoski flew many of the trips that are now at the center of public and legal scrutiny.

They do not show that he planned Epstein’s crimes or took part in abuse.

Larry Visoski’s testimony in the Ghislaine Maxwell trial

Visoski became widely known to the public when he appeared as a witness at Ghislaine Maxwell’s federal criminal trial. There, he answered questions under oath about:

  • How long he had flown for Epstein.

  • The properties and destinations they used.

  • Well-known people he remembered as passengers.

  • What he did or did not see on the flights.

In that testimony, he:

  • Confirmed the length of his employment, describing a multi-decade period in which he worked as Epstein’s pilot.

  • Recalled flying well-known passengers, including prominent political and public figures, on various trips.

  • Stated that he did not personally witness sexual activity in the cabin, and said that any such conduct would have been hidden from the cockpit.

His appearance at the trial was as a fact witness, not as a defendant. Prosecutors and defense lawyers both used his evidence to support their narratives: prosecutors to establish the scope of Epstein’s travel, and the defense to argue about what staff did or did not know.

Mentions in emails and other Epstein‐related documents

In large email dumps tied to Epstein investigations, a name like “Larry” or “Larry Visoski” can appear in routine operational messages, for example:

  • Scheduling flights and departure times

  • Confirming aircraft availability

  • Relaying instructions between Epstein, staff and pilots

These emails, where they exist, are consistent with his job as pilot. They show him as part of the logistics chain that moved Epstein and his circle around the world.

There is no public evidence in these archives that:

  • Visoski was negotiating financial deals for Epstein

  • He was involved in legal strategy or settlements

  • He was part of any shell companies or offshore structures

The emails, like the logs, reinforce the picture of a professional pilot working for a wealthy client, rather than a partner in Epstein’s broader financial or criminal activity.

Allegations about abuse on flights – and where Visoski fits in

Some of Epstein’s accusers have alleged that abuse took place on board his aircraft. These accounts have appeared in sworn testimony and in civil court filings.

In that context, Visoski’s role is often discussed because:

  • He piloted many of the trips on which abuse is alleged to have occurred.

  • He was physically present on the plane, though separated from the passenger cabin by the cockpit.

It is important to keep several points distinct:

  • Accusers’ claims describe what they say happened among passengers and Epstein inside the cabin.

  • Visoski’s testimony describes what he says he saw and knew from the cockpit and crew perspective.

  • Law-enforcement decisions to date have treated him as a witness, not as a charged participant.

The public record currently supports only the following careful statement:

Larry Visoski was the pilot on many flights later described in legal proceedings. Accusers have alleged abuse by Epstein and others on some flights. Visoski has denied witnessing sexual activity and has not been charged in connection with those alleged crimes.

Anything stronger than that would go beyond what the evidence shows.

No evidence of a broader business, legal, or family partnership

Across the major Epstein document sets and mainstream coverage, researchers do not find evidence that:

  • Visoski co-owned Epstein’s companies

  • He was involved in Epstein’s investment decisions

  • He shared bank accounts or shell entities with Epstein

  • He was part of Epstein’s legal defense teams or co-defendants in key cases

Instead, the pattern is consistent and narrow:

  • Role: employee (pilot).

  • Visibility in documents: flight logs, employment-related references, and witness testimony.

  • Legal position: fact witness, not charged.

For responsible research, that distinction matters. Being part of Epstein’s logistics and travel does not automatically mean sharing his criminal intent. At the same time, the long duration of employment makes Visoski’s evidence important for reconstructing Epstein’s movements and networks.

How to read the Visoski–Epstein connection in the wider “Epstein files”

For people using Epstein document archives—flight logs, email dumps, court exhibits—Larry Visoski is a useful case study in how to interpret names:

  • Context is everything.
    When a name appears as a pilot or staff member, that usually signals an employment role, not necessarily a personal friendship or business partnership.

  • Multiple document types can reinforce each other.
    In Visoski’s case, flight logs, employment descriptions, and sworn testimony all point in the same direction: a long-term pilot–employer relationship.

  • Avoid overstating what the record shows.
    It is factual to say that Visoski flew Epstein and his guests for many years and testified about those flights. It would be speculative to claim, without additional evidence, that he was part of Epstein’s financial operations or criminal planning.

Larry Visoski

This research page compiles publicly available information about Larry Visoski and their place in the broader Jeffrey Epstein connection graph. People may appear here either because they are mentioned in one or more evidence items (such as flight logs, emails, legal records or credible public reporting), or because reliable public sources document relationships or affiliations that link them to others in this network.

Some profiles therefore track individuals who may be several steps removed — sometimes up to six degrees of separation — from Jeffrey Epstein himself. They are included so researchers can see whether those names later recur in other documents, networks, or investigations. Listing Larry Visoski here is not, by itself, a statement of guilt or innocence.

Use the network graph, shortest-path view, and evidence links below to explore how this person connects to others in the dataset and to Jeffrey Epstein.

Shortest path to Jeffrey Epstein: 1 degree(s)
  1. Larry Visoski
  2. Jeffrey Epstein

Closest Connections

  • Jeffrey Epstein — flight log-pilot-testimony — Weak
    Evidence
    • Larry Visoski (Other) 0

Click a name to highlight 1° / 2° / 3° rings. Edge thickness indicates connection strength. Use Tab to focus and arrow keys to navigate.

Explore this person in the network graph

The presence of Larry Visoski in this dataset should be understood in a research and mapping context only. The project traces publicly documented relationships and degrees of separation — sometimes several steps removed — to see whether particular names recur across different evidence sets over time.

A person may therefore appear here because they are directly mentioned in documents, because they have a publicly reported relationship or affiliation with others in the network, or because they sit several links away in a chain of acquaintances. Inclusion alone does not imply criminal conduct, moral judgment, or endorsement.