Laura Dern is set to star in an upcoming scripted series about Jeffrey Epstein, taking on the role of an intrepid journalist who helped bring him down. The project adds another layer to the long, grim story of the 66-year-old financier, who died in 2019 in a New York City jail cell while awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges.
RadarOnline.com is also making picks for other key players in the drama, a cast list that points back to the people who moved closest to Epstein’s orbit. Ghislaine Maxwell, his closest confidante, recruited and groomed young girls for him to abuse and is now serving a 20-year sentence in federal prison.
The series arrives as Epstein remains one of the most notorious figures of the modern era, framed publicly as a convicted pedophile who secretly operated an underage sex ring. That history has kept his name in the news long after his death, and it explains why any screen version of the saga is likely to draw immediate attention. Laura Dern’s casting gives the project a recognizable center, but the story around it is still the same one that has shadowed Epstein for years: how his abuse continued, who was pulled into it, and who helped stop it.
That question of proximity runs through the wider cast of characters. Donald Trump and Epstein once ran in the same social circles before a falling-out in the early aughts, and Trump has insisted he was unaware of Epstein’s criminal enterprise and denied allegations he had any involvement with the trafficker’s victims. Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor also figures in the saga, after losing his royal titles and crown-owned home over his ties to Epstein. He later settled a civil lawsuit brought by Virginia Giuffre in 2022 for a reported $16 million.
Giuffre, who described alleged abuse in the memoir Nobody's Girl, died at 41 in April 2025 in what was officially called a suicide. Her death and Maxwell’s conviction have kept the case in the public eye, even as Epstein’s inner circle has splintered and receded. The new series, with Laura Dern at its center, looks set to return that history to prime time by focusing on the journalist whose reporting helped expose it in the first place.
For now, the most revealing detail is not the title or the casting roulette around it. It is that the screen version is being built around the person who helped tear the whole operation open, not the man who tried to hide it.