How Epstein and Maxwell Crafted an Alibi Inside Stonebriar Church
Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell openly discussed their alibi system inside the Stonebriar Church lobby—believing federal officers thought they were in another state. Witnesses report Epstein describing how he created a false paper trail by having staff use his credit card elsewhere, boasting that the system “worked like a charm.” This investigation reveals how the pair operated in plain sight, confident that their fabricated location history made them untouchable.
DALLAS, TX—During the period documented by multiple witnesses, federal officers were reportedly stationed inside the Stonebriar Church lobby in an undercover capacity, due to the known presence of Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell. Their presence was not unknown to law enforcement—yet Epstein and Maxwell behaved as though they were invisible.
In broad daylight, inside a crowded church lobby, they openly discussed the mechanics of an alibi system they believed would shield them from detection.

A False Sense of Security
Epstein and Maxwell appeared confident that federal officers believed they were in an entirely different state. According to conversations overheard by several people at Stonebriar Church, they did not believe they were being monitored at the church at all. Their behavior reflected a belief that they had successfully concealed their movements from federal scrutiny.
The Morning-Flight Routine
Nearly every time the pair visited Stonebriar, they repeated the same script:
They had “just flown in for the morning” and would be flying out again shortly after lunch or early in the afternoon, and that they used a different plane than their usual private jet. The story was consistent and rehearsed, delivered casually—as though it were simply part of their regular travel routine.
But the real purpose was strategic. It created a believable narrative to support a larger system Epstein had developed to hide his physical location.
Several women who interacted regularly with Maxwell inside the Stonebriar lobby later described how she openly discussed her travel routine with them. According to those women, Maxwell spoke about waking up very early on Sundays to prepare and board a plane so she could visit the church alongside Epstein, whom she referred to as her husband.
The travel was often framed as a sacrifice — something she did to remain with him while he traveled for business. Some women expressed admiration for the effort, commenting on how exhausting it must be to wake up so early just to come to church, and that she flies all the way from New York. Maxwell reportedly responded that the alternative was staying home alone, a remark that appeared to generate sympathy and reinforce a sense of devotion rather than suspicion.

Epstein’s System: Transactions in Another State
Witnesses reported hearing Epstein tell a man named Kevin that he had arranged for a member of his staff to use his credit card in another state while he was physically in Frisco, Texas. By generating a trail of transactions elsewhere, he manufactured a verifiable location history that would suggest he had never been at Stonebriar Church at all.
Epstein was explicit about the reliability of the tactic.
He said this had been his system for years—
“It works like a charm. I’ve never had a problem with it,” he told Kevin.
This was not a private confession. It was spoken openly in a public church lobby.

A Deliberate Strategy Hidden in Plain Sight
The alibi system Epstein described was not technologically advanced or difficult to execute. It relied on one principle:
create a false paper trail and trust that authorities will follow the records, not the reality.
Inside Stonebriar Church—surrounded by worshippers, staff, and undercover federal officers—Epstein and Maxwell acted with a level of confidence that defied the seriousness of their crimes. Their alibi strategy was laid out casually, as though it were just another part of their daily operations.
Multiple witnesses confirm that:
- Epstein and Maxwell believed they had misled federal surveillance.
- They discussed their tactics openly within the church.
- They operated under the assumption that their alibi system made them untouchable.
Their strategy wasn’t hidden. It was spoken aloud because they believed it was unbreakable.

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Stonebriar Church in Frisco, TX
Stonebriar Community Church is an Evangelical traditional style church located in the Dallas Fort Worth Metroplex at 4801 Legendary Dr, Frisco, TX 75034. The pastor of Stonebriar Church at the time of this incident was founding pastor Chuck Swindoll, who retired in October 2024. Chuck Swindoll is an evangelical Christian pastor, author, educator, and radio preacher. He founded Insight for Living, and is chancellor emeritus at Dallas Theological Seminary. Jonathan Murphy is the current senior pastor of Stonebriar Church. The church website is: https://www.stonebriar.org

