Jeffrey Epstein’s pilot recalls Bill Clinton, Donald Trump, and Prince Andrew flying on financier’s private jet during testimony in Ghislaine Maxwell trial

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Jeffrey Epstein’s pilot testified Tuesday about meeting Bill Clinton, Donald Trump, Prince Andrew, and other household names during 30 years of flying the financier’s private planes.

The pilot, Larry Visoki, mentioned Clinton during testimony about an earlier meeting with a female singer in the burgundy-carpeted cockpit of Epstein’s jet before taking off from Palm Beach airport. The singer, identified in court by a pseudonym, Jane, didn’t appear especially young to Visoki.

“You’ll forgive the question, Mr. Visoski, but I think you’ll remember that at the time you saw her, you also remembered she had large breasts. Isn’t that right?” Assistant U.S. Attorney Maureen Comey said.

“Uh. She was a mature woman,” the pilot replied.

Prosecutors say Jane was 14 years old when Maxwell first approached her at a summer camp in 1994.

He said he didn’t know whether Jane flew on the plane as a passenger the day he met her in the cockpit sometime in the mid-late 1990s.

“I can’t visualize her sitting in the passenger compartment like I would, say, President Clinton. It was so long ago,” the longtime pilot said.

Visoski added that he also recalled meeting Prince Andrew, Donald Trump, the actors Kevin Spacey and Chris Tucker, and world renowned violinist Itzhak Perlman on separate trips to Epstein’s mansions around the world.

“I certainly remember President Trump, but not many people associated with him,” the pilot testified under cross-examination by Maxwell’s lawyer, Christian Everdell. Visoki added that Trump flew on the plane before he was president.

Visoski said he flew Epstein’s private Boeing 727, a Gulfstream jet, and helicopters for decades. He said Maxwell also flew Epstein’s helicopters sometimes. The pilot did not specify the aircrafts where he met the former and future heads of state.

Visoski’s testimony came on the second day of evidence at Maxwell’s highly-anticipated trial.

The British publishing heiress has pleaded not guilty to six felony counts alleging she lured teen girls to Epstein’s properties worldwide to have unwanted and illegal sex with the multimillionaire.

Four women are expected to testify at the trial, slated to run until mid-January, about how Epstein and Maxwell abused them from the mid-1990s to the mid-2000s.

Visoski said that from 1991 until Epstein’s 2019 arrest and suicide, he regularly flew the financier to his private Caribbean island, Little St. James. Epstein often referred to the island by a nickname, Little St. Jeff’s.

“Every week to every 10 days if we weren’t elsewhere in the world, but, you know, it was a regular destination,” Visoski testified.

An aerial photograph of Epstein’s 75-acre private paradise, featuring a helipad framed by crystal clear blue seas, was shown to the jury along with photos of the financier’s aircraft and sprawling 10,000-acre Zorro Ranch in New Mexico.

Of Maxwell, Visoski said he remembered her as an employee of Epstein’s, but one whose role was never clear.