Former Norwegian Prime Minister Thorbjørn Jagland has become the first world leader to face criminal charges connected to the Jeffrey Epstein elite pedophile ring and sex trafficking network.
Norwegian authorities hit him with “gross corruption” (also reported as “aggravated corruption”) charges tied directly to his documented ties with Epstein and his network of elite pedophiles.
US authorities, sitting on mountains of unsealed DOJ documents teeming with evidence of underage exploitation and international cover-ups, must follow Norway’s lead and finally shatter the silence—prosecute the untouchables like Bill Clinton, Prince Andrew, and the rest, before the full satanic underbelly devours what’s left of justice.
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Norway’s economic crime unit Økokrim formally charged the former Prime Minister after the Council of Europe unanimously waived his diplomatic immunity — a shield he held from his time as Secretary General of the organization (2009–2019)
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Emails and other materials from the so-called Epstein files — released by the US Department of Justice — reportedly show Jagland planning solo trips and family visits to Epstein’s luxurious properties in Paris, New York, and Palm Beach, even after Epstein’s 2008 conviction for child sex offenses.
The documents suggest Epstein covered travel expenses for Jagland and his family members to these locations. One planned family trip to Epstein’s notorious private Caribbean island (Little St. James) was set for 2014 but was canceled due to Epstein’s illness.
Økokrim raided three of Jagland’s properties — including his home in Oslo and others in Risør and Rauland — as part of the probe. He is now expected to be questioned by investigators.
The charges center on suspicions that Jagland received improper benefits, including gifts, travel, and possibly assistance with a bank loan solicitation linked to Epstein.

Jagland, who also chaired the Norwegian Nobel Committee (which awards the Peace Prize) and served as Norway’s Prime Minister from 1996–1997, denies any criminal liability.
The Norwegian case marks a historic first: the initial criminal charging of a former head of government stemming from these explosive disclosures.
The scandal continues to rock Norway’s elite circles. Crown Princess Mette-Marit issued a profound public apology for her own friendship with Epstein after messages between them surfaced spanning three years.
Diplomats Mona Juul and her husband Terje Rød-Larsen face their own Økokrim investigation for “aggravated corruption” related to reports that Epstein’s will allegedly left $5 million to each of Juul’s children.
Juul has resigned her ambassador post, and both deny the accusations through their lawyers, expressing confidence the probe will clear them.
Even World Economic Forum CEO Børge Brende — a former Norwegian foreign minister — is under independent review by the WEF after acknowledging three dinners with Epstein in 2018–2019 and email/text communications.
As more Epstein documents surface and international fallout grows, Jagland’s charging signals that even the highest diplomatic and “human rights” figures may no longer escape scrutiny in the global pedophile network exposed by Epstein’s downfall.
The elite web is unraveling — and Norway just made the first major arrest move.

