Beautiful Virgin Islands

Thursday, Mar 19, 2026

Joi Ito, the director of the influential MIT Media Lab, submitted his resignation in the wake of scrutiny over the center’s financial relationship with Epstein

Joi Ito, the director of the influential MIT Media Lab, submitted his resignation in the wake of scrutiny over the center’s financial relationship with Epstein

Joi Ito, the director of the influential MIT Media Lab, submitted his resignation on Saturday, in the wake of continued scrutiny over the center’s financial relationship with Epstein, the university announced in a statement.

Ito, who was also a member of the New York Times Company board of directors, also resigned from that board, “effective immediately”, a Times spokeswoman said.

MIT and the Media Lab had previously admitted to accepting some financial donations from Epstein, despite the financier’s public history of pleading guilty to soliciting prostitution from a child.

But new reports from the New Yorker and the New York Times said that internal emails indicated Media Lab officials had worked to conceal the full extent of Epstein’s donations to the Media Lab, and his other assistance to the center.

This included at least $7.5m in donations Epstein helped secure from two other prominent philanthropists, Bill Gates and the investor Leon Black, the New Yorker reported.

In a statement, MIT’s president, L Rafael Reif, called the allegations in the New Yorker story “deeply disturbing” and “extremely serious” and pledged that the university would conduct “an immediate, thorough and independent investigation”, which would be conducted by a “prominent law firm.”

“The acceptance of the Epstein gifts involved a mistake of judgment,” Reif wrote. The university was still assessing how to “prevent such mistakes in the future”.

The New Yorker’s investigation cited former media lab employees who spoke about their concerns about the lab’s years-long relationship with Epstein, as well as internal emails from Ito, who wrote of one Epstein donation: “Make sure this gets accounted for as anonymous,” and another from an employee who wrote: “Jeffrey money, needs to be anonymous.”

In 2015, according to Signe Swenson, a former development associate at the lab who spoke to the New Yorker, Epstein himself visited the lab, accompanied by two young female “assistants”.

Swenson said the visit, already uncomfortable, became more distressing at the sight of the young women who accompanied Epstein.

Among the lab’s staff, “all of us women made it a point to be super nice to them. We literally had a conversation about how, on the off chance that they’re not there by choice, we could maybe help them,” Swenson told the New Yorker.

The lab’s internal planning for the visit included ensuring Epstein’s name was kept off Ito’s public calendar, and strategizing about how to keep a member of the lab who disapproved of its association with Epstein from seeing the meeting in progress, Swenson told the New Yorker.

Ito, who led the influential university research center for eight years, emailed his resignation to university officials on Saturday, according to the New York Times.

“After giving the matter a great deal of thought over the past several days and weeks, I think that it is best that I resign as director of the media lab and as a professor and employee of the Institute, effective immediately,” Ito wrote in an email shared with the New York Times.

Ito did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The investor and author has been an influential figure in the world of American media, technology, and philanthropy. As well as having served on The New York Times board, he had been serving on the board of the Knight Foundation, one of the most prominent funders of media innovation in the United States; and the MacArthur Foundation, which has given out grants totalling nearly $70bn in the past decades.

In a tweet on Saturday, the MacArthur foundation announced that Ito had also resigned from its board.

“The recent reports of Ito’s behavior in The New Yorker, if true, would not be in keeping with the values of MacArthur. Most importantly, our hearts go out to the girls and women who survived the abuse of Jeffrey Epstein,” the foundation tweeted.

The public revelations about Epstein’s relationships with MIT’s Media Lab had been divisive, with some Lab members and associates defending the center and others calling its ties to Epstein unacceptable. Before the New Yorker story was published, some of Ito’s friends and associates publicly came to his defense.

MIT’s president said the university had taken about $800,000 from Epstein over 20 years. The New Yorker reported Epstein had arranged $7.5m in donations.

Epstein killed himself in jail on 10 August while awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges.

Just days ago, a co-founder of the Media Lab had defended its decision to accept hundreds of thousands of dollars in funding from Epstein.

“If you wind back the clock, I would still say ‘take it’,” Nicholas Negroponte said at a town hall meeting on Wednesday.

Negroponte, whose brother served as an assistant secretary of state under George W Bush, later defended his remarks to the Boston Globe.

“We all knew he went to jail for soliciting underage prostitution,” Negroponte told the Globe. “But we thought he served his term and repented.”

In 2008, Epstein pleaded guilty to a charge of soliciting prostitution from an underage girl, as part of a lenient deal with federal prosecutors in Florida. He served 13 months of an 18-month prison sentence, much of it on day release.

That plea deal came under renewed scrutiny in recent months following a series of articles published by the Miami Herald, leading to new charges being filed against Epstein by federal prosecutors in New York.

Alex Acosta, who as US attorney in Miami oversaw the deal, resigned as US labor secretary.

Newsletter

Related Articles

Beautiful Virgin Islands
0:00
0:00
Close
UK Sets New Aid Priorities Following Significant Budget Reductions
Cyprus President Urges Open Dialogue Over Future of British Sovereign Base Areas
Cyprus President Urges Open Dialogue Over Future of British Sovereign Base Areas
UK Plans 50% Steel Tariffs in Bold Move to Protect Domestic Industry
Iran Conflict Sends Shockwaves Through UK Economy as Energy Costs and Trade Risks Surge
UK Health Officials Warn Kent Meningitis Outbreak Still Active as Cases Continue to Rise
UK Climate Progress Faces Scrutiny Over Reliance on Carbon Accounting Methods
UK Deploys Advisers to United States to Shape Plan for Reopening Strait of Hormuz
Amazon Bets on AI-Driven Alexa Upgrade to Revive UK Smart Speaker Market
UK Abortion Law Changes Spark Strong Response from Church Leaders and Pro-Life Advocates
UK Abortion Law Changes Spark Strong Response from Church Leaders and Pro-Life Advocates
GB News Faces Regulatory Complaints Over On-Air Remarks on ‘Genocide’ Claims
UK Signals Expanded Support for Gulf Allies as Iranian Attacks Intensify Regional Threats
UK VAT Decision Opens Path for Potential Refunds to U.S. Biopharma Firms
UK and Canada Advance ‘Middle Power’ Strategy to Shape Global Influence Beyond Superpowers
Google Explores AI Opt-Out Features in Search to Address UK Regulatory Concerns
Google Explores AI Opt-Out Features in Search to Address UK Regulatory Concerns
UK Fuel Prices Poised to Surge as Global Tensions Drive Oil Market Volatility
UK Fuel Prices Poised to Surge as Global Tensions Drive Oil Market Volatility
UK Holds Back on Hormuz Escort Mission While Continuing Talks with Allies
TrumpRx Pricing Platform Faces Scrutiny as Some Medicines Remain Costlier Than in the UK
UK, Netherlands and Finland Explore Joint Defence Investment Bank to Boost Military Capability
Deadly Meningitis Outbreak in Kent Raises Alarm as Cases Surge and Emergency Response Expands
UK Security Adviser Viewed US-Iran Nuclear Deal as Within Reach Before Sudden Escalation
UK Prime Minister Urges Continued Focus on Ukraine Amid Escalating Iran Conflict
UK Introduces New Safeguards to Shield Lenders from Bank Run Risks
UK Promotional Products Market Surpasses £1.3 Billion as Demand Strengthens in 2025
Reeves Pushes for Deeper UK-EU Economic Ties to Revive Growth
UK Security Adviser Saw No Imminent Iranian Nuclear Threat Days Before War Erupted
France Signals Warm Welcome for UK Return to EU Single Market Amid Renewed Cooperation Talks
UK Defence Official Criticises Boeing Over Delays to E-7 Wedgetail Programme
UK Urged to Secure Quantum Talent as Minister Warns Against Repeating AI Setbacks
UK Mayors Set to Gain New Spending Powers Under Reeves’ Fiscal Devolution Plan
Western Allies Urge Restraint as Israel Weighs Expanded Ground Operation in Lebanon
Trump Warns NATO Faces ‘Very Bad’ Future Without Stronger Allied Support in Iran Conflict
UK Minister Says Britain Not Bound to Support Every Demand From U.S. President
Starmer Tells Trump Britain Will Not Be Drawn Into Wider Iran War
Starmer Tells Trump Britain Will Not Be Drawn Into Wider Iran War
UK Set to Introduce Steel Tariffs of Up to 50 Percent in New Industrial Strategy
European Governments Decline Trump’s Call to Send Warships to Reopen Strait of Hormuz
Fears Over Iran Conflict Weigh on UK Consumer Confidence
Starmer Says UK Working With Allies on Hormuz Shipping Plan After Trump Raises Pressure
Iran War and Energy Shock Shake Britain’s Economy and Political Debate
Deadly Meningitis Outbreak at UK University Leaves Two Dead and Several Seriously Ill
Deadly Meningitis Outbreak at UK University Leaves Two Dead and Several Seriously Ill
King Charles and Queen Camilla Share Personal Tributes to Their Mothers on UK Mother’s Day
Prince William Honors Princess Diana with Mother’s Day Tribute
UK Economy Stalls in January as Households Cut Back on Eating Out
AI-Generated Singer Becomes Viral Voice for Iranians With New Anthem
London Private Club Founder Plans Exclusive Palm Beach Venue Near Trump’s Mar-a-Lago
×