Warren Buffett stops Gates Foundation donations over Epstein links
Warren Buffett skipped his annual billion-dollar donation to the Gates Foundation while he awaits a review of the charity’s ties to Jeffrey Epstein.
For the first time in two decades, the famed investor broke his annual giving tradition following revelations in the Epstein files about the potential extent of Bill Gates’s relationship with the paedophile.
The Gates Foundation has faced significant controversy after emails released by the US justice department in January showed Epstein was in contact with the non-profit’s staff.
Advertisement
Advertisement
The foundation launched an independent review into its ties with Epstein in April.
Mr Buffett, 95, is delaying his decision until after the findings are released this summer, people familiar with his plans told the Wall Street Journal.
The Berkshire Hathaway chairman has given roughly $48bn (£36bn) to the Gates Foundation, typically transferring shares in June each year as part of a “lifetime” pledge he made in 2006.
Mr Buffett said in March that he had not spoken to Mr Gates, a decades-old friend, since the release of the Epstein files.
Mr Gates’s name appeared extensively within the millions of documents related to the convicted sex offender released by the US government. There are at least two photos of Mr Gates with women whose faces are redacted. He has not been accused of any wrongdoing.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Before the release of the documents, it was already known that Mr Gates had a relationship with Epstein beginning in 2011 – almost three years after he was convicted for soliciting prostitution from a minor. The pair reportedly cut ties in 2014.
Bill Gates stands next to a woman whose face is obscured in this image from the Epstein estate
The Microsoft founder and the world’s leading global health philanthropist has called his relationship with him “a huge mistake”. He has strongly denied claims of personal wrongdoing.
Mr Buffett stepped down as a trustee of the Gates Foundation in 2021 after Bill and Melinda French Gates announced their divorce.
He said in 2024 that the foundation would be given no more of his money after he dies. That same year, Ms French Gates left the non-profit she co-founded to concentrate on her own philanthropic work.
Advertisement
Advertisement
On June 10, Mr Gates returned to the spotlight when he named three women he had extramarital affairs with as he testified in front of the House Oversight Committee.
According to a transcript released last week, he admitted to affairs with two Russian women – Mila Antonova, a bridge player, and Karima Nigmatulina, a nuclear physicist – along with an unnamed female scientist.
Jeffrey Epstein (centre left) and Bill Gates (centre right) pictured at Epstein’s Manhattan townhouse in 2011 – Department of justice
Questioned by US congressmen, the billionaire again denied any sexual misconduct but agreed he “may have been in the presence of victims” unknowingly while meeting Epstein.
He was also asked about an unsealed 2013 email Epstein sent to himself, alleging Mr Gates asked for antibiotics he could “surreptitiously give” to his then-wife, Ms French Gates, after catching a sexually transmitted infection. He has denied this.
Advertisement
Advertisement
In the closed-door interview, he admitted telling an associate he might have caught an infection through one of his affairs. “But I have never had an STD,” he added.
Mr Gates claimed that Epstein used compromising information about his past extramarital affairs to pressure him in 2014.
The philanthropist admitted to Gates Foundation staff in February that he had two affairs, later discovered by Epstein, but said they did not involve victims of the paedophile.
The Telegraph has reached Berkshire Hathaway and the Gates Foundation for comment.