Harvard University is in crisis, launching a new internal probe into its president, Larry Summers, after the release of emails revealing he corresponded with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein up until the day before his 2019 arrest—and sought his advice on a personal romantic relationship.
The investigation, confirmed by the university, was triggered by a trove of documents released by Congress that show Summers and Epstein dining together frequently and exchanging emails where Epstein acted as the powerful economist’s “wing man.” In one shocking exchange, Summers, a married father of six, asked Epstein for advice on how to pursue a woman who saw him as an “economics mentor.”

The revelations have already forced Summers to step down from the board of OpenAI and sever ties with a major Washington think tank. He has publicly expressed “shame” and “regret,” telling his Harvard students he will “step back from public activity,” but the university is now under intense pressure to hold its leader accountable.
Why It Matters
This is an institutional catastrophe. The emails don’t just show a casual association; they paint a picture of a deeply inappropriate, ongoing friendship where a university president was seeking personal counsel from a known predator. The “wing man” exchange is particularly damning, revealing a level of personal intimacy that is utterly incompatible with the moral leadership required of Harvard’s president.
Summers’ fall from grace is swift and deserved, but the real question is for Harvard itself. How could its president maintain such a close relationship with a man whose crimes were an open secret? This probe isn’t a solution; it’s a symptom of a profound failure of judgment at the very top. The university’s reputation is now inextricably linked to a man who saw a sex trafficker as a trusted confidant.
















