31 Names. 30 Out of 30. The Documents Speak for Themselves.
- Patrick Duggan
- Mar 10
- 5 min read
Thirty-one people just scored perfect 30/30 on CARVER and 50/50 on DREAD.
Not because we said so. Because the U.S. Department of Justice said so — across 402,707 documents that most people will never read.
What Just Happened
We indexed 2,147 new documents this week. Dataset 12 from the DOJ's Epstein File Transfer Act releases. Two thousand and one federal court records — depositions, motions, sealed filings, docket entries from the Southern District of Florida and the Southern District of New York.
These aren't leaked. These aren't stolen. These are government-released documents, OCR'd and made full-text searchable at [epstein.dugganusa.com](https://epstein.dugganusa.com).
When we ran our military-grade framework analysis against the updated corpus, the scores exploded.
The Scores
CARVER is a U.S. Army targeting methodology. Six dimensions: Criticality, Accessibility, Recuperability, Vulnerability, Effect, Recognizability. Scale of 6 to 30. It was designed to prioritize targets in wartime. We use it to prioritize accountability.
DREAD is a Microsoft threat modeling framework. Five dimensions: Damage, Reproducibility, Exploitability, Affected Users, Discoverability. Scale of 5 to 50. It was designed to rank software vulnerabilities. We use it to rank exposure in the documentary record.
Both score against the same thing: how many times a name appears across 402,707 federal documents, cross-referenced against 5.3 million ICIJ offshore records.
Here are the 31 names that scored perfect on both:
| Name | Documents | CARVER | DREAD | Risk |
|------|-----------|--------|-------|------|
| Prince Andrew | 15,472 | 30/30 | 50/50 | CRITICAL |
| Ghislaine Maxwell | 15,136 | 30/30 | 50/50 | CRITICAL |
| Larry Summers | 12,847 | 30/30 | 50/50 | CRITICAL |
| Maria Farmer | 8,070 | 30/30 | 50/50 | CRITICAL |
| Bill Gates | 6,743 | 30/30 | 50/50 | CRITICAL |
| Bill Clinton | 6,741 | 30/30 | 50/50 | CRITICAL |
| Robert Mueller | 5,993 | 30/30 | 50/50 | CRITICAL |
| Peter Mandelson | 5,916 | 30/30 | 50/50 | CRITICAL |
| Woody Allen | 5,737 | 30/30 | 50/50 | CRITICAL |
| Steve Bannon | 5,571 | 30/30 | 50/50 | CRITICAL |
| Leon Black | 5,462 | 30/30 | 50/50 | CRITICAL |
| Sarah Kellen | 5,407 | 30/30 | 50/50 | CRITICAL |
| Jes Staley | 4,939 | 30/30 | 50/50 | CRITICAL |
| Alan Dershowitz | 4,407 | 30/30 | 50/50 | CRITICAL |
| Les Wexner | 4,126 | 30/30 | 50/50 | CRITICAL |
| Jean-Luc Brunel | 3,363 | 30/30 | 50/50 | CRITICAL |
| Nicole Junkermann | 3,107 | 30/30 | 50/50 | CRITICAL |
| Eva Dubin | 2,929 | 30/30 | 50/50 | CRITICAL |
| Virginia Giuffre | 2,669 | 30/30 | 50/50 | CRITICAL |
| George Mitchell | 2,393 | 30/30 | 50/50 | CRITICAL |
| Kevin Spacey | 2,314 | 30/30 | 50/50 | CRITICAL |
| Ehud Barak | 2,300 | 30/30 | 50/50 | CRITICAL |
| Chris Tucker | 2,285 | 30/30 | 50/50 | CRITICAL |
| Donald Trump | 2,121 | 30/30 | 50/50 | CRITICAL |
| Arianne Zucker | 2,019 | 30/30 | 50/50 | CRITICAL |
| Reid Hoffman | 1,689 | 30/30 | 50/50 | CRITICAL |
| Alexander Acosta | 1,657 | 30/30 | 50/50 | CRITICAL |
| Glenn Dubin | 1,314 | 30/30 | 50/50 | CRITICAL |
| Nadia Marcinkova | 1,031 | 30/30 | 50/50 | CRITICAL |
| Howard Lutnick | 700 | 30/30 | 50/50 | CRITICAL |
| Jamie Dimon | 647 | 30/30 | 50/50 | CRITICAL |
What the Numbers Mean
Prince Andrew appears in 15,472 federal documents. Not tabloid articles. Not blog posts. Federal documents released by the United States Department of Justice under the Epstein File Transfer Act.
Ghislaine Maxwell: 15,136. Larry Summers — the former Secretary of the Treasury, the former President of Harvard — appears in 12,847.
Maria Farmer appears in 8,070. She's a survivor. She tried to report Epstein to the FBI in 1996. The FBI did nothing for nine years. The documents prove it.
Bill Gates and Bill Clinton are virtually tied at 6,743 and 6,741. That's not a coincidence. The documentary record treats them as equivalent nodes in the network.
Robert Mueller — the man who investigated a president — appears in 5,993 Epstein-related documents. Peter Mandelson, the architect of New Labour, in 5,916.
What Changed
Last week these numbers were different. Prince Andrew was at 1,152. Gates at 504. Clinton at 894.
The jump isn't because we changed the methodology. We didn't touch the scoring algorithm. We fixed a data integrity issue: 2,001 court records had been indexed as empty stubs. The documents were in the database. The text wasn't. When we OCR'd and re-indexed them with actual content, the scores did what scores do when you add thousands of pages of depositions and court filings to the corpus.
The court records are the most name-dense documents in the entire collection. Depositions repeat names hundreds of times. Motions reference every party. Docket entries cross-reference every filing. That's why the numbers jumped by 10x or more.
Why This Matters
These frameworks weren't designed for this. CARVER was designed to help the 101st Airborne decide which bridge to blow up. DREAD was designed to help Microsoft decide which bug to patch first.
We repurposed them because the underlying logic is the same: when you have limited resources and unlimited targets, you need a way to rank. The question isn't "who is guilty" — that's for courts. The question is "where should investigators look first?"
The answer, according to 402,707 federal documents: start with Prince Andrew. Then Maxwell. Then Summers.
What We Don't Claim
A high CARVER/DREAD score does not mean guilt. Virginia Giuffre scores 30/30 and she's a survivor. Maria Farmer scores 30/30 and she's a whistleblower. Document frequency measures exposure in the record, not culpability.
Some names appear thousands of times because they were deposed. Some because they were named in motions. Some because victims mentioned them repeatedly across multiple proceedings.
The frameworks rank documentary exposure. Humans determine what that exposure means.
Search It Yourself
Every number in this article is verifiable. Go to [epstein.dugganusa.com](https://epstein.dugganusa.com), type any name, and count the results. The search engine covers all 12 DOJ datasets, 2,001 federal court records, 12,056 archive.org documents, and 5.3 million ICIJ offshore entity records.
The API is free. The data is government-sourced. The methodology is published.
We don't tell you what to think. We built the machine that lets you think for yourself.
*DugganUSA LLC indexes government-released data and makes it searchable. We do not editorialize guilt or innocence. CARVER and DREAD are established frameworks from the U.S. military and Microsoft, respectively, adapted for documentary analysis. All source data is publicly available through the Department of Justice and federal court systems.*
*Framework analysis is available on demand at [epstein.dugganusa.com](https://epstein.dugganusa.com). Professional tier subscribers can run CARVER, DREAD, Diamond Model, and ACH scoring against any name via the API.*
*Her name was Renee Nicole Good.*
*His name was Alex Jeffery Pretti.*




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