Nadia Marcinko (legally Nada Marcinkova until about 2011) is a Slovakia-born commercial pilot who spent her late teens and twenties inside Jeffrey Epstein's inner circle. Investigators and multiple accusers say Epstein described her as a 'sex slave,' listed her as a protected co-conspirator in his 2007 non-prosecution agreement, and used her both as a participant in and facilitator of abuse.1
Flight manifests show her on hundreds of Epstein trips, sometimes while still underage.2 After receiving effective immunity, she rebranded as a social-media 'Global Girl,' earned high-level jet ratings, and launched the aviation-marketing firm Aviloop from a Manhattan building controlled by Epstein's brother.31
She invoked the Fifth Amendment in civil litigation, remains uncharged, and has reportedly vanished from public view following the 2024 document releases.45
Identity & Early Life
Marcinko was born in 1986 in what is now Košice, Slovakia.5 Court filings and police interviews assert that Epstein arranged for her to enter the United States around 2001, at roughly age 15, with the promise of modeling work.16
Entry into the Epstein Network
Palm Beach police records recalled Epstein boasting that he had 'purchased' Marcinkova from her parents and trained her for his personal use.1 Accusers told detectives that she both engaged in sex acts with minors and instructed them on what Epstein expected.6
Timeline of Documented Activity
Role in Abuse & Logistics
Investigators place Marcinko at multiple nodes of Epstein's trafficking operation: recruiting girls under the guise of massage work, participating in assaults, and later ferrying Epstein and guests as a licensed pilot. Flight logs include her initials on trips to Little St. James, Teterboro, and Paris.2 The 2016 Giuffre litigation sought her testimony precisely because witnesses saw her arranging schedules and enforcing Epstein's rules.4
Legal Status & Immunity
The 2007 Florida agreement explicitly barred federal charges against 'Sarah Kellen, Adriana Ross, Lesley Groff, or Nadia Marcinkova.' When Ghislaine Maxwell appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court in 2025, her lawyers cited this same clause, arguing it should have shielded all co-conspirators nationwide; the government disagreed.7 Marcinko herself has repeatedly declined to testify, invoking the Fifth Amendment dozens of times.5
Business Rebranding: Aviloop & 'Global Girl'
Aviloop markets pilot services, aviation events, and social-media campaigns; its website lists Marcinko as founder and chief executive, highlighting her Airline Transport Pilot certificate and aerobatic credentials.3 Public filings tie Aviloop's mailing address to Epstein-controlled real estate at 301 E 66th St., Manhattan.16
Current Whereabouts & Ongoing Scrutiny
Following the January 2024 unsealing of the final Epstein documents, reporters and neighbors said Marcinko was no longer seen at her Upper East Side apartment, and her social-media channels went dark.5 Law-enforcement focus has shifted to whether her 2007 immunity can withstand renewed federal interest if fresh evidence surfaces—especially because survivors continue to name her in civil filings.8
Conclusion
Marcinko's story sits at the intersection of victimhood and participation. The record shows (1) early coercion, (2) later authority over aviation logistics, and (3) legal insulation via the 2007 deal. Each element is well-documented through primary filings and reputable media analysis, yet her testimony remains unheard. Continual document releases and civil cases may determine whether that silence endures.