The school photography company caught in the Epstein files frenzy
Subscribe to enjoy similar stories. The blast radius of the Epstein files has toppled C-suite executives, shamed financiers and led to the arrest of a former British royal. Now, school picture day is in the crossfire.
A social media-led boycott has homed in on Lifetouch, the photography company hired by thousands of U.S. schools each year to take portraits of students. Online sleuths poring over government files have drawn a tenuous connection between the 90-year-old company and Leon Black, the former CEO of its private-equity owner, Apollo Global Management.
The backlash has prompted school districts across the country to cancel their contracts with Lifetouch. But unlike Jeffrey Epstein’s cozy messages with some business leaders or smiling photos of billionaires on Epstein’s island, there are no exchanges with Lifetouch executives in the Epstein files. Its parent company, Shutterfly, was acquired by Apollo one month after Epstein’s death in 2019.
And it is one of nearly 200 companies in Apollo’s vast portfolio, which Black hasn’t overseen in five years. The controversy over Lifetouch was caused by an army of amateur detectives looking for hidden links in the Epstein files. As the nation reels from the details of Epstein’s sex-trafficking operation and private correspondence with elites, any line of connection—no matter how thin or dotted—is setting off alarms.
“Now all these are obviously like unverified claims," said Shannon Wiltrout, a Pennsylvania mother of two, who called upon her local school to end ties with Lifetouch. “But I’d rather be safe than sorry with my children." Her daughter’s school canceled its contract, as did dozens of others from California to Texas to Kentucky to Arizona. Lifetouch maintains that
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