Tisch family moves to transfer $2.5 billion Giants stake to children as Epstein cloud hangs over co-owner
The Tisch family wants out of its New York Giants equity, and the timing raises questions nobody in the NFL front office seems eager to answer.
An NFL memo obtained by ESPN revealed that Steve, Jonathan, and Laurie Tisch are seeking to transfer their collective 23.1% stake in the Giants to their children through a trust. The proposed transfer values the franchise at $10.8 billion, putting the stake itself at roughly $2.5 billion.
According to the memo, the move would be total. "Following the transactions, the Sellers will no longer own any interest in the Club."
That's a clean break. And it comes while Steve Tisch's name is still reverberating through the Epstein files released by the U.S. Justice Department in January.
The Epstein shadow
The Justice Department released more than 3 million documents related to the Epstein investigation, and Steve Tisch's name appeared more than 400 times in those files, Fox News reported. The documents reference email exchanges between Tisch and Epstein in April 2013 and June 2013.
Tisch stated on Jan. 31, attempting to get ahead of the story. He described the relationship as limited.
"We had a brief association where we exchanged emails about adult women, and in addition, we discussed movies, philanthropy and investments."
"I did not take him up on any of his invitations and never went to his island."
"As we all know now, he was a terrible person and someone I deeply regret associating with."
Note the construction: "emails about adult women." That phrase is doing an enormous amount of work. It's a denial carefully sculpted to sound exculpatory without actually clarifying what those emails contained. Over 400 mentions in 3 million documents is not a cameo. It's a recurring role.
Goodell's familiar playbook
NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell addressed the matter in February during a news conference at Super Bowl week in San Jose, California. His response was vintage Goodell: vague enough to mean nothing, specific enough to sound like something. "Absolutely we will look at all the facts."
He continued, saying the league would examine the context and how it falls under the league's personal conduct policy, before adding his trademark punt. "I think we'll take one step at a time. Let's get the facts first."
The facts have been public for months now. Three million documents' worth. At some point, "getting the facts" stops being due diligence and starts being a delay. The NFL has never been shy about suspending players over allegations with far less documentation. The league moved with remarkable speed when it wanted to punish Daniel Snyder, but somehow the process here requires patience.
A $10.8 billion exit
Whether the equity transfer has anything to do with the Epstein investigation is, according to reporting, unknown. No direct evidence links the two. But context matters, and the context here is not subtle.
The Tisch family has been involved in Giants ownership since 1991. That's over three decades of holding a stake in one of the NFL's flagship franchises. The decision to transfer all of it, leaving the family with zero ownership interest, is not a routine estate planning maneuver. It's a complete exit dressed in trust language.
The $10.8 billion valuation itself is notable. For comparison:
- Miami Dolphins owner Stephen Ross sold just 1% of his team to billionaire entrepreneur Lin Bin at a valuation of $12.5 billion, a record.
- Julia Koch, a board member with Koch, bought a 10% stake in the Giants in October 2025 at a $10.3 billion valuation.
The Giants' valuation in the Tisch transfer sits slightly above the Koch purchase price. NFL franchises are appreciating assets. Exiting entirely right now means the family is prioritizing something over continued upside. What that something is remains the question nobody will answer directly.
The real accountability gap
The NFL operates as one of the most powerful private organizations in America. It enforces personal conduct policies against players with mechanical precision. A running back caught on video faces suspension within weeks. A wide receiver's social media post triggers an investigation overnight.
An owner whose name surfaces 400 times in the files of a convicted sex trafficker gets "let's take it one step at a time."
This is the two-tiered system that corrodes institutional credibility. Not because the league is necessarily protecting Tisch, but because the machinery of accountability plainly operates at different speeds depending on who it's pointed at. Players are labor. Owners are partners. The conduct policy has always understood the difference, even if the league's public statements pretend otherwise.
The Mara family founded the Giants in 1925 and remains the controlling ownership group. They will outlast this chapter. The Tisch family, it appears, has decided not to wait around to see how it ends.
The trust will hold the equity. The children will inherit the asset. And Steve Tisch will no longer technically own a piece of the NFL. Clean on paper. The Epstein files, though, are permanent.



