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Goldman Sachs Shares Plummet Pre-Market: Top Lawyer Exits Amid Epstein Email Scandal

Goldman Sachs Shares Plummet Pre-Market: Top Lawyer Exits Amid Epstein Email Scandal

Published:
2026-02-13 13:07:21
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Goldman Sachs shares take pre-market pounding as top lawyer leaves over Epstein emails

Goldman Sachs is taking a pre-market beating—and it's not because of interest rates or inflation. The bank's top legal eagle just flew the coop, and the reason has traders hitting the sell button faster than a high-frequency algorithm.

The Lawyer's Exit

No golden parachute here. The departure is tied directly to the lingering specter of Jeffrey Epstein. Internal emails surfaced, creating a compliance nightmare no amount of corporate spin could contain. The move wasn't a retirement; it was a strategic ejection to limit reputational fallout.

Market Reaction & The Bigger Picture

Pre-market trading turned ugly. The share price drop signals a market that's lost patience with legacy finance's recurring scandals. It's a stark reminder that for all their polished quarterly reports, the old guard is still vulnerable to the ghosts in their servers.

In an era where decentralized ledgers promise immutable transparency, Wall Street's biggest players keep getting tripped up by their own inboxes. Maybe the real systemic risk isn't in the code, but in the 'reply-all' chain. Another day, another crisis perfectly managed about six months too late.

Goldman Sachs counsel to step down after Epstein files reveal ties 

Late Thursday, Ruemmler told the Financial Times that the attention on her had become untenable. “I made the determination that the media attention on me, relating to my prior work as a defence attorney, was becoming a distraction,” she said.

She also told Axios it was her “responsibility…to put Goldman Sachs’ interests first,” and informed Chief Executive David Solomon of her plans to quit. Solomon accepted the resignation and praised Ruemmler as “one of the most accomplished professionals in her field.”

“Throughout her tenure, Kathy has been an extraordinary general counsel, and we are grateful for her contributions and sound advice on a wide range of consequential legal matters for the firm,” Solomon said in a statement.

Earlier this business week, the Justice Department released more documents from its Epstein investigation. The documents showed Ruemmler was in contact with the sex offender before she joined Goldman Sachs.

In one of the emails covered by FT, Ruemmler asked Epstein if he was going to trade “one of his Russians” for her to get a job at Citadel. In another email chain, she forwarded messages to Epstein about an affair she had with one of his close associates.

The records also showed Epstein provided her with luxury gifts, including a Hermès handbag, Apple devices, spa treatments, haircuts, and plane tickets. “Am totally tricked out by Uncle Jeffrey today! Jeffrey boots, handbag, and watch!” she wrote in a January 2019 email.

Ruemmler insists she regrets knowing Epstein and was unaware of his criminal conduct. “I made decisions based on the information that was available to me. I have an enormous amount of sympathy and heartache for anyone who he hurt,” the outgoing bank lawyer told reporters.

Ruemmler served as WHITE House Counsel under former President Barack Obama before joining Goldman Sachs. She later became one of the bank’s most senior executives and sat on internal committees on reputational risk and conduct.

Goldman Sachs in frenzy after Ruemmler’s ‘forced’ resignation

According to several current and former executives within the American bank, there is frustration towards how CEO Solomon has handled the news about Ruemmler. Some board members who are reportedly against Solomon’s support for Ruemmler said he could harm Goldman’s reputation.

“It’s a distraction, and it’s embarrassing,” said one person close to a board member before her resignation. “It’s not the board’s job to hire and fire people. That is the CEO’s role.”

Five former partners said they were surprised Solomon chose to publicly stand by Ruemmler, and expected the firm to distance itself more clearly from the controversy. Before her ties to Epstein became public, Ruemmler was internally liked for being disciplined, competent, and discreet. 

The bank did not announce an immediate successor and has not revealed any interim leadership plans for its legal division.

Last week, at another law firm affected by the Epstein ordeal, Brad Karp stepped down as chair of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison after his ties to the sex trafficker appeared in the latest document release. Karp said the disclosures had placed all the focus on him, and “that is not in the best interests of the firm.”

In a 2015 email, Karp thanked Epstein for inviting him to “an evening I’ll never forget.” A 2016 email showed Karp asking for his assistance in securing a job for his son on the set of a Woody Allen film.

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