Unmasking Casey Wasserman: The Emails That Demand His Resignation from LA 2028 Olympics
- Anonymous
- Feb 22
- 4 min read
Updated: Feb 23
The LA 2028 Olympics promised a fresh start for the city and the global sporting community. Yet, recent revelations have cast a dark shadow over this event. Emails exchanged between Casey Wasserman, the chairman of the LA 2028 Olympics, and Ghislane Maxwell have surfaced, exposing troubling connections and questionable conduct. These communications reveal a side of Wasserman that contradicts the integrity expected from someone in his position. Given the Olympics' ongoing struggles with abuse scandals, it is clear that the leadership must change to restore trust and ensure a safe environment for all involved.

The Context of the LA 2028 Olympics Controversies
The Olympics have long been a symbol of unity, sportsmanship, and global cooperation. However, recent years have seen the event mired in controversies, especially concerning abuse scandals involving athletes and officials. These issues have raised serious questions about the governance and oversight of the Olympic committees worldwide.
LA 2028 was supposed to be a turning point, a chance to rebuild the Olympic brand with transparency and accountability. Instead, the emergence of emails between Casey Wasserman and Ghislane Maxwell threatens to deepen the crisis. Maxwell, a figure already associated with serious legal and ethical controversies, is not someone one would expect to be in communication with the chairman of such a prestigious event.
What the Emails DO NOT Contain
Reading through e-mail correspondence that's available as of February 2026 in the Epstein Files, there are a few things notably absent :
Contact with anyone after 2003.
Discussions of political, Olympic, or budgeting matters.
Direct emails with Jeffrey Epstein.
Regard for the possible damage he was causing.
While we can give him credit for those things, many notable figures maintain that what WAS in the e-mails is more than enough to boot him as chairman of the Olympics.
What the Emails Reveal About Casey Wasserman
The leaked emails show a pattern of communication that raises red flags about Wasserman’s judgment and ethics. While the full content of all the emails remains confidential, key excerpts and summaries are searchable in the Epstein Files. These messages suggest:
Close and frequent contact between Wasserman and Maxwell, despite her notorious reputation and Wasserman's marriage to another woman.
Discussions that indicate his interests were often of a very sexual nature and included "massages."
Time on Jeffrey Epstein's private jet.
A lack of transparency and accountability in his dealings, which contradicts the public image he projects.
This correspondence paints Wasserman as a slippery figure, prioritizing personal connections over the welfare of the LA Games and the athletes who depend on a safe and fair environment.
Why Casey Wasserman’s Position Is No Longer Tenable
Leadership in any major international event requires the highest standards of integrity. The chairman of the LA 2028 Olympics holds a position of immense responsibility, tasked with ensuring the event runs smoothly and ethically. The revelations about Wasserman’s communications with Maxwell undermine confidence in his ability to lead.
The Olympics are already grappling with the fallout from abuse scandals. The last thing the event needs is a chairman whose actions suggest complicity or at least poor judgment in associating with controversial figures. This situation demands decisive action:
Resignation of Casey Wasserman to allow new leadership to restore credibility.
A thorough investigation into the nature of his communications and any potential conflicts of interest.
Implementation of stricter oversight mechanisms to prevent similar issues in the future.
Investigation into the nature of Wasserman's relationship with Sarah Hirshland and the USOPC.
The Broader Impact on the Olympic Movement
The LA 2028 Olympics are more than just a sporting event; they are a global symbol. When leadership is compromised, it affects the entire Olympic movement. Athletes, sponsors, and fans lose faith, and the spirit of the games suffers. One athlete in particular is synonymous with the Summer Games, Simone Biles. In 2021, She had to fight hard to represent an Olympic Commitee and Gymnastics Organization (USAG) who didn't support her and tried to hide the abuse she was enduring through a global pandemic, sponsors hesitant tohave their name associated with an olympic games that would allow the way she was treated, a medication shortage due to politics, and a case of "the twisties". Larry Nassar is still a dirty word in the world of Olympic sport and Casey Wasserman's involvement in the upcoming Summer Games only adds more infamous names to the list: Ghislane Maxwell and Jeffrey Epstein. Consider hpw impossible it makes things for the biggest names in Olympics to show up, support the games, be the face of the brand, try to keep sponsors... and a smile on their face.
This scandal highlights the urgent need for reform in how the Olympic committees operate - both the IOC and the USOPC. Transparency, ethical conduct, cooperation with oversight orgs, and accountability must be non-negotiable. The emails between Wasserman and Maxwell serve as a stark reminder that without vigilance and the right leadership choices, Olympic events can be easily tarnished.
Steps Forward for LA 2028 & the Olympic Committees
To move past this crisis, the LA 2028 Olympics must take clear and visible steps:
Appoint new leadership with a proven track record of ethical behavior.
Publicly commit to transparency in all dealings related to the games.
Engage independent watchdogs to monitor the planning and execution of the event.
Prioritize athlete safety and well-being above all else.
Only by addressing these issues head-on can the LA 2028 Olympics hope to regain the trust of the public, our athletes, and the global sports community.



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