Apollo, Leon Black sued for allegedly concealing Epstein business ties from shareholders

Apollo Global Management’s logo at their office in Tokyo, Japan October 20, 2025. REUTERS
NEW YORK, (Reuters) – Shareholders sued Apollo Global Management and ​its billionaire co-founders Leon Black and Marc Rowan on Monday in a proposed class action for ‌allegedly defrauding them for nearly five years about the private capital firm’s business dealings with disgraced sex offender and financier Jeffrey Epstein.
According to a complaint filed in Manhattan federal court, the shareholders alleged the defendants falsely denied in several regulatory filings in 2021 and 2022 ever ​doing business with Epstein, though Epstein “was heavily involved and frequently communicated with Apollo Global’s senior leadership” about ​Apollo’s business during the 2010s.
The shareholders said Apollo’s stock fell about 15% over three weeks in ⁠February, wiping out about $12 billion of market value, as the truth came out.
A spokesperson for Apollo and Rowan, its ​chief executive, declined to comment. Whit Clay, a spokesperson for Black, declined to comment. Rowan succeeded Black as chief executive ​in 2021.
Apollo said in a February 18 letter, to clients that neither Rowan nor anyone else at Apollo other than Black had a business or personal relationship with Epstein.
It also said that “in select instances” Rowan and other Apollo employees provided information to Epstein related to his ​tax work for Black, but that when Epstein sought to do work for other co-founders he was “declined at every turn.”
Black ​has denied wrongdoing and said he was unaware of Epstein’s criminal conduct.
Shareholders led by Solomon Feldman said in the lawsuit that Apollo’s regulatory ‌filings ⁠referred to a January 2021 review, by the Dechert law firm, which found Black paid Epstein $158 million for tax and estate planning, but Apollo never retained Epstein for any services and Epstein never invested in Apollo-managed funds.
Apollo’s assurances allegedly proved false following the U.S. Department of Justice’s January 30 release of a large cache of documents, videos and images related to Epstein.
The ​complaint cites media reports on ​Epstein’s alleged written and in-person ⁠communications with Apollo officials during the mid-2010s, and demands by teachers unions that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission investigate Apollo.
Though the proposed class period began in May 2021, after ​Black stepped down as Apollo’s chief executive and chairman, the complaint said he remained ​liable as a “control ⁠person” with 7% of Apollo’s stock as of April 2025.
Apollo’s share price decline in February coincided with the latest stage of a months-long slide among large alternative asset managers.
Investors in the sector have worried about growth prospects, underwriting standards in private lending, ⁠and whether ​AI would disrupt software businesses that the firms have lent to or ​purchased.
Epstein died in a Manhattan jail in August 2019 while awaiting trial for sex trafficking. The office of the New York City medical examiner ruled ​his death a suicide.

Reporting by Jonathan Stempel and Isla Binnie in New York; Editing by Noeleen Walder and Christian Schmollinger

 

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