Zohran Mamdani slams Mira Nair, Jeffrey Epstein AI photos: 'How quickly a lie can spread'
Zohran Mamdani criticized AI-generated images depicting him and his mother, Mira Nair, alongside Jeffrey Epstein, calling the experience “incredibly difficult.”
New York City's mayor, Zohran Mamdani, has publicly slammed the AI-generated images circulating on social media on Wednesday that falsely depicted his mother, Mira Nair, and him as a child alongside convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. The mayor described seeing the images as “incredibly difficult.”

The fake images started circulating online shortly after the Justice Department released millions of documents from the Epstein Files. One of the documents from the new tranche included a 2009 email referring to Mira Nair's attendance at a film screening after-party.
Social media users have since exploited that context and created AI-photos.
Read more: Zohran Mamdani, mom Mira Nair, pictured with Epstein? Truth behind viral photo
“There is an adage about how quickly a lie can spread with comparison to the truth."
The AI-images went viral on various social media platforms where Mamdani and Nair can be seen in a group photo alongside Jeff Bezos, Epstein, Ghislaine Maxwell, former President Bill Clinton, and Bill Gates.
The images fueled a fresh controversy and brewed an online backlash at both Mamdani and Nair.
Another image created by AI has Nair holding a baby Mamdani with Bezos, Maxwell, Clinton, and Epstein. The account that created the images initially referred to itself as “an AI-powered meme engine.”
Responding to the controversy, Mamdani said that seeing clearly fake “patently photoshopped" images spreading widely across the world in “an era of misinformation” is “incredibly difficult.”
He also recounted an adage – "how quickly a lie can spread with comparison to the truth.”
Read more: Protest held outside Mamdani’s residence? What we know as videos surface
Call for regulation of AI
Mamdani called for a stronger regulation of artificial intelligence and digital platforms to curb the misuse of such tools. “We also have to work to ensure that we have a city, we have a state, we have a country that actually has a regulatory system when it comes to AI,” Mamdani said.
He warned about how quickly AI technology is advancing in today's world and said, “Frankly, what it looks like today is a system that is ill-equipped for the speed and the reach of the technologies in front of us.”
ABOUT THE AUTHORShirin GuptaShirin Gupta is a content producer with the Hindustan Times. She covers everything between politics, entertainment and sports at the US desk. Shirin got interested in political journalism during her time as a web editor at her college newspaper NCC News in Syracuse when she first started seeing the effects of national politics in life of her fellow colleagues. Shirin has worked on a wide range of fast-moving and developing stories locally when she was at NCC editing accessible reports for the audience. Her current role requires her to track real-time updates, verify information and present balanced coverage across diverse beats. Covering US politics from an international newsroom perspective has further deepened her understanding of how domestic decisions can have far-reaching global consequences. With a keen interest in international affairs, Shirin continues to build her expertise in geopolitics, policy shifts, and cross-border developments. She aims to learn and evolve her reporting in matters of geopolitics and international issues. Outside the newsroom Shirin writes about books and music for her personal blog. She is an avid consumer of pop culture and reveres literature.Read More

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