She’s flashing a million-dollar smile.
Jeffrey Epstein’s last girlfriend graduated from a postdoctoral dentistry program at Columbia University in May and obtained her license to practice in New York a few months ago, The Post has learned.
Karyna Shuliak also appears in a never-before-seen graduation video — all smiles as she strolls across the Columbia stage, leaving the stench of scandal far behind her.
But the Belarusian beauty was tightly entangled with the sex predator. She was described as staunchly loyal to Epstein and was the recipient of his last phone call from prison. Shuliak, 36, was set inherit $100 million, a 32-carat engagement ring and Epstein’s properties, including his infamous “Pedo Island,” in the will he signed two days before his death.
She made recent headlines after the federal Epstein files revealed the pedophile donated $100,000 to an Ivy League dean to get her admitted to the university’s dental school as a transfer student in 2012, just weeks after the school had rejected her. Columbia recently axed two of the dental school officials involved.
After she graduated from dental school in 2015, she went on to pursue postgraduate studies at the Morningside Heights institution, records reveal. She completed a residency in advanced education in general dentistry last spring, a program Columbia describes as “designed to prepare dentists to practice independently.”
During the program, she would’ve had the “opportunity to treat a large number of patients who present with a wide range of comprehensive care problems,” according to the school’s description.
In the little-noticed video posted by Columbia’s College of Dental Medicine to YouTube, the stage included professor Dr. Thomas Magnani, one of the officials the school said it cut all ties with in the wake of last month’s revelations. Magnani was Epstein’s dentist, helped get Shuliak admitted in 2012 and solicited donations from Epstein, the Department of Justice files show.
In an awkward scene, after she arrives on stage, dental school officials fumble to find a diploma with her name.
“Where’s Karyna?” asked Dr. Vicky Evangelidis-Sakellson, director of the Postdoctoral Advanced Education in General Dentistry program, as she looked through the pile of diplomas.
“That’s okay,” Shuliak replies, before she bursts out laughing, looking completely unbothered.
“What do you mean that’s okay?” retorted Evangelidis-Sakellson. “That’s not okay.”
“Give her anything,” another dental school official is heard saying, before Shuliak whispers something indiscernible while pointing to the pile, and they hand her a diploma and all hug and pose for a picture.

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