Billionaire Pedophile Jeffrey Epstein Goes Free

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Re: Billionaire Pedophile Jeffrey Epstein Goes Free

Postby Iamwhomiam » Tue Aug 27, 2019 11:55 am

did I leave any thing out of the coverup timeline?


The report from an inmate that he heard screams coming from Epstein's cell.

Another man who had once been an inmate in that wing reported the ceiling in the cell to be 9 feet high, but this you sort of touched upon.

I think Epstein was 6'2" tall. He would have had a three-foot reach. Standing on his bed he could have tied a twisted sheet, even if made from paper, into a rope and affix it to some sort of fixture on the ceiling, if there was such a fixture mounted there. So he could have committed suicide. Sure, it's questionable as to paper sheets being strong enough to hold his weight without braking, but if they were, suicide remains a possibility. I think he was killed and did not commit suicide.

I also believe we should keep our eyes on Acosta; I feel he'll soon "expire," too. Had he not been so lenient with Epstein, this trafficking ring have been all but forgotten, except by his and his cohorts many still living victims. Thank goodness New York allowed this wretchedness to be so broadly exposed.

Who would trust any photograph capturing the scene if such was produced at this late date? Crime scene photos are unlikely to ever be produced, but if they did, what would they show? The guards removed his 'hanging body' and attempted resuscitation of his corpse, so what could we learn from a photo of his corpse lying on the floor in his cell? A photo of the ceiling would be of more interest to me. One of the ceiling would show the lamp fixture he supposedly hung himself from. Then we could confirm or deny the possibility of suicide.

But again, a photograph of the ceiling being produced at this late date might show a friggin chandelier hanging there.
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Re: Billionaire Pedophile Jeffrey Epstein Goes Free

Postby seemslikeadream » Tue Aug 27, 2019 2:19 pm


random facts girl.

well, the statements made in court today by Epstein's victims seem to be sufficient to get arrest warrants against Maxwell, Kellen, and all the other pimps, clients and enablers that were mentioned, no?
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‘Historic’ day as victims of Jeffrey Epstein will get to testify Tuesday
August 27, 2019 08:27 AM

Years later, Epstein’s victims discuss the lasting impact of sexual abuse

Victims of Jeffrey Epstein share the emotional toll that sexual abuse has taken on them — even years after the abuse occurred. Miami Herald reporter Julie K. Brown interviewed the young women, most speaking for the first time about Epstein. By Emily Michot | Julie K. Brown
New York
In what one lawyer called ”a historic day for crime victims in America,” more than a dozen women — and perhaps as many as three dozen — who were sexually abused by sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein are expected to testify in a New York courtroom, giving them a voice that they were deprived of by federal prosecutors more than a decade ago when they were abused by him as teenagers.

The hearing, before U.S. District Judge Richard M. Berman, will mark the first time many of the victims will be able to speak about the betrayal they’ve felt at the hands of federal prosecutors, who gave Epstein a secret plea deal in 2008. It’s also the first time that they are able to talk about the financier’s death in a federal prison two weeks ago.

Palm Beach multimillionaire Jeffrey Epstein has been a free man, despite sexually abusing dozens of underage girls according to police and prosecutors. His victims have never had a voice, until now.

“I can’t say that I’m pleased he committed suicide, but I am at peace knowing he will not be able to hurt anyone else,’’ said one of his victims in a written statement released Tuesday by her lawyer, Lisa Bloom.

Bradley Edwards, one the attorneys who brought a precedent-setting crime victims’ rights case on behalf of the women, said Tuesday’s proceeding will be “a historic day for crime victims in the United States.“

He continued: “This hearing has great significance. While it does not provide complete closure, it solidifies the fact that victims are an integral part of the process,’’ he said.

It’s unclear exactly how many women will appear at the hearing, which is a mechanism for federal prosecutors in New York to formally drop the sex trafficking case against Epstein, who who was found dead in his jail cell on August 10, one week after he was removed from suicide watch.

Attorney General William Barr has ordered a federal investigation into his death, which the medical examiner ruled a suicide.

Ghislaine Maxwell is named in at least one of the three lawsuits filed Tuesday, Aug. 20, 2019, against the estate of Jeffrey Epstein.
Geoffrey Berman, U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, has said he intends to pursue federal charges against the co-conspirators Epstein used to recruit girls and young women around the country and abroad. Among those suspected of helping him is Ghislaine Maxwell, a British socialite and daughter of the late publishing tycoon Robert Maxwell. Maxwell has denied the allegations.

The case was first investigated by Palm Beach police beginning in 2005. It wound through the criminal justice system, ending with the FBI and the U.S. attorney in Miami at the time, Alexander Acosta. The Miami Herald, in a three-part series published this past November, reconstructed the case by analyzing the dozens of civil suits filed over the past decade. The Herald also identified more than 80 women who alleged they were abused by Epstein, interviewing about a dozen of them for the series. Four of them spoke on the record and on video.


How a teen runaway became one of Jeffrey Epstein’s victims

Virginia Roberts was working at Mar-a-Lago when she was recruited to be a masseuse to Palm Beach hedge fund manager Jeffrey Epstein. She was lured into a life of depravity and sexual abuse.

At least two of the women who were part of the series are expected to testify Tuesday.

As a result of the series, and subsequent stories that followed further scrutinizing the case, Acosta — appointed U.S. secretary of labor by President Trump in 2017 — was forced to resign. Epstein, who had returned to his jet-setting life after a short jail term, was arrested on new federal charges in July.

There are two federal investigations into the case as well as a criminal probe in Florida, where Epstein abused many of the girls from 1997 to 2006, court records show. The victims, most of whom were 13 to 16 years of age, were recruited from schools, spas and malls as part of a sexual pyramid-like operation in which they were offered money in exchange for giving him massages. The massages sometimes turned into sexual assaults.

In February, a federal judge in Florida ruled that Epstein’s 2008 plea deal was negotiated in violation of the federal Crime Victims’ Rights Act, which requires federal prosecutors to take certain steps to involve victims in the criminal justice process. In this case, the judge found that prosecutors deliberately hid the plea deal from Epstein’s victims, sealing the agreement so that no one, including the victims and the public, would learn about it until months after the case was closed.

The non-prosecution agreement called for Epstein to serve little more than a year in the Palm Beach County Jail. During his incarceration, he was allowed to leave his jail nearly every day, spending up to 12 hours in a luxurious office he set up in West Palm Beach.

One woman has recently come forward to allege that Epstein had a sexual encounter with her and another woman in his office during the time he was provided “security” by plainclothes members of the Palm Beach Sheriff’s Office. Epstein was allowed to hire the deputies, paying them to escort him to and from jail during his 13 months of incarceration. Questions have been raised about how a convicted sex offender of young girls was allowed work release, some of that time spent behind closed doors unsupervised, records show.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has ordered an investigation into whether laws were broken by sheriff’s deputies and others in the jail who gave him special treatment.
https://www.miamiherald.com/news/state/ ... 17847.html
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Billionaire Pedophile Jeffrey Epstein Goes Free

Postby RocketMan » Tue Aug 27, 2019 2:50 pm

This post is good stuff. :partyhat

Indeed, Acosta might be feeling the Jeffrey...

Iamwhomiam » Tue Aug 27, 2019 6:55 pm wrote:
did I leave any thing out of the coverup timeline?


The report from an inmate that he heard screams coming from Epstein's cell.

Another man who had once been an inmate in that wing reported the ceiling in the cell to be 9 feet high, but this you sort of touched upon.

I think Epstein was 6'2" tall. He would have had a three-foot reach. Standing on his bed he could have tied a twisted sheet, even if made from paper, into a rope and affix it to some sort of fixture on the ceiling, if there was such a fixture mounted there. So he could have committed suicide. Sure, it's questionable as to paper sheets being strong enough to hold his weight without braking, but if they were, suicide remains a possibility. I think he was killed and did not commit suicide.

I also believe we should keep our eyes on Acosta; I feel he'll soon "expire," too. Had he not been so lenient with Epstein, this trafficking ring have been all but forgotten, except by his and his cohorts many still living victims. Thank goodness New York allowed this wretchedness to be so broadly exposed.

Who would trust any photograph capturing the scene if such was produced at this late date? Crime scene photos are unlikely to ever be produced, but if they did, what would they show? The guards removed his 'hanging body' and attempted resuscitation of his corpse, so what could we learn from a photo of his corpse lying on the floor in his cell? A photo of the ceiling would be of more interest to me. One of the ceiling would show the lamp fixture he supposedly hung himself from. Then we could confirm or deny the possibility of suicide.

But again, a photograph of the ceiling being produced at this late date might show a friggin chandelier hanging there.
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Re: Billionaire Pedophile Jeffrey Epstein Goes Free

Postby seemslikeadream » Tue Aug 27, 2019 5:50 pm

23 Women Stood In Court And Said Jeffrey Epstein Abused Them. Here Are Their Most Powerful Quotes.
One by one, with many in tears, the women described how Epstein manipulated, coerced, threatened, and sexually abused them when they were just teens.

Julia Reinstein
One by one, with many in tears, the women described how Epstein manipulated, coerced, threatened, and sexually abused them when they were just teens.

Getty Images; Reuters
In a packed federal courtroom in New York City on Tuesday morning, 23 women spoke about sexual abuse they said they faced as underage girls at the hands of Jeffrey Epstein.

Epstein — who was being held on federal charges for allegedly running a sex trafficking operation in which he sexually abused dozens of underage girls, some as young as 14 — killed himself in jail on Aug. 10 while awaiting trial.

Following Epstein's initial arrest, US Attorney for the Southern District of New York Geoffrey Berman said that bringing charges against the financier was “profoundly important to the many alleged victims who are now young women," and that "they deserve their day in court."

Denied their chance at true justice upon his death, some of these women got at least a day in court on Tuesday. In formally closing the case against Epstein, Judge Richard M. Berman took the unusual step of inviting the women to speak, thinking it important they should at least be given the opportunity to tell their stories.

And so one by one, with many in tears, the women stood in front of the judge and described how Epstein manipulated, coerced, threatened, and sexually abused them when they were just teen girls in the early 2000s. Many of them said Epstein paid them to give him nude "massages," then violently raped them.

Some of the women used their names. Many didn't, instead going by "Jane Doe." A number of them had their lawyers read statements they'd written.

Here are some of their most powerful words.


Jane Rosenburg / Reuters
Victims wait to make impact statements during the Epstein hearing on Tuesday.
Courtney Wild

"Jeffrey Epstein robbed myself and all the other victims of our day in court to confront him one by one, and for that he is a coward."

Jane Doe #1

"I still feel like I am learning the ways that he's impacted me."

"Even though Jeffrey Epstein brought it to a grand scale, on some level, a lot of girls could relate to the trauma we are talking about."

Jane Doe #2

"I think each of us has a different story and different circumstances for why we stayed in it, but for me, I think he was really strategic in how he approached each of us. Things happened slowly over time. It was almost like that analogy of a frog being in a pan of water and slowly turning the flame up."

"A lot of us were in very vulnerable situations and in extreme poverty, circumstances where we didn't have anyone on our side."

Jane Doe #3

"My world kind of spiraled after that. I stopped going on modeling castings. I gained weight. I became depressed. I stopped going out with my friends. And only five months after I had been in New York City to pursue my dream, I left. I left the modeling industry, I left New York City, and I totally switched my career path."

Jane Doe #4

"We will always carry irreparable damage and pain throughout our lives after this. It's something that's never going to go away. Whoever we marry in our life, whatever future we have in our life, it's always going to be something that's always there for us."

Jane Doe #5

"You paid for your freedom. You violated my rights. You should have to pay for them, just as anyone else. You got a plea deal no one else would have been able to get. You used your money to get out of paying the price for your actions."

Chauntae Davies

"I began my massage, trying not to let him smell my fear and obvious discomfort, but before I knew what was happening, he grabbed onto my wrist and tugged me towards the bed. I tried to pull away, but he was unbuttoning my shorts and pulling my body onto his already naked body faster than I could think. I was searching for words but all I could say was, 'No, please stop,' but that just seemed to excite him more."

Anouska Georgiou

"Something I think is very important to communicate is that loss of innocence, trust, and joy that is not recoverable. The abuse, spanning several years, was devaluing beyond measure and affected my ability to form and maintain healthy relationships, both in my work and my personal life. He could not begin to fathom what he took from us."

Michelle Licata

"What happened to me occurred many years ago when I was in high school, but it still affects my life. I was told then that Jeffrey Epstein was going to be held accountable, but he was not. In fact, the government worked out a secret deal and didn't tell me about it... The fact that I mattered this time and the other victims mattered is what counts."

Theresa J. Helm

"That experience for the last 17 years has been a dark corner in my story... So I'm here today because it is time to bring light to that darkness, and it's time to replace that darkness with light."

Virginia Roberts Giuffre

"He will not have his day in court, but the reckoning of accountability has begun, supported by the voices of these brave and beautiful women in this courtroom today. The reckoning must not end — it must continue. He did not act alone and we, the victims, know that."

Sarah Ransome

"I would like to acknowledge and extend my gratitude to the prosecutors from the Southern District of New York for pursuing justice on behalf of the victims. Please, please finish what you have started."

"We, the victims, are still here, prepared to tell the truth, and we all know he did not act alone. We are survivors, and the pursuit of justice should not abate."

Annie Farmer (speaking on behalf of her sister Maria Farmer)

"Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell not only assaulted her, but as we're hearing from so many of these brave women here today, they stole her dreams and her livelihood. She risked her safety in 1996, so many years ago, to report them — to no avail — and it is heartbreaking to her and to me that all this destruction has been wrought since that time."

Marijke Chartouni

"She told me he went to Cooper Union. He was a mathematical genius. That he had favorite girls that he would take to Chanel for 15-minute, all-you-can-buy shopping trips. She told me his right-hand person had connection to the arts and the fashion world, and she could help me."

Jennifer Aroz

"He robbed me of my dreams. He robbed me of my chance to pursue a career I always adored. He stole my chance at really feeling love because I was so scared to trust anyone for so many years that I had such severe anxiety. I didn't want to leave my house, let alone my bed."

"The fact I will never have a chance to face my predator in court eats away at my soul. Even in death, Epstein is trying to hurt me. I had hoped to at last get an apology, but this evil man had no remorse or caring for what he did to anyone."

Jane Doe #6

"Jeffrey Epstein stole my innocence. He gave me a life sentence of guilt and shame. I do not consider myself a victim. I see myself a survivor."

Jane Doe #7

"I used to be relatively carefree, inquisitive, hopeful and excited about life, but my life changed because of Jeffrey Epstein. My perspective on life became very dark when I was unknowingly recruited by one of his agents. Jeffrey Epstein ruined me."

Jane Doe #8

"I cannot say that I am pleased he committed suicide, but I am at peace knowing he will not be able to hurt anyone else. However, a sad truth remains. I, along with other people, will never have an answer as to why. I will never have an apology for the wrongdoing. And most importantly, Epstein will not be justly sentenced for his crimes."'

Shannon Stapleton / Reuters
Teala Davies speaking outside court on Tuesday.
Teala Davies

"I was going to start this statement by saying that I was a victim of Jeffrey Epstein. But that's not the case. I'm still a victim of Jeffrey Epstein. I'm still a victim because the fear of not being heard stopped me from telling my story for so many years... I'm still a victim because I am fearful for my daughters and everyone's daughters... I'm still a victim because the 17-year-old Teala was manipulated into thinking she had found someone who cared, someone who wanted to help."

Jane Doe #9

"When I was 15 years old, I flew on Jeffrey Epstein's plane to Zorro Ranch, where I was sexual molested by him for many hours. What I remember most vividly was him explaining to me how beneficial the experience was for me and how much he was helping me to grow."

"I remember feeling so small and powerless, especially after he positioned me by laying me on his floor so that I was confronted by all the framed photographs on his dresser of him smiling with wealthy celebrities and politicians."

Jane Doe #10

"Epstein targeted and took advantage of me, a young girl, whose mother had recently died a horrific death and whose family structure had deteriorated. His actions placed me, a young girl, into a downward spiral to the point where I purchased a gun and drove myself to an isolated place to end my suffering."

Jane Doe #11

"He promised me that he would write me a letter of recommendation for Harvard if I got the grades and scores needed for admission. His word was worth a lot, he assured me, as he was in the midst of funding and leading Harvard's studies on the human brain, and the president was his friend."

"I had never even kissed a boy before I met him, and never throughout the horrific abuse did Jeffrey Epstein kiss me even once. When he stole my virginity, he washed my entire body compulsively in the shower and then told me, 'If you're not a virgin, I will kill you.' And then I wasn't a virgin anymore."

Jane Doe #12

"They told me to go upstairs and directed me to Jeffrey Epstein's office. Mr. Epstein had a white robe on and we chatted very briefly. I had my portfolio of photos, but he didn't even look at it. Suddenly, he took his robe off and got close to me. I got up to leave, but the door was locked."
https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/ju ... gc#4ldqpgc
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Billionaire Pedophile Jeffrey Epstein Goes Free

Postby seemslikeadream » Tue Aug 27, 2019 8:35 pm

Jeffrey Epstein's lawyers highly 'skeptical' of suicide ruling, say he wasn't 'despairing, despondent' before death
GP: Reid Weingarten 130814
Reid Weingarten

A defense lawyer for Jeffrey Epstein on Tuesday expressed deep skepticism that the wealthy financier died by hanging himself in a Manhattan federal jail while awaiting trial on child sex trafficking charges, as a medical examiner has ruled.

The injuries suffered by Epstein are “far more consistent with assault” than suicide, the lawyer, Reid Weingarten, told Judge Richard Berman in U.S. District Court in Manhattan during a hearing.

Weingarten cited the defense’s own medical sources. Broken bones were found in Epstein’s neck during an autopsy after he died Aug. 10.

Such fractures are somewhat more common in cases of strangulation than in hanging.

Weingarten told the judge that when he and other defense attorneys spoke to Epstein shortly before his death “we did not see a despairing, despondent, suicidal person.”

Weingarten’s comments came during a proceeding where prosecutors were seeking the dismissal of child sex trafficking charges against the Epstein as a result of his death.

More than 20 alleged victims of Epstein spoke or had statements read during the hearing.

Another Epstein lawyer, Martin Weinberg, told Berman that the defense team had prepared a “significant” motion to dismiss the case, and that the lawyers were not approaching the case with a “futile, defeatist attitude.”

Weingarten said Berman had a “pivotal role to find out what happened.”

“We want the court to help us find out what happened,” Weingarten said.

“We’re skeptical of the certitude” of the finding of suicide by hanging by the New York City medical examiner, the lawyer said.

There are “significant doubts” regarding “the conclusion of suicide,” Weingarten said.

But Maurene Comey, a federal prosecutor, told Berman that Epstein’s death was already the subject of “an ongoing and active grand jury investigation.”

“It is not the purview, respectfully, of the court to conduct an investigation into uncharged matters,” Comey said.

The focus of the hearing, she added, should be to allow Epstein’s accusers to be heard “and to bring this case to a close.”

However, Epstein’s lawyers argued that there was legal precedent for the court to investigate Epstein’s death.

And some of the victims’ lawyers also suggested that a court-led investigation might be appropriate.

“If there is jurisdiction ... it would increase the confidence” to have the court “oversee the investigation,” said Gloria Allred, the high-profile attorney who introduced new alleged victims of Epstein at the hearing.

Epstein, 66, was a former friend of Presidents Donald Trump and Bill Clinton, Prince Andrew and other celebrities, whom he entertained at his luxurious residences on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, Palm Beach, Florida, and on a private island in the U.S. Virgin Islands.

Authorities and accusers have said that Epstein sexually abused young girls and women at those properties, and that his misdeeds were abetted by a number of conspirators, none of whom has ever been charged. Berman had refused to release him on bail because of his potential threat to girls if released.

Federal prosecutors in Miami in 2007 reached a nonprosecution deal with Epstein that allowed him to escape potentially serious federal charges in exchange for pleading guilty to less serious state charges related to prostitution, for which he served 13 months in jail.

Weeks before his death, Epstein was found semiconscious in his cell in the Manhattan Correctional Center with marks on his neck. That incident led to him being placed on suicide watch, but he was taken off of that status about a week later.

Epstein’s connections, vast wealth and the prior incident in the jail led to a rash of speculation about whether he was killed in his jail cell, and did not commit suicide.

“There are conspiracy theories galore,” Weingarten noted Tuesday.

Weingarten also pointed out that “we’ve heard that” the surveillance video at the jail around Epstein’s cell “were either corrupted or not functioning.”

Weingarten also said of conditions in the jail: “In a word, they were dreadful.” He said there was vermin, standing water and lack of natural light at the facility.

Epstein’s other lawyer, Weinberg, called the MCC’s conditions “horrific” and “medieval.”

The warden of the MCC was transferred out of his post on the heels of Epstein’s death, and two guards were placed on leave.

— Kevin Breuninger reported from U.S. District Court in Manhattan, and Dan Mangan reported from Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey.
https://www.cnbc.com/2019/08/27/jeffrey ... uling.html


Craig Unger's book explores Jeffrey Epstein's ties to Russia
Los Angeles Times
Two weeks after the death of disgraced financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, publisher Dutton announced a new book that will explore his connections with the Russian underworld.

Journalist Craig Unger, author of “House of Trump, House of Putin: The Untold Story of Donald Trump and the Russian Mafia,” will release a new book about Russian connections to public figures, including Epstein, U.S. Atty. Gen. William Barr and President Trump, the Penguin Random House imprint revealed Tuesday.

The publisher said the book, due for release in 2020 and as yet untitled, “will contain deeply reported, explosive newsbreaks that shed new light on Russian ties to powerful politicians and financiers.”

The Department of Justice did not respond to request for comment about Unger’s book.

Amanda Walker, Dutton’s publicity director, said the book was in the works before Epstein died in custody on Aug. 10 while awaiting trial on new sex trafficking charges. His death was ruled a suicide.

“In light of Jeffrey Epstein’s recent suicide, Unger will pursue the story behind his death as the news unfolds and will continue to research his connections using the civil suits against his estate and the prosecution of his co-conspirators,” the Dutton announcement said.

Epstein, a teacher turned financier, was convicted in Florida on two prostitution-related charges in 2008, and served 13 months in prison. .

Dutton said Unger’s book would explore the Russian use of “kompromat,” or damaging personal information, to intimidate and control American politicians and public figures.
https://www.latimes.com/entertainment-a ... raig-unger



this is the guy in charge of the coverup

The Washington Post reports that Atty. General Barr is hosting a $30,000 holiday party at the president's DC hotel.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Billionaire Pedophile Jeffrey Epstein Goes Free

Postby seemslikeadream » Thu Aug 29, 2019 11:34 am

Earlier it was reported that a security camera aimed in the direction of Jeffrey Epstein’s cell failed to capture his death. Now Reuters is reporting that both cameras aimed at Epstein malfunctioned. Wait, there were two cameras, and they both failed? :shrug:


random facts girl.

PED = Epstein's "Program for Evolutionary Dynamics"

Aside from it being wholly totally not humorous that Epstein et al chose the acronym PED for the program he *partially* funded at Harvard...

Why was the PEDboat docked at Little St. James around the time he was arrested?

Image

Image
https://twitter.com/soychicka


https://www.overlawyered.com/files/pivar/complaint.pdf

random facts girl.

Thank you for asking this question, @jetjocko.

This is where it gets personal for a lot of female scientists.

Epstein didn't just promote his circle of white men in a vacuum.

There were tangible costs to those he didn't promote - lost grant opportunities, even ended careers...
Image
https://twitter.com/soychicka




random facts girl.


@jetjocko's lede just got @wired a new subscriber.

Instead of giving the money back, though, give it to initiatives that combat the problem of how the money was first obtained.

Even better, let the victims choose where it goes.

https://www.wired.com/story/jeffrey-eps ... -networks/
Image
8:09 AM - 29 Aug 2019
8 Retweets 10 Likes gBoris DirnbachMercedes GomezLois WinklerPoncey(((EVADC32)))Sarah AndersonJ.R.N.Didi French. Animal Activist. Vegan.

Because you'd be lucky if they didn't sue your institution for its role in laundering his reputation.

As would any institution with even the slightest affiliation with Epstein, especially where he dangled admission to lure his victims.

If they choose not to include you in the RICO suits that eventually pour forward, you'd be lucky to get that opportunity in lieu of a fair settlement, which would probably be far more than whatever portion of what he promised that he actually handed out.

* full disclosure - I've been trying to subscribe for a few months, since I heard about the Google piece
@nitashatiku
was working on, but... amazon pay broken... + lazy.

but I was ready to get up and get my wallet to fill out the form for that lede.
https://twitter.com/soychicka/status/11 ... 2436022276



Jeffrey Epstein and the Power of Networks
The billionaire child rapist bought his way into an elite crowd of intellectuals that defined the last three decades of science, tech, and culture.

Adam Rogers08.27.2019 07:00 AM
jeffrey epstein
Before and after his year in prison, Jeffrey Epstein lavished money and attention on scientists and other influential thinkers, raising the question: What cultural ideas did he help shape?Rick Friedman/Getty Images
Give the money back.

Anyone who took money or accrued influence from accused child rapist Jeffrey Epstein, who died of an apparent suicide in jail, should give that money back. Or they should donate an equivalent amount to someone who will help people with it.

It would be the smallest quantum of reparations. MIT knows this; after apologies from Joichi Ito, head of MIT’s Media Lab, and physicist Seth Lloyd for accepting Epstein’s money, university president Rafael Reif announced Thursday that the school would be giving away $800,000, the amount Epstein had donated over the past 20 years. Harvard, thus far, doesn’t get it. In July, school representatives said the university had no plans to return $6.5 million that helped set up its Program for Evolutionary Dynamics.

Giving away the money would begin to clean up the gross, topologically complex web of influence trading that Epstein helped weave. Before and after his year in prison, in 2008, Epstein lavished money and attention on scientists—biologist Stephen Jay Gould, biochemist George Church, evolutionary scientist Martin Nowak, linguist Steven Pinker, physicist Murray Gell-Mann, physicist Stephen Hawking, and AI researcher Marvin Minsky, among many others.

Epstein was, in the parlance of the sciences, a marker. Like the radioactive tracer you get injected with before an fMRI, his villainy illuminates how the connections among a relatively small clique of American intellectuals allowed them, privately, to define the last three decades of science, technology, and culture. It was a Big-Ideas Industrial Complex of conferences, research institutions, virtual salons, and even magazines, and Jeffrey Epstein bought his way in.

How did these geniuses find themselves cozying up to a child rapist? In putting his apologies on the record with Stat reporter Sharon Begley, Church chalked it up to “nerd tunnel vision.” Ito, who also let Epstein contribute to his personal technology investment funds, called it “an error in judgment.” (Two people affiliated with the Media Lab have announced their departures as a result.)

As reasons to associate with a child rapist, tunnel vision seems less likely than dollars and network effects. Epstein’s network had the literary agent and superconnector John Brockman as a prominent node, and Epstein’s money seems to have followed Brockman's edges. In addition to representing an elite crew of popular and well-compensated writers about technology and science, Brockman had been a fixture in the tech and culture worlds since his time running multimedia events alongside Marshall McLuhan in the 1960s. He also runs Edge, a sort of salon that for 20 years, until 2018, asked an annual big question of intellectuals and published their answers. Data on decades of Epstein’s charitable giving acquired by the Miami Herald shows Epstein gave $505,000 to the Edge Foundation from 1998 to 2008.

As the writer Evgeny Morozov, himself a Brockman client, argues in The New Republic, the agent became an “intellectual enabler” for Epstein. Morozov shares an email thread in which Brockman encourages him to meet Epstein even though he got “into trouble” and landed in jail for a year. Morozov writes that he declined.

Epstein, it’s easy to surmise, hoped to launder his reputation by association with all this—to purchase secular indulgences from these intellectual high priests. Or maybe he just wanted to feel smart. According to one account, Epstein’s actual interest in science was at best dilettantish; he’d ask big questions but his attention would wander, and he’d change the subject by saying, “What does that got to do with pussy?”

But Epstein didn’t stop at socializing with scientists or giving them grants; he also helped spread their ideas. Mother Jones says that Epstein and his accused procurer-of-girls Ghislaine Maxwell were on the board of Seed Media Group, publisher of an influential science magazine and blog network of the early 2000s that featured many Brockman clients. And no influence peddler’s circuit is complete without a stop at TED, the then-exclusive, now-ubiquitous conference at which Brockman was a stalwart, always on the lookout for new clients. Brockman threw an annual dinner during TED, for a while called the Millionaires’ Dinner—and then, for a while, the Billionaires’ Dinner. Epstein sometimes flew Brockman’s chosen guests in a private Boeing 727 that The New York Times described in 2002 as “outfitted with mink and sable throws” and catered by Le Cirque 2000.

This rot goes deep. These men—it’s almost entirely men—have defined the way culture has thought about, absorbed, and acted on technological change. And their inner circle included a monster.

Which brings me to the missing noun here: WIRED.

In some ways, WIRED began at the Media Lab. Nicholas Negroponte, the Lab’s cofounder and its director from 1985 to 2000, was one of WIRED’s first investors. Pitched at TED in 1992, Negroponte gave publisher Louis Rosetto $75,000 for a 10 percent stake and became the back page columnist. Since then, WIRED has featured many of the people I’ve named here and other Brockman clients. Ito is a longtime WIRED contributor. (When President Barack Obama guest-edited the magazine, he asked to interview Ito.)

WIRED’s affiliation with the Media Lab was mostly over long before Epstein’s conviction, though members of the Brockman circle continue to contribute and participate in stories. Chris Anderson, WIRED’s editor in chief from 2001 to 2012, was a client of Brockman’s, and he says he attended one of the agent’s dinners at which Epstein was present, though Anderson says they didn’t actually meet. (Anderson’s predecessor as editor, Katrina Heron, as well as founding executive editor and “senior maverick” Kevin Kelly, were also on the guest list. Some of the guests describe their experiences here.) Whatever overlap remains between WIRED and the Brockman circle is, as far as I can tell, limited. But WIRED, like Epstein, profited from the association.

Just because Epstein dined alongside intellectuals doesn’t, on its own, taint their work. The scientific method still stands. The data and conclusions hold. But in the spirit of the Edge Question that Brockman used to toss out for his crowd to pontificate on, here’s a Big Question: What ideas did Jeffrey Epstein shape? A convicted sex offender, an accused child rapist, a person who would ask what quantum computing or the origin of life had to do with “pussy” … what did he incept into the work of important scientists, into the writing of influential authors? The idea that should run freon through your cortex is that Jeffrey Epstein likely helped plant some thoughts there.

Here’s an even bigger Big Question: Who got ignored because Epstein helped shine a light on someone else? Cultural ideaspace is finite. The Brockman/Epstein circuit was very male and very white.

Giving the Epstein money back, or donating it to someone who helps the kind of people he victimized, doesn’t change any of this, of course. But at least it’s feasible. Extracting the money from the equation lets the focus shift, rightly, to the more pernicious influences that people rarely acknowledge—and that are much harder to fix.

After the revelations of abuse and rape, the most frightening thing the Epstein connections show is the impregnable, hermetic way class and power work in America. In private rooms, around tables full of expensive food, middle-aged white men agree to help each other out. They write complementary books about each other, they introduce each other to people who can cut seven-figure checks, and they trade yet more invitations to other, even more private rooms. These are the places where power in America gets apportioned.

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Scientists aren’t any more or less human than nonscientists. Despite the profession’s nominal commitment to rational investigation of the universe’s deeper truths, scientists were also involved in the Tuskegee experiment, the eugenics movement, disinformation about tobacco, lead, sugar, pesticides … Enlightenment thinking doesn’t always guarantee enlightenment. And the same goes for journalists.

Both groups are supposed to be more. They’re supposed to bust open the doors, fling wide the windows, plug in box fans, turn on klieg lights, and start recording. But cliques never rush to expose their own rot. And monsters persist.
https://www.wired.com/story/jeffrey-eps ... -networks/



“The frightening thing the Epstein connections show is the impregnable, hermetic way class and power work in America. In private rooms, around tables full of expensive food, middle-aged white men agree to help each other out.”


FBI New York

We are renewing our appeal for any possible victims of Jeffrey Epstein to contact us at 1-800-CALL-FBI. If you have been victimized by Epstein, we would really like to hear from you.
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Re: Billionaire Pedophile Jeffrey Epstein Goes Free

Postby Grizzly » Thu Aug 29, 2019 3:14 pm

Random facts me...

Of course it's ONLY Russians and Republican's and Putin in his Network. Not the DNC or DCC or Blue or correct the records... Etc. Only Russian and those that look like em...
“The more we do to you, the less you seem to believe we are doing it.”

― Joseph mengele
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Re: Billionaire Pedophile Jeffrey Epstein Goes Free

Postby seemslikeadream » Thu Aug 29, 2019 3:16 pm

sorry she did not say that .....you should read everything before you judge, that would be helpful in not jumping to conclusions

she is one of the best on Epstein...your comments are extremely unfair


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How a Ring of Women Allegedly Recruited Girls for Jeffrey Epstein
By Amy Julia Harris, Frances Robles, Mike Baker and William K. Rashbaum
Aug. 27, 2019

Haley Robson was a 16-year-old South Florida high school student when an acquaintance from school approached her at a local pool with an intriguing offer: Did she want to make extra money giving massages to a billionaire in Palm Beach?

She agreed. When Jeffrey Epstein tried to grope her while she was giving him a massage, wearing nothing but a thong, she brushed his hand away, Ms. Robson said in a 2009 deposition for a civil case. But she continued to visit Mr. Epstein’s mansion dozens more times, in a lucrative new role: a recruiter of other teenage girls from her school.

“I didn’t have to convince them,” she said in the deposition. “I proposed to them. They took it.”

After Mr. Epstein’s suicide in a Manhattan jail cell in early August, federal authorities have refocused their investigation on the more than half-dozen employees, girlfriends and associates who prosecutors say he relied on to feed his insatiable appetite for girls, according to two people with knowledge of the inquiry. Ms. Robson, now 33, is among them.

A review by The New York Times of lawsuits, unsealed court records and depositions, along with new interviews, offers disturbing allegations about how this small cadre of women helped Mr. Epstein lure girls into his orbit and managed the logistics of his encounters with them.

The urgency of the investigation into Mr. Epstein’s associates was underscored on Tuesday when about two dozen women offered searing accounts of how he had sexually abused them before a packed courtroom in Manhattan.

The judge overseeing the case had invited the women to speak at a hearing to dismiss the indictment against Mr. Epstein in light of his death.

Virginia Roberts Giuffre, right, and Sarah Ransome, left, who have said they were sexually abused by Mr. Epstein, after a hearing in federal court in Manhattan.
Virginia Roberts Giuffre, right, and Sarah Ransome, left, who have said they were sexually abused by Mr. Epstein, after a hearing in federal court in Manhattan. Jefferson Siegel for The New York Times
Several of the women implored federal prosecutors to continue investigating the women in Mr. Epstein’s inner circle.

“Jeffrey is no longer here, and the women that helped him are,” said Teresa Helm, who said she was recruited into Mr. Epstein’s world 17 years ago. “They definitely need to be held accountable for helping him, helping themselves, helping one another carry on this huge — almost like — system.”

The United States attorney in Manhattan, Geoffrey S. Berman, whose office brought the charges against Mr. Epstein, said after his suicide that the investigation into the sex-trafficking conspiracy was not finished and prosecutors were committed to standing up for the “brave young women” Mr. Epstein had abused.

One of the women under scrutiny, Mr. Epstein’s onetime girlfriend, Ghislaine Maxwell, has been accused in several well-publicized lawsuits of overseeing efforts to procure girls and young women for him, a charge she has firmly denied.

But Mr. Epstein is also accused in civil suits of relying on an organized network of underlings: those who trained girls how to sexually pleasure him; office assistants who booked cars and travel; and recruiters who ensured he always had a fresh supply of teenage girls at the ready.

None of Mr. Epstein’s associates have been charged or named as co-conspirators in Manhattan. But federal authorities are eyeing possible charges that include sex trafficking and sex trafficking conspiracy, the two people with knowledge of the investigation said.

Four women were apparently so instrumental to Mr. Epstein’s operation that they were named as possible “co-conspirators” and were granted immunity from prosecution in a widely criticized plea bargain Mr. Epstein struck with federal prosecutors in Florida more than a decade ago. That deal allowed Mr. Epstein to plead guilty to state charges and to spend 13 months in a county jail rather than face a federal sex-trafficking indictment.

The four women — Sarah Kellen, Lesley Groff, Adriana Ross and Nadia Marcinkova — could still be subject to criminal charges in Manhattan. The United States attorney’s office has said it is not bound by the Florida agreement.

Mr. Epstein and Ms. Maxwell, shown in 1995.Patrick McMullan, via Getty Images
‘The boss’

Three women have alleged in lawsuits that Mr. Epstein’s sex-trafficking ring operated as a hierarchy, with the financier and Ms. Maxwell at the top.

“She orchestrated the whole thing for Jeffrey,” Sarah Ransome, who sued Ms. Maxwell and other associates in 2017, said in an interview.

Ms. Maxwell, the daughter of the British publishing magnate Robert Maxwell, was Mr. Epstein’s longtime companion, managing his homes and introducing him to many of the politicians, celebrities and dignitaries who became fixtures within his social circle.

“They were like partners in business,” Janusz Banasiak, Mr. Epstein’s house manager, said in a deposition. Mr. Epstein’s butler, Alfredo Rodriguez, described Ms. Maxwell in a deposition as “the boss.”

Ms. Maxwell has vehemently denied she trafficked girls. Neither Ms. Maxwell nor her lawyers responded to requests for interviews for this article.

But Mr. Epstein’s accusers contend in court papers that Ms. Maxwell managed the network of recruiters and helped devise the playbook for how to lure young women into Mr. Epstein’s web. Recruiters were allegedly told to target young, financially desperate women, and to promise them help furthering their education and careers, these civil complaints said.

Virginia Roberts Giuffre said in a deposition that she was 16 when she met Ms. Maxwell and was recruited as a masseuse. She said she remembered Ms. Maxwell’s sales pitch: If she gave a wealthy man a massage, a whole world of opportunity would open to her.

“If the guy likes you, then, you know, it will work out for you,” Ms. Giuffre, in a deposition, recalled Ms. Maxwell telling her. “You’ll travel. You’ll make good money. You’ll be educated.”

Ms. Giuffre took the job. Soon, she said, she became Mr. Epstein’s “sex slave,” not only providing sexual favors to him but also to some of his acquaintances, including politicians and prominent businessmen.

“My whole life revolved around just pleasing these men and keeping Ghislaine and Jeffrey happy,” she said in the deposition. “Their whole entire lives revolved around sex.”

The ‘lieutenant’

Just below Ms. Maxwell in the chain of command was Ms. Kellen, another high-ranking employee, who has been accused in multiple lawsuits of scheduling girls to have sex with Mr. Epstein in his Palm Beach mansion.

She was called the “lieutenant” in one lawsuit. David Rodgers, Mr. Epstein’s pilot, said in a deposition that Ms. Kellen was “like an assistant to Ghislaine.”

Ms. Kellen kept the names and numbers of all the girls who gave Mr. Epstein erotic massages, according to Palm Beach police reports and Ms. Robson’s deposition. She would call them whenever Mr. Epstein was in town, asking the girls if they were ready to “work,” the reports and Ms. Robson said.

“She saw herself as the boss,” said Spencer T. Kuvin, a West Palm Beach lawyer who represented several accusers in lawsuits. “Sarah was really running that organization, bringing girls and getting them in and out of the Palm Beach home.”

Ms. Kellen, who sometimes goes by Sarah Kensington or Sarah Vickers, did not respond to requests for an interview. Her lawyers also did not respond to requests for comment.

Multiple girls told Palm Beach detectives that when they arrived at Mr. Epstein’s mansion, Ms. Kellen would escort them upstairs to Mr. Epstein’s bedroom and lay out the massage table with the various oils and lotions that they were to use on him, according to police reports.

In an interview, Ms. Ransome said Ms. Kellen and Ms. Maxwell also gave her tips on how to give Mr. Epstein erotic massages, including how to rub his feet and best satisfy him sexually.

“It was Ghislaine and Sarah Kellen that showed me how to please Jeffrey,” Ms. Ransome said.

Lesley Groff was Mr. Epstein’s executive assistant for nearly two decades.Max Rapp/Patrick McMullan, via Getty Images
The assistants

Ms. Groff, Mr. Epstein’s executive assistant for almost 20 years, was one of the possible co-conspirators named in the 2008 plea deal Mr. Epstein’s lawyers worked out with the United States attorney’s office in Miami.

She said in a 2005 interview with The Times that she answered Mr. Epstein’s telephone and managed his schedule, which included meetings with prominent scientists, Wall Street executives, foreign dignitaries and American politicians.

Over the years, she said in 2005, she formed a special bond with the financier, anticipating his needs. “I know what he is thinking,” she said at the time.

But Ms. Ransome said in her lawsuit that Ms. Groff, now 53, also arranged travel and lodging for the seemingly endless stream of adolescent girls and young women who provided Mr. Epstein with erotic massages.

In a recent interview with The Times, Ms. Ransome said Ms. Groff communicated directly with her, repeating Mr. Epstein’s promises to help her obtain a fashion degree.

Ms. Groff’s lawyer, Michael Bachner, said his client worked as part of a professional staff, making appointments, taking messages and setting up meetings. “At no time during Lesley’s employment with Epstein did she ever engage in any misconduct and never knowingly made travel arrangements for anyone under 18,” Mr. Bachner said.

Ms. Ransome also alleged in her lawsuit that she was instructed by Mr. Epstein’s associates to go on a diet and to lose about 11 pounds to maintain her slim figure. In one email exchange reviewed by The Times, Ms. Ransome told Ms. Groff she was monitoring her weight for Mr. Epstein. “Please could you also let him know that I am now 57 kg and that everything is going well,” Ms. Ransome emailed Ms. Groff in 2007.

Another of Mr. Epstein’s assistants, Ms. Ross, was also named as a potential co-conspirator in the 2008 plea deal.

When Palm Beach police were investigating Mr. Epstein around 2005, Ms. Ross removed three computers from the Florida mansion, Mr. Banasiak, the house manager, said in a deposition. The police noted in their reports that the computers, which they had reason to think might contain photos of naked girls, were missing when investigators arrived.

“She show up one day with gentleman,” Mr. Banasiak said. “And she told me that they are moving out those computers.”

Ms. Ross, who went on to study accounting and is based in Miami, did not respond to calls or emails seeking comment.

‘The more you do, the more you make’

Ms. Marcinkova, a former model and pilot, had come under police scrutiny in Palm Beach in 2005.

A 16-year-old told detectives she was giving Mr. Epstein a massage when Ms. Marcinkova entered the room naked, according to Palm Beach police reports. Mr. Epstein then told the girl she could make an extra $200 if she performed oral sex on Ms. Marcinkova, and the girl reluctantly agreed, the reports said.

That encounter was the first of many sexual trysts the teenager told the police she was coerced into having with both Ms. Marcinkova and Mr. Epstein at his Palm Beach mansion, according to a police incident report.

Police records also show that investigators had indications that Ms. Marcinkova might have been underage herself when she became involved with Mr. Epstein.

Ms. Marcinkova, who later used the last name Marcinko, declined to answer questions about Mr. Epstein’s alleged abuse of girls when she was deposed in a lawsuit, invoking the Fifth Amendment.

Reached by The Times, Ms. Marcinkova’s lawyers, Erica T. Dubno and Aaron Mysliwiec, said “like other victims, Nadia Marcinko is and has been severely traumatized” and “needs time to process and make sense of what she has been through before she is able to speak out.”

Prosecutors may face thorny legal issues in deciding whether to charge some of Mr. Epstein’s associates, like Ms. Robson and Ms. Marcinkova, who may have initially been victims themselves.

Determining criminal liability is always a complex decision if a person has been exploited for sex, then used as a pawn to recruit others, said Lauren Hersh, a former sex-trafficking prosecutor in Brooklyn who now leads World Without Exploitation, an anti-trafficking organization.

“But for their own exploitation, they wouldn’t do that,” she said. “It becomes really, really tricky.”

Ms. Robson, a former stripper and Olive Garden worker, was not among the four women given immunity in the Florida plea agreement. But her role in Mr. Epstein’s operation was significant enough that Palm Beach Police detectives had planned to charge her more than a decade ago, according to an affidavit by the lead detective in Palm Beach.

She was also sued twice, and she described her role in Mr. Epstein’s operation in a deposition.

When Mr. Epstein would fly into Florida, Ms. Robson said she would get a call on her cellphone from Ms. Kellen, who would tell her how many massages the financier needed for the upcoming visit. The two of them would hammer out logistics.

“I would have a girl that would be available for those dates and times,” Ms. Robson said in a 2009 deposition.

Ms. Robson told lawyers she made $200 for every high school girl she brought to the Palm Beach mansion. She recruited the girls from her high school, including one who was 14. When she brought a 23-year-old, Mr. Epstein balked. Too old, he told her.

The girls knew what they were getting into, Ms. Robson said. The rules were unspoken, but understood.

“The more you do, the more you make,” Ms. Robson said in the deposition. “If you were topless, if you were working in your thong, your bra, you’re going to make more than a hundred.”

Reached by The Times, Ms. Robson said, “I have nothing to say. I would appreciate if I was not contacted.”

Douglas McIntosh, a lawyer who represented her in a civil case in Florida, called Ms. Robson “a lovely young lady,” but declined to answer questions about her involvement with Mr. Epstein.

In her deposition, Ms. Robson said that she had debated suing Mr. Epstein, but decided against it.

“I just thought it was the easy way out,” she said. “And then I decided this is my life and I have to take responsibility for my own actions because I did volunteer.”
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/08/29/nyre ... xwell.html
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Re: Billionaire Pedophile Jeffrey Epstein Goes Free

Postby Wombaticus Rex » Thu Aug 29, 2019 8:12 pm


“The frightening thing the Epstein connections show is the impregnable, hermetic way class and power work in America. In private rooms, around tables full of expensive food, middle-aged white men agree to help each other out.”


Seems like there's an awful lot of Jews, too.
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Re: Billionaire Pedophile Jeffrey Epstein Goes Free

Postby coffin_dodger » Fri Aug 30, 2019 6:46 am

Hush now, Sleeping Tiger.
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Re: Billionaire Pedophile Jeffrey Epstein Goes Free

Postby seemslikeadream » Fri Aug 30, 2019 9:33 am

One man (or woman’s) ceiling is another’s floor

When I read Virginia’s statement in her own voice, I had a strange sense of having been here before. Then it hit me. I had.

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Amanda Keller was a 20-year old stripper/train wreck when she met Mohamed Atta. Her husband, who she said beat her, had her “Baker-acted,” which is a verb in Florida.

As a result she lost custody of her two small children. She was soon stripping for a living at Fantasies & Lingerie in Sarasota.
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https://www.madcowprod.com/2019/08/23/e ... deep-dive/



Molly Lambert
Ghislaine hugging Graydon Carter while Harvey Weinstein and Georgina Chapman look on, 2007
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https://twitter.com/nycsouthpaw



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Many public libraries have online subscriptions and access to major national newspapers AND to academic research. You log in through your library’s website, with your library card number.
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Re: Billionaire Pedophile Jeffrey Epstein Goes Free

Postby PufPuf93 » Fri Aug 30, 2019 12:40 pm

Worry that this dismissal of the Epstein means that the case will go down the memory hole and investigation and prosecution of associated criminals does not occur.

Hard to believe that Epstein's death was truly a suicide, too many individuals have to much to lose or at least be revealed.

Maxwell to start plus all the Trump and other political and wealth connections must be relieved to a degree.

Video at link.

The criminal case against Jeffrey Epstein has been officially dismissed

By Dakin Andone, CNN

Updated 6:16 PM ET, Thu August 29, 2019


(CNN)The criminal case against the late Jeffrey Epstein was officially dismissed Thursday, almost three weeks after the accused sex trafficker died in his jail cell.
Judge Richard Berman, who was overseeing the case, signed what's known as a "nolle prosequi," or a notice that the court will no longer pursue the charges, citing Epstein's death.

The dismissal was expected, as prosecutors had filed a motion to dismiss the federal sex trafficking charges after the multimillionaire's death on August 10, which the medical examiner deemed a suicide.

Jeffrey Epstein's accusers had their day in court, but not in the way they had hoped for.

Even though the criminal case won't move forward, some of Epstein's accusers were still able to make their voices heard. On Tuesday, even though the accused was not present, Judge Berman allowed them to deliver victim impact statements. Some of them felt they were robbed of justice, not just in the recent case against Epstein, but also years ago, when Florida prosecutors offered Epstein a plea deal without their input.

"Jeffrey Epstein robbed myself and all other victims of our day in court to confront him one by one, and for that he is a coward," said accuser Courtney Wild, who thanked authorities for giving them the opportunity to have their moment in court. "I feel very angry and sad that justice has never been served in this case."

The case has been dismissed, but prosecutors have indicated that the investigation will continue, thanks to a count of conspiracy that was included in the indictment.

Civil cases could also move forward against Epstein's estate.

CNN's Brian Vitagliano and Emanuella Grinberg contributed to this report.

https://www.cnn.com/2019/08/29/us/jeffr ... index.html
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Re: Billionaire Pedophile Jeffrey Epstein Goes Free

Postby seemslikeadream » Sat Aug 31, 2019 2:17 pm

What's next for Epstein's Zorro Ranch, where accusers say they were raped and trafficked
August 31, 2019 / 11:06 AM
By Mola Lenghi

Jeffrey Epstein's massive 21,000-square-foot New Mexico mansion sits high on a mesa overlooking nearly 10,000 acres of desert land halfway between Santa Fe and Albuquerque. Multiple women say they were recruited and sexually abused by the convicted pedophile and his alleged co-conspirators at Zorro Ranch, which they say was integral to Epstein's alleged sex trafficking operation.

Several of Epstein's accusers say they were trafficked and raped on the ranch. It is also where Epstein, according to the New York Times, confided to scientists that "he hoped to seed the human race with his DNA by impregnating women at his vast New Mexico ranch."

Zorro Ranch, which includes a firehouse, log cabin, guest house, pool, airstrip, antique railroad car and train tracks, is part private, part public land. But New Mexico state officials say Epstein was so secretive about the ranch that they have virtually no access and little knowledge about what happens on the public portions.

The property appears to have been designed to create as much privacy as possible. The sprawling compound is tightly guarded with surveillance cameras, well-secured gates and fencing and employees who, despite requests, remain tight-lipped and appear to avoid interaction with any potential visitors.

That recently included New Mexico Land Commissioner Stephanie Garcia Richard when she made an unannounced visit to the property after her office's requests to schedule a visit went unreturned.

The state Land Commission has two land-lease contracts with Zorro Ranch; 1,200 acres of state property lie within Epstein's 10,000 acres of property. That public land is leased by Zorro Ranch, a cause for concern for Garcia Richard who insists the state should not be in business with a convicted pedophile.

Land-lease agreements are a common practice among states for the purposes of encouraging agriculture and ranching. But Garcia Richard recently told CBS News that Epstein's property does not operate as a "typical" ranch, a sentiment echoed by his accusers.

"No one gets in trouble for anything here"

nfa-lenghi-epstein-new-mexico-needs-trk-and-gfx-frame-92.jpg
CBS News obtained exclusive photos of Epstein's "Zorro Ranch" CBS News
One alleged victim, identified as "Jane Doe" in a recent federal court hearing in Manhattan, recounted her first experience at Zorro Ranch. She recalled riding an ATV with another young woman, who had been to the ranch before. When "Jane Doe" accidentally crashed her ATV, the other young woman told her not to worry because "no one gets in trouble for anything here."

"I certainly think there was a veil of secrecy. Access to state land was very secure and prohibited almost," Garcia Richard told CBS News.

The land-lease agreement includes access, which means occasional visits by Land Commission staff to the public property. But the Land Commission said, while this is usually an easy process with their other state land-lessees, it was never as simple when dealing with Zorro Ranch, which appeared to control the terms of any visits by state officials.

The public property on Zorro Ranch is surrounded by Epstein's private property and can only be accessed by trekking through the private lands. Garcia Richard told CBS News that ranch staff would require advanced notice of any visits and would escort and tightly monitor officials while on the property.

When Epstein purchased Zorro Ranch through his Cypress Inc. holding company in 1993, he acquired the land-lease contracts as part of the sale. When Garcia Richard became land commissioner this year, she inherited oversight of those contracts. Disturbed by allegations of crimes that may have been committed on the ranch, Garcia Richard told CBS News she has been trying to find the legal ground to rip up those contracts ever since.

Now she believes she has found that legal footing. Earlier this month, her office turned over 400 pages of Epstein's property records to investigators. Those documents may contain names of his alleged co-conspirators.

On Thursday, New Mexico Attorney General Hector Balderas said he concluded that the state has the legal authority to retake the 1,200 acres of state land on Zorro Ranch associated with the land-lease contracts.

"The original leases to Epstein appear to have no beneficial use justification to the State, but rather appear to simply have been taken by him to increase privacy and the land mass surrounding his estate," Balderas said in a written statement.

According to the AG's office, the leases were renewed on October 1, 2016 and set to expire on September 20, 2021.

"Finally, the rising number of allegations from survivors saying they were trafficked to the Zorro Ranch is reason enough for us to rip these leases in half and seize back this public land," Garcia Richard told CBS News.

Epstein did not appear to have connections in New Mexico prior to purchasing Zorro Ranch. Asked what might attract a wealthy financier who grew up on Coney Island in Brooklyn to purchase a desert ranch in New Mexico, Garcia Richard said, "I think there's a perception that people won't ask questions (in New Mexico)."

After serving 13 months in Florida for a 2008 guilty plea to one count of procuring a 17-year-old girl for prostitution, Epstein registered as a sex offender in New Mexico on August 17, 2010, per the guidelines of his plea deal, as well as in Florida and New York. But on August 19, 2010, the Santa Fe County Sheriff's Office sent a letter to Epstein telling him he was not required to register as a sex offender. The legal age of consent is 17 in New Mexico.

At least two state officials told CBS News it is "curious" that Epstein was informed and the matter resolved so quickly — in just two days — considering the process of registering, checking and officially responding would typically take much longer to work its way through the bureaucratic process.

"I was raped on Zorro Ranch"

The federal sex trafficking charges against Epstein were officially dropped Thursday by the Southern District of New York in light of the 66-year-old's suicide on August 10. Two days before the case was dismissed, Epstein's accusers gave emotional accounts of sexual abuse and torment in what would be a final hearing.

One woman, identified as one of the multiple "Jane Does" who spoke that day, recounted being flown to Zorro Ranch for the first time in 2004 when she was 15 years old. She said, upon arriving, the sexual abuse began and continued "for hours" as Epstein took her virginity. She recalled Epstein telling her to lay on the floor in a room. From that vantage point, she said she remembered looking up and seeing multiple framed pictures on a dresser, including pictures of Epstein posing with famous and "powerful people." This, she said, as the man in those pictures was sexually abusing her while telling her how beneficial the experience would be for her.

Chauntae Davies spoke at the same hearing. She said she was recruited by Epstein's ex-girlfriend, Ghislaine Maxwell. She said it began as what seemed like the opportunity of a lifetime. Epstein and Maxwell took her in, gave her a job and traveled with her around the world.

Maxwell has denied any wrongdoing and has not been charged with a crime.

Davies told CBS News that Epstein sent her to culinary school and paid for her sister to study abroad to be a translator in Spain. But Davies said for her the focus was education.

She recalled feeling like part of a family but now says all the perks were accompanied by a horrifying level of sexual abuse.

"I was raped on Zorro Ranch at least twice," she told CBS News.

Davies described what she believes was a sophisticated operation of rape, exploitation and manipulation of young women disguised as growth, apprenticeship and education.

"It was about the third or fourth encounter meeting the two of them where things progressed to rape," Davies told "CBS This Morning." "He made it very confusing... the way that they were able to orchestrate and manipulate the situation, you know, led me to believe that something like that wouldn't happen again so I did go back a second time," she continued.

The "veil of secrecy" that Epstein appears to have created around Zorro Ranch extended to visitors. Whenever she was there, she would see others — "random young women, some models, other women," she told CBS News — but when asked if they were also allegedly sexually abused, Davies said she was unsure. "There was always a lot of people there," she said.

Davies said people would travel to Zorro Ranch either on commercial flights into Santa Fe Airport and would then be driven to the ranch or they'd fly on Epstein's private jet and land on the airstrip built on the ranch's private property.

Virginia Roberts Giuffre, another Epstein accuser, claimed in a lawsuit that was ultimately settled that she was trafficked to the ranch as an underage sex-slave. A recently unsealed 2016 deposition references Prince Andrew, former U.S. Senator George Mitchell, high-powered attorney Alan Dershowitz and former New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson as men she was "directed" to have sex with. Giuffre's legal team told CBS News she was trafficked and lent out for sex on Zorro Ranch.

All the men have denied the allegations.

"These allegations and inferences are completely false," Richardson said recently in a written statement. "Governor Richardson has never even been contacted by any party regarding this lawsuit. To be clear, in Governor Richardson's limited interactions with Mr. Epstein, he never saw him in the presence of young or underage girls. Governor Richardson has never met Ms. Giuffre."

Former Governor Richardson is known to have visited Zorro Ranch at least once.

Maria Farmer, another Epstein accuser, claimed in an affidavit submitted to a federal court in New York that her sister, Annie, told her she was flown to the ranch in 1996 and molested by Epstein and Maxwell.

"She was only 15 at the time and they directed her to take off all of her clothes and get on a massage table. Maxwell and Epstein then touched her inappropriately on the massage table,'" Farmer said in the court document.

Another accuser, identified as "Priscilla Doe" in her recent civil lawsuit against the Epstein estate, claimed Epstein coerced her to engage in sex acts at Zorro Ranch between 2007 and 2010.

What's next for Zorro Ranch?

The land commission told CBS News it plans to officially terminate the contracts next week, but acknowledges a complicated road may lie ahead. The office tells CBS News it plans to develop creative solutions to access the land, given that state land is surrounded by private land and that ranch employees have been unwilling to give land commission access. The office did not elaborate on those solutions.

Sources told CBS News that several women who say they were sexually abused and trafficked at Zorro Ranch have been interviewed by investigators.

Davies told CBS News she was interviewed by the FBI for five hours one week before Epstein was arrested on federal sex trafficking charges after landing at New Jersey's Teterboro Airport on July 6, 2019.

The New Mexico Attorney General's Office tells CBS News it is working with and forwarding evidence to federal investigators who say they will continue to pursue, investigate and bring charges against possible co-conspirators.

Still, the ranch appears to be the only Epstein property in the U.S. that has not yet been raided by federal agents.

The New Mexico property is one of five — including ones in New York City, West Palm Beach, The U.S. Virgin Islands and France — that Epstein owned and frequented. Zorro Ranch is believed to have accounted for roughly $17 million of Epstein's estate, with claimed assets valued at $577 million.

Just two days before Epstein's August 10 death, ruled a suicide by the New York City Medical Examiner, he signed a will that put all of his holdings into a trust and transferred his vast assets into a private trust. The trust is secret — not open to the public — and administered by trustees.

Attorneys for Epstein's accusers admit the legal battle with the multi-millionaire's estate may be a long one, but it's one they're willing to have. Several civil lawsuits targeting Epstein's estate have already been filed and more are expected. Along with federal prosecutors, Epstein's accusers say they too will pursue and seek justice from anyone who may have exploited and abused them in relation to Epstein.

First published on August 31, 2019 / 11:06 AM
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/jeffrey-ep ... 019-08-31/
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Billionaire Pedophile Jeffrey Epstein Goes Free

Postby Iamwhomiam » Sat Aug 31, 2019 3:25 pm

RocketMan » Tue Aug 27, 2019 2:50 pm wrote:This post is good stuff. :partyhat

Indeed, Acosta might be feeling the Jeffrey...


Thanks, RocketMan. I appreciate your feedback.

Toys R Us needs to find a new mascot.

~~~~~~~~~~

What instigated the rest of my comment seems to have disappeared or has been deleted, so it may seem to be off topic, but the need for it remains. (At moments like this I miss Lord Balto, who was knowledgeable of Egyptian history)

Jews did not exist before Moses. The peoples who joined joined his supposed exodus from Egypt were Egyptians, including many descendants of the conquered Hyksos, the former invader rulers of Egypt, who are now believed to to have come from Turkey, as did the line of Abraham; and Canaanites, who were peoples from all the Mediterranean coast countries, Syria, Lebanon, Palestine and Jordan, and elsewhere. Many different tribal gods were worshiped and most rulers allowed any or all gods to be worshiped, though they might be dedicated in their devotion to only one god.

An ancient psyop seems to still have its impact some thousands of years later, the myth that Jews sacrificed their children. Sadly, this myth was first promulgated by Greeks and Romans against the Phoenicians and later (?) by Palestinians against the Canaanites. Still, today, this malicious rumor circulates.

While there has been research done in Phoenician Carthage and in a Phoenician settlement in Sicily and in what was ancient Gath, the city of Goliath, in ancient Canaan, no proof-positive evidence of human child sacrifice having been practiced by the Phoenicians has been produced. They found an isolated cemetery of mostly males, generally aged under 6 years of age, but included infants too, and that seemed to prove these people practiced human sacrifice. Topeth

However, the finding of female skeletons of very young children and infants raises doubt that this cemetery was devoted to victims of human sacrifice, as all victims of ritual sacrifice, it is believed, would have been male. Although this cemetery was distinctly segregated as a "special" place, it is now believed that it was reserved for still-born infants and other young children who did not survive childhood and died of disease.

We do know the Druids practiced child sacrifice. How many other tribes do we know of that also held such practices that are not Middle Eastern in origin. How about those Greeks?

Focus, please!

Here's a video to help explain the foundation of this disparagement.
(To skip the bible verse reading, begin at 1:36.)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nf0_Gyt6n08&feature=youtu.be&t=26

Please don't prejudge the video.
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Re: Billionaire Pedophile Jeffrey Epstein Goes Free

Postby seemslikeadream » Sat Aug 31, 2019 8:01 pm

My Night With Epstein Pal Jean-Luc Brunel and His Terrified Models
I don’t remember why I was in the nightclub Les Bains Douches that evening, but what happened there and afterward is a crystal-clear memory.

Published 08.29.19 8:45PM ET
It was 1993 or 1994 when I first encountered Jean-Luc Brunel, the controversial French modeling agent, at a then-trendy South Beach restaurant called The Strand in Miami. A table near mine, set for six, expanded to seat ten, then shrank for eight, then enlarged to fit a party of twelve, and was finally occupied, as I finished my meal, by a pack of extremely young women, teenagers, really, with the willowy frames and lovely faces of neophyte models, and a smaller number of older men who appeared to be … well … smug probably sums it up best.

A quarter century later, I was reminded of that dinner when Brunel suddenly riveted the world’s attention in the hours immediately before the suicide of the notorious pervert pederast Jeffrey Epstein, when it was alleged that the Frenchman had provided underage women to the very freaky financier.

Shortly after that Miami night, I interviewed Brunel, among many others, for a book on the modeling industry, published in 1995 as Model: The Ugly Business of Beautiful Women. So, although I never met nor wrote about Epstein, my phone started ringing following his latest arrest for trafficking underage women, and it hasn’t stopped since, as exposés of Brunel pile up like a mound of fetid garbage, notably in England’s Guardian, France’s Liberation, the Washington Post, and The Daily Beast. And reporters have told me that apparently, I’m among the very few journalists who ever interviewed the then-elusive and now impossible-to-find Brunel.

But there’s more to this story than the handful of damning quotations the papers have lifted from Model, from and about the man sometimes described as a rabbateur, i.e . one who beats the bushes during a hunt to drive game out into the open. There is the videotape of a 60 Minutes segment from 1988—long suppressed by legal order—that exposed him as an alleged serial abuser of young women, for instance; interviews with competitors who described him as a serial rapist; and a 28-page transcript of our taped interview in which I asked about the charges that Brunel was way more loco than parentis with the young women in his charge, as well as his oft-reported fondness for the Champagne of bottled drugs, cocaine.

His assurances of his innocence then were barely credible, but I felt a responsibility to report them alongside the sordid charges against him, and some of the more damning passages from our conversation. But I left out what happened the same night as our daytime interview. I don’t remember why I was in the nightclub Les Bains Douches that evening—it was 25 years ago after all—but what happened there and afterward is a crystal-clear memory, most likely because I’d planned to include it in a final chapter of Model that was never written because the book was already long and tawdry enough.

My plan was to conclude the tome with a chapter on the youngest models of all, known as test board kids, discovered in malls and at modeling conventions and then thrown into the deep end of fashion’s pool—the studios and clubs of Paris and Milan—where they would either swim or sink. I’d chosen a handful of them at an annual modeling convention in New York, asked them to be my pen pals for a year, and that day at Brunel’s agency, Karin, met one of them, Robin [I’ve changed the models’ names], a Midwesterner who’d signed with him. She introduced me to her friend, who called herself Dakota, and we chatted and went our separate ways.

But there was Dakota, on the restaurant floor above the disco at Bains Douches, sitting with Brunel and another group of models and older men at a huge table. And when she waved hello, it was clear she was miserable. She told me she hated the place and Brunel had forced her to come. “Can you get us out of here?” she whispered, gesturing to another model. Sure, easy.

“He’d struck me as shrewd, smug and vaguely sleazy. She’d told me she’d had to rebuff his advances.”

I took them in a taxi to their “model” apartment off the Champs-Elysées, a crowded room where dirty clothes covered every inch of floor and Dakota told me she’d moved there after first living with Brunel at his far more spacious and glamorous apartment nearby on Avenue Hoche. There, she’d discovered an apparent peep hole that looked into the bathrooms the models in residence used, inspiring her to flee, albeit not very far. The only part of the story that wasn’t normal was that peep hole. Models often bunk in their agents’ homes. “Want to see it?” Dakota asked. She still had a key.

Around the corner we went, then up one of those old French cage elevators, to a far more lavish flat, where, sure enough, there was a hidden hole drilled through a wall and a view of a bathroom. The girls were laughing about their escape when Brunel joined us. Earlier that day, he’d denied that he still used cocaine. “I had a problem,” he’d said in a staccato burst, “it was not a major. I mean, it was a problem…. For four or five years I did it as fun, because I never did it in the day, and then I did it as an experiment, fine, it lasted maybe a bit longer than it should, but it had never been like a problem, it had never been—I was at work at 9 in the morning.” But, as the notes I took afterwards say, he was “uncommonly animated,” so I wouldn’t have vouched for the truth of that assertion. And he was with a friend with a case of the sniffles. And the peephole? “I want you to look behind all the mirrors,” he said. Frankly, I just wanted out of there.

A demand that Dakota return to Bains Douches with him made me nervous. Earlier that day, he’d struck me as shrewd, smug and vaguely sleazy. She’d told me she’d had to rebuff his advances. His reappearance added scary to that list.

There was a white Ferrari with a white leather interior sitting outside his building. Dakota sat in front and when Brunel offered to drop me off en route, I squeezed into the back. Her hand snaked around the seat where Brunel couldn’t see it. I grabbed it. She squeezed, until we reached the Pont des Arts, and I got out of the thrumming car. “Will you be okay?” I whispered to Dakota. Her voice said yes. Her eyes weren’t so sure. And off they roared into the night.

Some time later, I got a letter from Dakota. She was still in Paris—and I never learned more of what happened to her. But she reported that Robin had returned to the prairie, suffering from an ulcer. I never heard from her again, either. But what young woman, full of dreams, would want to tell the tale of how she failed as a fashion model—even if quitting was one of the smartest choices she ever made?

Over the years since, I vaguely kept tabs on the agents who were the protagonists, if not the heroes, of Model. So I heard that Brunel had broken with this and that partner and founded an agency of his own in Miami. And beginning about a decade ago, when I first learned of his friendship with Jeffrey Epstein, I certainly wasn’t surprised. For his part, Brunel and his lawyers have denied the claims that he recruited underage girls for Epstein and abused them himself. Still, he’s disappeared in the wake of Epstein’s arrest and suicide.

Now, of course, I feel for the no-longer young women who have finally been emboldened to speak out about Brunel. And I wonder—and still worry—about Dakota. https://www.thedailybeast.com/my-night- ... itter_page
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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