Epstein Part 17 (Redacted).pdf
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07/26/17 Page 1 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
THE PALM BEACH POST • TUESDAY, AUGUST 8, 2006 9B W S C Attorney: Police gave media 'distorted view' 134- EPSTEIN from 1B They did that Monday via Gold- berger and a Los Angeles publicist for Miami criminal defense attorney Roy Black, who also has represented Epstein in the case. "We just think there has been a distorted view of this case in the me- dia presented by the Palm Beach po- lice," Goldberger said. Reiter has consistently declined to comment on the case and did not respond to a request for comment Monday. The implication that State Attor- ney Barry Krischer was easy on Ep- stein by presenting the case to a grand jury rather than filing charges directly against him is wrong, Gold- berger said. The Palm Beach Police Depart- ment was "happy and ecstatic" that the panel was going to review the evidence. "I think what happened is they weren't happy with the result. They decided to use the press to embarrass Mr. Epstein." But records show that Reiter wrote Krischer on May 1— well be- fore the case went to the grand jury— suggesting that Krischer "consider if good and sufficient reason exists to require your disqualification from the prosecution of these cases." Rather than flat-out decline to charge Epstein, Krischer referred the case to the grand jury to "ap- pease" the chief, Goldberger said. A state attorney's spokesman would say only that the office refers cases to the grand jury when there are issues with the viability of the evidence or witnesses' credibility. Both the state attorney and the grand jury concluded there was not sufficient evidence that Epstein had sex with minors, according to Gold- berger. "It was just a childish perfor- mance by the Palm Beach Police Department," Goldberger said. The defense attorney said one of the alleged victims who claimed she was a minor was in fact over the age of 18. Another alleged victim who was subpoenaed to testify to the grand jury failed to do so. Epstein's E...
THE PALM BEACH POST • TUESDAY, JULY 25, 2006 Epstein 1,/ 'V° Indictment: Billionaire solicited 3 times Palm Beach police will report today about their prostitution probe of the money manager. By LARRY KELLER Palm Beach Post Staff Writer Billionaire money manager and Palm Beach part-time resident Jeffrey Epstein solicited or procured prostitutes three or more times between Aug. 1 and Oct 31 of last year, according to an in- dictment charging him with felony so- licitation of prostitution. Epstein, 53, was booked at the Palm Beach County jail at 1:45 a.m. Sunday. He was released on $3,000 bond. Epstein's case is unusual in that suspected prostitution johns are usually charged with a misdemeanor, and even a felony charge is typically made in a criminal information — an alternative to an indictment charging a person with the commission of a crime. His attorney, Jack Goldberger, declined to discuss the charge. State attorney's of- fice spokesman Mike Edmondson also had little to say. "Generally speak- ing, there is a case that has a number of different aspects to it," Edmondson said of a prostitution- related charge being submitted to a grand jury. "We first became aware of the case months ago by Palm Beach police." Prosecutors and police worked to- gether to bring the case to the grand jury, he said. Palm Beach police confirmed that and said the department will release a report today regarding its investigation. Epstein has owned a five-bedroom, 71/2-bath, 7,234-square-foot home with a pool and a boat dock on the Intracoastal Waterway since 1990, according to property records. A man answering the door there Monday said that Epstein wasn't home. A Cadillac Escalade reg- istered to him was parked in the drive- way, which is flanked by two massive gargoyles. Epstein sued Property Appraiser Gary Nikolits in 2001, contending that the assessment of his home exceeded its fair market value. He dismissed his lawsuit in D...
1Vlystery money man faces soliciting charge" By NICOLE JANOK Palm Beach Post Staff Writer A part-time Palm Beacher who has socialized with Donald Trump, Bill Clinton and Kevin Spacey was jailed early Sunday with accused drug dealers, drunken drivers and wife beaters after he was charged with soliciting a prosti- tute. Manhattan money manager Jeffrey Epstein, 53, was picked up at his home on El Brillo Way at 1:45 a.m. He was released hours later on $3,000 bond. Epstein was indicted last week by a state grand jury, according to state at- torney's spokesman Mike Edmoddson. Despite Epstein's arrest, the indictment containing the allegations remained sealed Sunday and Edmondson provid- ed no details. Unlike most accused johns, Epstein was charged with a third-degree felony instead of a misdemeanor. Under state law, a solicitation charge usually is ele- vated to a more-serious felony when the defendant has at least two solicitation convictions. However, checks of court records here and in New York Sunday turned up no such convictions. Epstein could not be reached. I' 1- mondson said he was being representti by West Palm Beach attorney Jack Goldberg, who declined comment. Epstein is the president of J Epstein & Co., a money management company based in Manhattan that caters to ultra= wealthy clientele, according to pub- See SOLICMNG, 6B ► Jeffrey Epstein Indictment related to prostitution. 07/26/17 Page 4 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
`Mysterious billionaire' has been on probatpn SOLICITING from IB fished reports. National magazines have described him as a "mysterious billion- aire" who lives in a 45,000- square-foot New York City mansion. He has been in trouble before. In 1993, he and two other defendants were charged in federal court with three counts of postal larceny and theft and one count of property theft. Epstein plead guilty to a single charge of conspiring to steal U.S. Treasury checks from resi- dential mailboxes and re- ceived 5 years' probation. The remaining charges were dropped. Since then, Epstein's name has turneap in New York City's tablcs. The New York Post noted`flew Pres- ident Clinton Id Kevin Spacey to Afrion his pri- vate Boeing 72'i 2003, the paper dubbed lone of the Big Apple's "tdids." In 2004, stein bid against Truml a 43,000- square foot PBeach es- tate once owby health- care magnate 9osman. 1 Trump toppetein with a $41.35 millio: Staff Researclrelica Cortez contriA this story O ntcole janoktcam 07/26/17 Page 5 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
r/2-4704 CORRECTIONS & CLARIFICATIONS Because of reporting errors, The Palm Beach Post Monday said thatJeffrey Epstein, a part-time Palm Beach resi- dent, pleaded guilty in 1993 to a charge of conspiring to steal U.S. Treasury checks. That was another Jeffrey Epstein, not the one indicted here on a prostitution so- licitation charge. Jeffrey Epstein of Palm Beach has never been charged with postal larceny and theft of U.S. Treasury checks, has never pleaded guilty and has never been on probation. The story also incorrectly said that Epstein was arrest- ed Sunday at his Palm Beach home. He surrendered at the Palm Beach County Jail, according to his attorney, Jack Goldberger. Goldberger's name also was misspelled in the article. The story appeared on the front page of the Local section. 07/26/17 Page 6 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
Building overhang falls on Waste Management truck, trapping driver, 3B County told to decide on Callery-Judge project guidelines, 3B 'emale accusers liars >ody who came over the age of fled that, I don't iestion is, did occur. The law here." xplanation as to mild pay girls or massage train- alleged victims ase — $200 to r visits. "The hese witnesses 'riously ques- timed," Goldberger said. Epstein, 53, was i- zed by a county grand Mast month on a charge .elony solicitation of prostitution. Af- ter an 11-month investigation that included sifting through Epstein's trash and surveilling his home, Palm Beach police conduded there was enough evidence to charge him with sexual activity with minors. When the grand jury indicted Epsteka on the less serious charge, Police Chief Michael Reiter referred the case to the FBI to determine whether there were federal law viola- tions. After a spate of stories about the case last week, New York publicist Dan Klores — whose client list has included Paris Hilton and Jennifer Lopez — said on Saturday that Ep- stein's camp was ready "to get their story out" See EPSTEIN, 9B ► `Mr. Epstein absolutely insisted anybody who came to his house be over the age of 18.' JACK GOLDBERGER, Epstein's lead attorney 07/26/17 Page 7 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
Police kept watch on home, airport, sifted through trash ► EPSTEIN from m suggesting the county's top prosecutor disqualify himself. "I must urge you to ex- amine the unusual course that your office's handling of this matter has taken and consider if good and sufficient reason exists to require your dis- qualification from the prose- cution of these cases," Reiter wrote in a May 1 memo to Krischer. While not commenting specifically on the Epstein case, Mike Edmondson, spokesman for the state at- torney, said his office pre- sents cases other than mur- ders to a grand jury when there are questions about witnesses' credibility and their ability to testify. By the nature of their jobs, police officers look at evi- dence from a "one-sided per- spective," Edmondson said. "A prosecutor has to look at it in a much broader fashion," weighing the veracity of wit- nesses and how they may fare under defense attorneys' questioning, he said. Epstein's attorney, Jack Goldberger, said his client committed no crimes. 'The reports and state- ments in question refer to false accusations that were not charged because the Palm Beach County state attorney questioned the credibility of the witnesses," Goldberger said. A county grand jury "found the allegations wholly unsubstantiated and not credible," and that's why his client was not charged with sexual activity with minors, he said. Goldberger said Epstein passed a lie detector test ad- ministered by a reputable polygraph examiner in which he said he did not know the girls were minors. Also, a search warrant served on Epstein's home found no evi- dence to corroborate the girls' allegations, Goldberger said. According to police docu- ments: • A Palm Beach Commu- nity College student said she gave Epstein a massage in the nude, then brought him six girls, ages 14 to 16, for mas- sage and sex-tinged sessions at his home. • A 27-year-old woman who worked as Epstein's personal assist...
01/23/2008 15:04 5616404420 X PAGE 01 Aileen Josephs, P.A. Attorney at Law 101 (.1k-rontim Strevr Burn: 5000 5%,/,..Nr Palm St.och. Florida 554%7'1 (561)801.4119 Fax (56) ) 640.4420 omvphsMgok,lxialt http://www.InmigrAnolUS•c, au Aileen 1 0,01,1v. Mem r of INstrici of (:oltinthin ovd Florida 13c1r' IIVW 0:A01110AM-0M 60 January 25,2008 TO: Ms. Sanchez, Esq. RE: Mr. Epstein From Aileen Josephs, Esq. Ms. Sanchez: Women in our County have been watching this case with great concern. I strongly suggest that you do not attack the victitu(s). If you feel your client is innocent, you can file a libel suit- of course, the truth is an absolute defense to libel, and please keep in mind that not knowing the age of a child is no defense to statutory rape or any sexual crime committed against a child. Sincerely, Aileen Josephs, Esq. Cc. Ms. Lana Belohavek- State Attorney's Office Ms. La Tosha Lowe- request to place this letter in State's file Chief of Police- Palm Beach 07/26/17 Page 9 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
11-1E PALM BEAN POST
in
I 0
EDITOR
•
FRIDAY, AUGUST 25, 2006
OA
f
6
-1
4
A
ei/23/2008 15:04 561646
4420
'
111
Epstein oughtto shut up,
be happy with 'Justice'
I think that Jeffrey EpsteirN
"camp" should be happy that
money and power does buy
justice in this county ("Palm
Beach chief focus of fire in
Epstein case," Aug 14).
The exception: the Rush Lim-
baugh case. But that was at a
time when Palm Beach County
State Attorney Barry Krischer
was running for reelection
and was not sure he would
run uncontested. He received
thousands of e-mails asking
him to press charges against
Mr. Limbaugh. It was a good
political move to do so.
The Epstein camp should
stop atta&ing the victims'
reputation in the media Let's
not forget — they are children.
A child's reputation is sacred.
Also, according to the law, lack
of knowledge of the age of the
victim is no defense for statu-
tory rape or any sexual crime
committed against a child.
If his camp feels that Jeffrey
Epstein has been libeled, his
high-powered attorneys, Jack
Goldberger and Alan Dershow-
itz, can lee a libel suit against
the appropriate parties. Accord-
ing to the law, the truth is an
absolute defense against libel
Other than that, the Epstein
camp should be silent and con-
tent with the justice obtained
from the state attorney. Past
cases indicate that children's
rights, victim's rights and
women% rights are meaningless,
and often the victim is re-vic-
timized.
AILEEN JOSEPHS
West Palm Beach
Parker's off: Lieberman
was too close to the GOP
Kethletn.,,brlitarauv
tananassee
Let commissioners visit
Westgate, see good works
I read with interest a recent
article in The Fait* Beads Post
regarding the Westgate Tab-
ernacle in West Palm Bets%
("Church helps homeless fulfill
college dreams," Aug 18).
I was unaware of the
tence of this church or of the
problems it reportedly has had.
with Palm Beach County Over
code violations. Out of curies*
ity, I att...
, • \IR. WC Jeffrey Epstein in Ness NOrk. 2001. Lrfi. Epstein\ nine-floor, 51.000-square- foot limn house. lie also omns a 7.500-acre ranch in New Nlesico, a house in Palm Beach, and a Caribbean island. Lately,. Jeffrey Epstein's high-flying style has been drawing oohs and aahs: the bachelor financier lives in New York's largest private residerke, claims to take only Millionaires as clients, and flies celebrities including Bill Clinton and Kevin Spacey on his Boeing 727. But pierce his air of mysterY and the picture changes. VICKY WARD explores Epstein's investment career, his ties to retail magnate Leslie Wexner, and his complicated past ..; 07/26/17 Page 11 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
07/26/17 Page 12 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
n Manhattan's Upper Eat Side, home to some of the most expensive real estate on earth, exists the crown jewel of the city's residential town houses. With its 15-foot-high oak door, huge arched windows, and nine floors, it sits on—or, rather. commands—the block of 71st Street between Fifth and Madison Avenues. Almost ludicrously out of pro- portion with its four- and five-story neigh- bors. it seems more like an institution than a house. This is perhaps not surprising— until 1989 it was the Birch Wathen private school. Now it is said to be Manhattan's largest private residence. Inside. amid the flurry of menservants attired in sober black suits and pristine white gloves, you feel you, have stumbled into someone's private Xanadu. This is no mere rich person's home, but a high- walled. eclectic. imperious fantasy that seems to have no boundaries. The entrance hall is decorated not with paintings but with row upon row of indi- vidually framed eyeballs: these, the owner tells people with relish, were imported from England. where they were made for in- jured soldiers. Next comes a marble foyer, which does have a painting, in the man- ner of Jean DubutTet ... but the host coyly refuses to tell visitors who painted it. In any case. euests are like pygmies next to the nearby twice-life-size sculpture of a naked African warrior. Despite its eccentricity the house is curi- ously impersonal. the statement of someone who wants to be known for the scale of his possessions. Its occupant, financier Jeffrey Epstein, 50. admits to friends that he likes it when people think of him this way. A good- looking man, resembling Ralph Lauren, with thick gray-white hair and a weathered face, he usually dresses in jeans, knit shirts, and loafers. He tells people he bought the house because he knew he "could never live anywhere bigger." He thinks 51.000 square feet is an appropriately large space for some- one like himself, who deals mostly in large concep...
personality Donald Trump—sometimes seem not all that clear as to what he ac- tually does to earn his millions. Certainly, you won't find Epstein's transactions writ- ten about on Bloomberg or talked about in the trading rooms. "The trading desks don't seem to know him. It's unusual for animals that big not to leave any footprints in the snow," says a high-level investment manager. Unlike such fund managers as George Soros and Stanley Druckenmiller, whose client lists and stock maneuverings act as their calling cards, Epstein keeps all his deals and clients secret, bar one client: bil- lionaire Leslie Wexner, the respected chair- man of Limited Brfnds. Epstein insists that ever since he left Bear Stearns in 1981 he has managed money only for billionaires— who depend on him for discretion. "I was the only person crazy enough, or arrogant enough. or misplaced enough, to make my limit a bil- lion dollars or more," he tells peo- ple freely. According to him, the flat fees he receives from his clients. combined with his skill at playing the currency markets "with very lame sums of money," have afforded him the lifestyle he enjoys today. Why do billionaires choose him as their trustee? Because the prob- lems of the mega-rich, he tells peo- ple. are different from yours and mine. and his unique philosophy is central to understanding those problems: -Very few people need any more money when they have a billion dollars. The key is not to have it do harm more than any- thing else. . You don't want to lose your money." 1 e has likened his job to that of an architect—mom specifically, one who spe- cializes in remodeling: "I always describe [a billion- aire] as someone who started out in a small home and as he became wealthier had add- ons. He added on another addition, he built a mom over the garage ... until you have a house that is usually a mess.... It's a large house that has been put together over time where no one could foretell th...
"I think we both possess the skill of seeing patterns," says Wexner. "But Jef- frey sees patterns in politics and finan- cial markets, and I see patterns in lifestyle and fashion trends. My skills are not in in- vestment strategy, and, as everyone who knows Jeffrey knows, his are not in fash- ion and design. We frequently discuss world trends as each of us sees them." SPOILS OF SUCCESS From top: Epstein's 70- acre island. Little St. James. in the U.S. Virgin Islands—he now calls it Little St. Jeff: Epstein with President Clinton in Brunei. 2002: Leslie Wexner with his future wife, Abigail, at the 1990 C.F.D.A. Fashion Awards, in New York. 1991. Larry Summers, Harvard's current presi- dent. Harvard law professor Alan Dersho- witz says, "I'm on my 20th book.... The only person outside of my immediate family that I send drafts to is Jeffrey." Real-estate developer and philanthropist Marshall Rose. who has worked with Epstein on projects in New Albany. Ohio, for Wexner, says. "He digests and decodes the information very rapidly, which is to me terrific because we have shorter meetings." Also on the list of admirers are former senator George Mitchell and a gaggle of distinguished scientists, most of whom Epstein has helped fund in recent years. They include Nobel Prize winners Gerald Edelman and Murray Gel- Mann. and mathematical biologist Martin Nowak. When these men describe Epstein. they talk about "energy" and -curiosity,- as well as a love for theoreti- cal physics that they don't ordinarily find in laymen. Gell-Mann rather sweetly mentions that "there are al- ways pretty ladies around" when he goes to dinner cite: Epstein, and he's under the impression that Epstein's clients include the Queen of En- gland. Both Nowak and Dershowitz were thrilled to find themselves shaking the hand of a man named "Andrew" in Epstein's house. "Andrew" turned out to be Prince Andrew, who subsequently arranged to sit in the back of Dersh...
being so brutal as to be "irresponsible." One reporter; in fact, received three threats from Epstein while preparing a piece. They were delivered in a jocular tone, but the message was clear: There-will be trouble for your family if I don't like the article. On the other hand, Epstein is clearly very generous with friends. Joe Pagano, an Aspen-based venture capitalist, who has known Epstein since before his Bear Stearns days. can't say enough nice things: "I have a boy who's dyslexic, and Jeffrey's gotten close to him over the years.... Jeffrey got him into music. He bought him his first piano. And then as he got to school he had difficulty ... in studying ... so Jeffrey got him interested in taking flying lessons." Rosa Monckton recalls Epstein telling her that her. daughter. Domenica, who suf- fers from Down syndrome. needed the sun, and that Rosa should feel free to bring her to his house in Palm Beach anytime. Some friends remember that in the late 80s Epstein would offer to upgrade the air- line tickets of good friends by affixing first- class stickers: the only problem was that the stickers turned our to be unofficial. Some- times the technique worked. but other times it didn't. and the unwitting recipients found themselves exiled to coach. (Epstein has claimed that he paid for the upgrades, and had no knowledge of the stickers.) Many of _those who benefited from Epstein's largesse claim that his generosity comes with no strings attached. "I never felt he wanted anything from me in return." says one old friend. who received a first-class upgrade. E pstein is known about town as a man who loves wom- en—lots of them, mostly young. Model types have been heard saying they are full of gratitude to Epstein for flying them around. and he is a familiar face to many of the Victo- ria's Secret girls. One young woman recalls being summoned by Ghislaine Maxwell to a concert at Epstein's town house. where the women seemed to outnu...
contains a parody of Affleck and Matt Da- ton making Good Will Hunting II, Meek sys to Damon, "What do I keep telling you? hu gotta do the safe picture, then you do is art picture. Then sometimes you gotta d the payback picture because your friend sys you owe him. Then sometimes you got- ugo back to the well." 'Sometimes you do Reindeer Games," Dimon says derisively. "That's just mean," Affleck whines. But it's a pretty accurate description of hi career to date. "Ben takes these franchise poperties so he can go and experiment," sas Harvey Weinstein. "He believes in trying to stretch himself ad not/keep doing the same thing," ob- saves Bruce Willis, who starred with Affleck inArmageddon. "He's an awesome actor, and I think he's going to do great things." Several years ago, in a televised interview onlnside the Actors Studio, Affleck said that hisgoal was to make big commercial movies. He has since revised his ambitions. "That's an adolescent aspiration, in a way. I'd raker be in movies like Magnolia, which I rind( is a towering achievement. I'll con- tinue to act, but I won't act in a way that requires me to hang my name out there and do a lot of publicity. I'll do character roles and focus on writing and directing. It doesn't require the same kinds of sacri- fles in terms of quality of life and person- al life. and it's a more holistic approach to the process. It's become increasingly frus- trating for me to have my role in the story- telling process limited to one character. You hate to be respectful and judicious about your input when it's somebody else's project." Affleck has always impressed colleagues with his voracious appetite for information and skills. "He has made it a point to learn everything he can about how the business works—not just the craft of acting, but from the producing standpoint, from the studio standpoint." says Jon Gordon, exec- utive vice president of production at Mira- max. "He knows how deals work...
?Jeffrey Epstein lions between Mr. Cayne and anyone else re- garding St. Joe Minerals? A: No. And still later in the questioning comes this exchange: Q: Have you had any type of business deal- ings with Mr. Cayne? A: There's no relationship with Bear Stearns. Q: Pardon? A: Other than Bear Stearns. no. Q: Have you been a participant in any type of business venture with Mr. Cayne? A: No. Q: Do you have any expectation of participat- ing iniany business venture with Mr. Cayne? A: Nd. Q: Have you had any business participations with- Mr. Theram? A: No; nor do I anticipate any. Q: Mr. Epstein, did anyone at Bear Stearns ell you in words or substance that you should lot divulge anything about St. Joe Minerals to he staff of the Securities and Exchange Corn- nission? A: No. Q: Has anyone indicated to you in any way. ether directly or indirectly. in words or sub- lance. that your compensation for this past star or any future monies coming to you from Bear Stearns will be contingent upon tour not divulging information to the Securities and Exchange Commission? A No. Despite the circumstances of Epstein's leaving. Bear Stearns agreed to pay him his annual bonus—which he anticipated as be- irn, approximately S100.000. The S.E.C. never brought any charges against anyone at Bear Stearns for insider trading in St. Joe. but its questioning seems to indicate that it was skeptical of Epstein's answers. Some sources have wondered why, if he was such a big producer at Bear Stearns. he would have given it up over a mere $2.500 fine. Certainly the years after Epstein left the firm were not obviously prosperous ones. His luck didn't seem to change until he met HotTenberg. ne of Epstein's first assignments for Hof- fenberg was to mastermind doomed bids to take over Pan American World Airways in 1987 and Emery Air Freight Corp. in 1988. Hoffenberg claimed in a 1993 hearing before a grand jury in Illinois that Epstein came up with the idea ...
whose identity they could not be allowed to know. But Hoffenberg has claimed the mon- ey came from him, and Towers's financial statements for that year show a loan to Ep- stein of $400,000. (Epstein has said he can't remember the details and has dis- puted the accuracy of the Towers financial reports.) Around the same time, Nederlander and Toboroff let Epstein come in with them on a scheme to make money out of Pennwalt, a Pennsylvania chemical company. The plan was to group together with two other parties to take a substantial declared position in the stock. According to a source. Epstein was supposed tip help Nederlander and Toboroff raise 515 million. He seemed to fail to find other investors, say those familiar with the deal. (Epstein has said he was merely an in- vestor.) He invested SI million, which he told his co-investors was his own money. But in his 1989 deposi- tion he said that he put in only 5300,000 of his own money. Where did the rest come from? Hof- fenberg has said it came from him. in a loan that Nederlander and Toboroff didn't know about. Two things happened that alarmed Nederlander and Toboroff. After the group signaled a possible takeover. the Pennwalt management threatened to sue the would-be raiders. Epstein was reluctant ini- tially to give a deposition about his share of the money. telling Toboroff there were "reasons" he didn't want to. Then. after the opportunity for new investors was closed, co-investors recall Epstein announcing that he'd found one at last: Dick Snider. then C.E.O. of the publisher Simon & Schuster. who want- ed to put up approximately 5500.000. (Nei- ther Epstein nor Snyder can now recall the investment. Yet in the 1989 deposition Epstein said that he had recruited Sny- der. whom he had met socially, into the deal.) According to a source. Toboroff and Ne- derlander told Epstein that Snyder was too late. but, without their realizing it. Hoffen- te.rg has claimed, Snyder wrote ...
Jeffrey Epstein he is winning. Whether in conversations or negotiations, he always stands back and lets the other person determine the style and manner of the conversation or negotiation. And then he responds in their style. Jeffrey sees it in chivalrous terms. He does not pick a fight, but if there is a fight, he will let you choose your weapon." One case is rather more serious. Currently, Citibank is suing Epstein for defaulting on loans from its private-banking arm for $20 million. Epstein claims that Citibank "fraud- ulently induced" him into borrowing the money for investments. Citibank disputes this charge. The legal papers for another case offer a tare window into Epstein's finances. In 1995. Epstein stopped paying rent to his landlord, the nonprofit Municipal Arts Society, for his office in the Ward House. He claimed that hey were breaking the terms of the lease by Dot letting his staff in at night. The case was ventually settled. However, one of the papers fled in this dispute is Epstein's financial state- tient for 1988. in which he claimed to be vorth S20 million. He listed that he owned S7 million in securities, S 1 million in cash. zero in residential property (although he told sources that he had already bought the home in Palm Beach), and S11 million in other assets. including his investment in Riddell. A co-investor in Riddell says: "The company had been bought with a huge amount of debt. and it wasn't public, so it was meaningless to attach a figure like that to it ... the price it cost was about 51.2 mil- lion." The co-investors bought out Epstein's share in Riddell in 1995 for approximately S3 million. At that time, when Epstein was asked. as a routine matter. to sign a paper guaranteeing he had access to a few million dollars in case of any subsequent disputes over the sale price. Wexner signed for him. Epstein has explained that this was because the co-investors wanted an indemnity against being sued by...
' 1 1:25 5616404420 PAGE 01 Page 1 of 9 • sl t;e_c 011 '46 ORA,„' PRINTTHIS 11172Mg-CUM cuJ,52._ (A) Features -61J The Fantasist Accused of paying underage girls for sex, superrich money manager Jeffrey Epstein is finding that living in a dream world is dangerous--even if you can pay for it. • By Philip Weiss • Published Dec 10, 2007 Corh.s2 Jeffrey Epstein is under indictment for sex crimes in Palm Beach, Florida, and I'd expected that when he came into the office of PR guru Howard Rubenstein, he would be sober and reserved. Quite the opposite. He was sparkling and ingenuous, apologizing for the half-hour lateness with a charming line- -1 never realized how many one-way streets and no-right-turns there are in midtown. I finally got out and walked"--and as we went down the corridor to Rubenstein's office, he asked, "Have you managed to talk to many of my friends?" Epstein had been supplying me the phone numbers of important scientists and financiers and media figures. "Do you understand what an extraordinary group of people http://www.printthis. el ickabi I ity.com/pt/cpt?action=cpt&title=The+Fantasist&expire=&url... I /13/2008 07/26/17 Page 21 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
01/11/2006 21 : 25 5616404420 X PAGE 132 The Fantasist Page 2 of 9 they are, what they have accomplished in their fields?" One of the accusers—a girl of 14—had put his age at 45, not in his fifties, and you could see why. His walk was youthful, and his face was ruddy with health. He had none of the round-shouldered, burdened qualities of middle age. There was nothing in his hands, not a paper, a book, or a phone_ Epstein had on his signature outfit: new blue jeans and a powder-blue sweater. "I've only ever seen him in jeans," his friend the publicist Peggy Siegal had reported, saying there was a hint of arrogance in that, Epstein's signal that he doesn't have to wear a uniform like the rest of us. I told Epstein and Rubenstein the sort of story New York wanted to do, and Epstein seemed to find ironic delight in every word- "A secretive genius," I'd said. "Not secretive, private," he corrected in his warm Brooklyn accent. "And if I was a genius I wouldn't be sitting here." "A guy with sex issues." A smile formed on Epstein's bow-shaped lips. "What do you mean by sex issues?" Well ... He was 54, had never married—I didn't finish. "Are you channeling my mother?" When I said we were interested in the agony of his ordeal, Rubenstein wrote out the word agony in capital letters on his pad. But agony seemed the last thing on Epstein's soul. "It's the Icarus story, someone who flies too close to the sun," I said. "Did Icarus like massages?" Epstein asked. Two years before, he had tried to explain himself to the Palm Beach police in the same way. After they came into his mansion with a search warrant and carted off massage tables and photos of naked girls and soaps shaped like genitalia, Epstein conveyed an urgent message to the detectives through his attorney. "Mr. Epstein is very passionate about massages ... The massages are therapeutic and spiritually sound for him; that is why he has had many massages." Epstein had even given $100,000 to Ball...
01/11/2008 21:25 5616404420 The Fantasist PAGE 03 Page or of the charmingly inevitable accidents of Epstein's rise, Greenberg was a senior partner of the house; Bear Stearns CEO Jimmy Cayne later told New York that Epstein's forte was dealing with wealthier clients, helping them with their overall portfolios. Leslie Wexner, founder of LimitedBrands, reportedly made Epstein his financial adviser and was instrumental in building his fortune. Epstein was no footman; he loved luxury and, in his own words, saw himself as a financial architect, someone who could show the rich how to live with their money. "I want people to understand the power, the responsibility, and the burden of their money," he once wrote. At times, his powers seemed magical. "I think it's all done with mirrors," says Michael Stroll, a Chicago business-man who sued Epstein (and lost) when an oil deal didn't work out. Next: Epstein's Icarus moment. The New York Timm Redux) Stroll says he could never get a straight line from Epstein. "Everybody who's his friend thinks he's so darn brilliant because he's so darn wealthy. I never saw any brilliance, I never saw him work. Anybody I know that is that wealthy works 26 hours a day. This guy plays 26 hours a day." Those who believe in Epstein say that his intelligence works in a lofty and synthetic manner. "His mind goes through a cross section of descriptions," says Joe Pagano, a financier. "He can go from mathematics to psychology to biology. He takes the smallest amount of information and gets the correct answer in the shortest period of time. That's my definition of IQ." A Columbia University geneticist says Epstein has that insight in science, too. "He has the ability to make connections that other minds can't make," says Richard Axel, a Nobel Prize winner. "He is extremely smart and probing. He can very quickly acquire information to think about a problem and also to identify biological problems without having all the data that ...
/11,./2m!: `1:25 566164F344'2E PAGE 04 The Fantasist Page 4 of 9- minutes so that you can see his mind thrashing about, as if in a labyrinth. And even to doubt an expert's statements." Epstein has been a munificent supporter of cutting-edge research. Axel met Epstein during the early biotech days of the eighties. Vanity Fair columnist Michael Wolff met him in the Internet bubble, in the late nineties, when Epstein invited him and a group of scientists and media types to fly to a conference on the West Coast in his beautiful 727. "It was all a little giddy," Wolff says. "There's a little food out, lovely hors d'oeuvre. And then after fifteen to twenty minutes, Jeffrey arrives. This guy comes onboard: He was my age, late forties, and he had a kind of Ralph Lauren look to him, a good-looking Jewish guy in casual attire. Jeans, no socks, loafers, a button-down shirt, shirttails out. And he was followed onto the plane by—how shall I say this?—by three teenage girls not his daughters. Not adolescent girls. These are young, 18, 19, 20, who knows? They were model-like. They towered over Jeffrey. And they immediately began serving things. You didn't know what to make of this ... Who is this man with this very large airplane and these very tall girls?" Soon after, Wolff was invited to tea at the house on East 71st Street. He understood that there was a purpose to the cultivation. Epstein was shifting his view to media, in his Uber-way. "What does the media mean, where does he fit into it?" Then Epstein began to show up in the press. In 2002, he flew Bill Clinton and Kevin Spacey to Africa on his plane to discuss aids policy, and suddenly he was being written about. In 2003, be became a discreet confidant to Wolff during the period when Wolff was involved in a bid for New York Magazine. Sometime after that, Wolff saw the financial architect in his office at 457 Madison Avenue, the Villard House, where Random House once had its offices. "His literal ...
01/11/2008 21:25 5616404420 PAGE 05 The Fantasist Page 5 of 9 Next: The police lock onto Epstein's sybaritic lifestyle. The lengthy police narrative in the case doesn't make clear how police connected gray-haired Jeff with Jeffrey Epstein, but when the girl identified his picture in an instant in a photo lineup, police threw themselves into an investigation of the modern and palatial house on El Brillo Way. Palm Beach Island is a 3.75-square-mile spit of land famous for towering ficus privacy hedges on Mediterranean-influenced architecture that begins at over $5 million for a single-family home. But the police did their work miles across the water, in the sprawling, drab subdivisions of West Palm Beach, where, according to police reports, high-school girls had been recruited to visit Epstein's house. The 14- year-old was used to set up her 18-year-old go-between, Haley Robson. Robson had massaged him once and thereafter refused, but had agreed to procure girls, for $200 a head. "I'm like Heidi Fleiss." she said. The police net went wider, to malls and community colleges, and Olive Garden restaurants and trailer parks, and the story was always the same. Skinny, beautiful young girls were approached by other girls, who said they could make $200 by massaging a wealthy man, naked. Robson said Epstein had told her the younger the better—which she said meant 18 to 20. The rules were simple. Tell him you're 18. There might be some touching; you could draw the line. "The more you do, the more you are paid." A couple of the girls said they went all the way into the experience—one told police she visited 50 times, another hundreds of times, both having sex with Epstein and Nada Marcinkova, a then-19-year-old beauty who Epstein told one of them was his "sex slave"; he'd purchased her from her family back in Yugoslavia. Epstein's friends' belief that he was targeted for his big life reflects the fact that the police locked onto Epstein's sybaritic lifes...
01/11/2008 21:25 5616404420 The Fantasist PAGE 06 Page o or Epstein was doing because they kept their eyes averted. Two or three girls started crying when they talked to police, one hysterically. One wanted to tell the police but knew that he was "powerful" and was afraid he would come after her family. A 17-year-old model described an uncomfortable encounter in which Epstein offered to help her get jobs, then belittled her modeling portfolio before cajoling her to model the underwear he'd bought for her. A 16-year-old who needed money for Christmas said she was so upset by Epstein's removing her underwear as she massaged him that she broke off her friendship with the girl who brought her. Another called Epstein "a pervert." Epstein clearly did not see it that way. The girls knew what they were getting into and came willingly and were well paid. He was a sexy guy who was working to give the girls pleasure. The master bedroom was a sensual place, with a mural of a naked woman and a hot-pink couch, and a wooden armoire with sex toys. The lights dimmed, music came on. Still, it is a stretch to say Epstein's love shack was like Hugh Hefner's. Playboy was state-of-the-art pornography for the sixties. Today, cutting-edge porn is men with bankrolls picking up young amateurs, say, high-school cheerleaders or college girls on break, and daring them to go further and further for more cash, all the way to sex toys and lesbian sex. At 52, Epstein was outside the demographic of the makeout artists of The Bang Bros, Girls Gone Wild, and Coeds Need Cash but he surely saw himself in that erotic milieu, and seems to have been shocked that his activities would result in a police investigation. His claim that he'd given a total of $100,000 to Ballet Florida for massage was absolutely true. "The massage and therapy fund is excruciatingly important to us. It's part of a dancer's life to have daily massages," says the ballet's marketing director, Debbie Wemyss, who...
01/11/2008 21:25 5616404420 The Fantasist c de J; "dt S\/\411)1AANA PAGE 07 Page of 9 waterway to the Palm Beach County state attorney's office, hut the state attorney apparently saw the main witnesses as weak. One had run away from home, lied about her age, and bragged about her ass on MySpace. Another had a drug arrest and had stolen from Victoria's Secret. The police wanted numerous felony charges against Epstein as well as charges against Haley Robson and Sarah Kellen. Then they heard that the state attorney was preparing a deal with Epstein giving him five years on probation and sending him for psychiatric evaluation. The police chief, Michael Reiter, accused the state attorney of bending over backward for a rich man and then turned the matter over to the FBI. Finally, in July 2006, the Palm Beach County state attorney's office handed down one indictment of Epstein on a felony count of soliciting prostitution. There is no reference to minors in the indictment. Reiter was enraged. He released a letter he had sent out to five underage girls that read "I do not feel that justice has been sufficiently served." Epstein's lawyer said that Reiter was out of control, but the police chief was having an effect. The U.S. Attorney's office began an investigation, and the dream team added another member, Kenneth Starr, the former Clinton prosecutor. One of Epstein's friends told me, "He thinks there's an anti-Semitic conspiracy against him in Palm Beach. He's convinced of that. Maybe it's a defense mechanism." Palm Beach was historically a bastion of Gentile privilege. Vanderbilt and Glendinning and Dillman and Warburton are still engraved on the public fountains, and the Everglades Club with its espaliered trees and brass plates reading private seems stuck in the time of the Gentlemen's Agreement. Yet the anti-Semitic charge disturbed Jews whom I asked about it in Palm Beach. Michael Resnick, rabbi at the oldest synagogue on the island, Temple Ema...
01/11/2008 21:25 5616404420 The Fantasist PAGE 08 rage 0 in 7 Next: Epstein maintains he's done nothing wrong. The police narrative has overtones of a man avoiding all connection or intimacy. For years, Epstein had had a companion in a woman who could take him on if any woman could: Ghislaine Maxwell, the daughter of Robert Maxwell, the British newspaper baron, a Jew born in Czechoslovakia, who died mysteriously off his yacht in 1991. The British tabloids say that Epstein reminded Maxwell of her father and that she brought him into a Continental world. The Broadway and movie producer Jonathan Farkas says he and his wife used to double-date with the couple. Maxwell spent time at the Palm Beach house, and the police narrative says that she even hired an assistant-cum-masseuse for Epstein. But that was five years ago, and the girl was 23, at a local college. Maxwell never showed up in all the surveillance. only her stationery. Epstein's activities seem to have devolved in recent years. Juan Alessi, his longtime houseman, told police that toward the end of his employment, the girls were "younger and younger," and he often had to wash off vibrators and "a long rubber penis" left in the sink. The next houseman, Alfredo Rodriguez, said that he found the sex toys he had to wash "scattered on the floor." ryt No need to worry about dirty laundry, if there's someone to do it. J iewpo The U.S. attorney's investigation put Epstein in a bind. If the Feds brought a case and he lost, he would be imprisoned for a mandatory minimum ten-year sentence. Given the choice, it appears that Epstein will not gamble on a trial but make a deal with the state attorney on the prostitution charge. Not that he is likely to admit that he did anything wrong_ Throughout his ordeal, Epstein maintained the air that there was nothing sordid about his actions. His wealth seems to have endowed him with utter shamelessness, the emperor's new clothes with an erection. Even Alan...
01/11/2000 21:25 5615404420 The Fantasist PAGE 09 rage 7' "In my mind, I'm like, 'Oh my God, when this is over you're getting so much money." Jose Lambiet says the ease went forward in Palm Beach despite the efforts of the dream team because of community rage arising from the class issues in the case—Epstein found the girls not from his own fancy neighborhood but from the struggling suburbs. He has never shown a glimmer of understanding that a high-school girl could be damaged by a powerful 50-year-old's demands, or that some of the girls were already emotionally damaged. For someone who could dream anything, it seems a little small. Find this article at: http //wvAtv.nymag corn/news/features/41826 Check the box to incluciw the list Of links referenced in the snide. Copy nght ()Kew York !Navin= 1-foklinv 1.1..0 All Rights Reserved. The magazine - that never rests Just 44C an issue. htt„• //unsn.v nri nit h iq rtliekahiliht.r.nrrtinticnt?action—cnt&title=TheA-Fantasist&exnire-&url... 1/13/2008 07/26/17 Page 29 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
07/26/17 Page 30 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
Jeffrey Epstein in New York, 2001. Left,. Epstein's nine-floor, 51,000-square- foot town house. He also owns a 7,500-acre ranch in New Mexico, a house in Palm Beach, and a Caribbean island. Lately, Jeffrey Epstein's high-flying style has been drawing oohs and aahs: the bachelor financier lives in New Iork's largest private resideulte claims to take only billionaires as clients, and flies celebrities including Bill Clinton and Kevin Spacey on his Boeing 727. But pierce his air of mysterY and the picture changes. VICKY WARD explores Epstein's investment career, his ties to retail magnate Leslie Wexner, and his complicated past 07/26/17 Page 31 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
n Manhattan's Upper Eat Side. home to some of the most expensive real estate on earth, exists the crown jewel of the city's residential town houses. With its 15-foot-high oak door, huge arched windows, and nine floors, it sits on—or, rather. commands—the block of 71st Street between Fifth and Madison Avenues. Almost ludicrously out of pro- portion with its four- and five-story neigh- bors, it seems more like an institution than a house. This is perhaps not surprising— until 1989 it was the Birch Wathen private school. Now it is said to be Manhattan's largest private residence. Inside. amid the flurry of menservants attired in sober black suits and pristine white gloves. you feel yod have stumbled into someone's private Xanadu. This is no mere rich person's home. but a high- walled. eclectic. imperious fantasy that seems to have no boundaries. The entrance hall is decorated not with paintings but with row upon row of indi- vidually framed eyeballs: these, the owner tells people with relish, were imported from England. where they were made for in- jured soldiers. Next comes a marble foyer, which does have a painting, in the man- ner of Jean Dubuffet ... but the host coyly refuses to tell visitors who painted it. In any case. guests are like pygmies next to the nearby twice-life-size sculpture of a naked African warrior. Despite its eccentricity the house is curi- ously impersonal. the statement of someone who wants to be known for the scale of his possessions. Its occupant, financier Jeffrey Epstein, 50, admits to friends that he likes it when people think of him this way. A good- looking man, resembling Ralph Lauren. with thick gray-white hair and a weathered face, he usually dresses in jeans, knit shirts, and loafers. He tells people he bought the house because he knew he "could never live anywhere bigger." He thinks 51,000 square feet is an appropriately large space for some- one like himself, who deals mostly in large concepts...
personality Donald Trump—sometimes seem not all that clear as to what he ac- tually does to earn his millions. Certainly, you won't find Epstein's transactions writ- ten about on Bloomberg or talked about in the trading moms. "The trading desks don't seem to know him. It's unusual for animals that big not to leave any footprints in the snow," says a high-level investment manager. Unlike such fund managers as George Soros and Stanley Druckenmiller, whose client lists and stock maneuverings act as their calling cards, Epstein keeps all his deals and clients secret, bar one client: bil- lionaire Leslie Wexner, the respected chair- man of Limited Brtnds. Epstein insists that ever since he left Bear Stearns in 1981 he has managed money only for billionaires— who depend on him for discretion. "I was the only person crazy enough, or arrogant enough. or misplaced enough, to make my limit a bil- lion dollars or more," he tells peo- ple freely. According to him, the flat fees he receives from his clients, combined with his skill at playing the currency markets "with very large sums of money," have afforded him the lifestyle he enjoys today. Why do billionaires choose him as their trustee? Because the prob- lems of the mega-rich. he tells peo- ple. are different from yours and mine. and his unique philosophy is central to understanding those problems: -Very few people need any more money when they have a billion dollars. The key is not to have it do harm more than any- thing else.... You don't want to lose your money.- 1 e has likened his job to that of an architect—more specifically, one who spe- cializes in remodeling: "I always describe [a billion- aire] as someone who started out in a small home and as he became wealthier had add- ons. He added on another addition, he built a mom over the garage ... until you have a house that is usually a mess.... It's a large house that has been put together over time where no one could foretell ...
SPOILS OF SUCCESS From top: Epstein's 70- acre island. Little St. James. in the U.S. Virgin Islands—he now calls it Little St. Jeff: Epstein with President Clinton in Brunei. 2002: Leslie Wexner with his future wife, Abigail. at the 1990 C.F.D.A. Fashion Awards. in New York. 1991. Larry Summers. Harvard's current presi- dent. Harvard law professor Alan Dersho- witz says, "I'm on my 20th book.... The only person outside of my immediate family that I send drafts to is Jeffrey." Real-estate developer and philanthropist Marshall Rose. who has worked with Epstein on projects in New Albany. Ohio. for Wexner. says. "He digests and decodes the information very rapidly, which is to me terrific because we have shorter meetings." Also on the list of admirers are former senator George Mitchell and a gaggle of distinguished scientists, most of whom Epstein has helped fund in recent years. They include Nobel Prize winners Gerald Edelman and Murray Gell- Mann. and mathematical biologist Martin Nowak. When these men describe Epstein, they talk about "energy" and -curiosity." as well as a lore for theoreti- cal physics that they don't ordinarily find in laymen. Gell-Mann rather sweetly mentions that "there are al- ways pretty ladies around" when he goes to dinner chef Epstein, and he's under the impression that Epstein's clients include the Queen of En- gland. Both Nowak and Dershowitz were thrilled to find themselves shaking the hand of a man named -Andrew" in Epstein's house. "Andrew" turned out to be Prince Andrew, who subsequently arranged to sit in the back of Dershowitz's law class. Epstein gets annoyed when anyone sug- gests that Wexner "made him." "I had real- ly rich clients before." he has said. Yet he does not deny that he and Wexner have a special relationship. Epstein sees it as a partnership of equals. "People have said it's like we have one brain between two of us: each has a side." "I think we both possess the skill o...
being so brutal as to be "irresponsible." One reporter, in fact, received three threats from Epstein while preparing a piece. They were delivered in a jocular tone, but the message was clear: There will be trouble for your family if I don't like the article. On the other hand, Epstein is clearly very generous with friends. Joe Pagano. an Aspen-based venture capitalist, who has known Epstein since before his Bear Stearns days. can't say enough nice things: "I have a boy who's dyslexic. and Jeffrey's gotten close to him over the years.... Jeffrey got him into music. He bought him his first piano. And then as he got to school he had difficulty ... in studying ... so Jeffrey got him interested in taking flying lessons." Rosa Monckton recalls Epstein telling her that her, daughter. Domenica, who suf- fers from Down syndrome. needed the sun. and that Rosa should feel free to bring her to his house in Palm Beach anytime. Some friends remember that in the late 80s Epstein would offer to upgrade the air- line tickets of good friends by affixing first- class stickers: the only problem was that the stickers turned out to be unofficial. Some- times the technique worked. but other times it didn't, and the um% thing recipients found themselves exiled to coach. (Epstein has claimed that he paid for the upgrades, and had no knowledge of the stickers.) Many of those who benefited from Epstein's largesse claim that his generosity comes with no strings attached, "1 never felt he wanted anything from me in return." says one old friend. who received a first-class upgrade. y pstein is known about town as a man who loves wom- en—lots of them. mostly young. Model types have been heard saying they are full of gratitude to Epstein for flying them around, and he is a familiar face to many of the Victo- ria's Secret girls. One young woman recalls being summoned by Ghislaine Maxwell to a concert at Epstein's town house. where the women seemed to outnumb...
contains a parody of Meek and Matt Da- mon making Good Will Hunting II, Aft' leek says to Damon, "What do I keep telling you? You gotta do the safe picture, then you do the art picture. Then sometimes you gotta do the payback picture because your friend says you owe him. Then sometimes you got- ta go back to the well." "Sometimes you do Reindeer Games," Damon says derisively. "That's just mean," Affleck whines. But it's a pretty accurate description of his career to date. "Ben takes these franchise properties so he can go and experiment," says Harvey Weinstein. "He believes in trying to stretch himself and notl keep doing the same thing," ob- serves Bruce Willis. who starred with Affleck in Armageddon. "He's an awesome actor, and I think he's going to do great things." Several years ago, in a televised interview on Inside the Actors Studio, Affleck said that his mai was to make big commercial movies. He has since revised his ambitions. "That's an adolescent aspiration, in a way. I'd rather be in movies like Magnolia, which I think is a towering achievement. I'll con- tinue to act. but I won't act in a way that requires me to hang my name out there and do a lot of publicity. I'll do character roles and focus on writing and directing. It doesn't require the same kinds of sacri- fice. in terms of quality of life and person- al life. and it's a more holistic approach to the process. It's become increasingly frus- trating for me to have my role in the story- telling process limited to one character. You have to be respectful and judicious about your input when it's somebody else's project." Affleck has always impressed colleagues with his voracious appetite for information and skills. "He has made it a point to learn everything he can about how the business works—not just the craft of acting, but from the producing standpoint, from the studio standpoint," says Jon Gordon, exec- utive vice president of production at Mira- max. "He kno...
,L,Iirev Epstein tions between Mr. Cayne and anyone else re- garding St. Joe Minerals? A: No. And still later in the questioning comes this exchange: Q: Have you had any type of business deal- ings with Mr. Cayne? A: There's no relationship with Bear Stearns. Q: Pardon? A: Other than Bear Steams. no. Q: Have you been a participant in any type of business venture with Mr. Cayne? A: No. Q: Do you have any expectation of participat- ing iniany business venture with Mr. Cayne? A: No. Q: Have you had any business participations with Mr. Theram? A: No; nor do I anticipate any. Q: Mr. Epstein. did anyone at Bear Stearns tell you in words or substance that you should not divulge anything about St. Joe Minerals to the staff of the Securities and Exchange Com- mission? A: No. Q: Has anyone indicated to you in any way. either directly or indirectly. in words or sub- stance. that your compensation for this past year or any future monies coming to you from Bear Stearns will be contingent upon our not divulging information to the Securities and Exchange Commission? A: No. Despite the circumstances of Epstein's leaving, Bear Steams agreed to pay him his annual bonus—which he anticipated as be- ing approximately S100.000. The S.E.C. never brought any charges against anyone at Bear Stearns for insider trading in St. Joe. but its questioning seems to indicate that it was skeptical of Epstein's answers. Some sources have wondered why, if he was such a big producer at Bear Stearns. he would have given it up over a mere $2,500 tine. Certainly the years after Epstein left the firm were not obviously prosperous ones. His luck didn't seem to change until he met Hoffenberg. nne of Epstein's first assignments for Hof- fenberg was to mastermind doomed bids to take over Pan American World Airways in 1987 and Emery Air Freight Corp. in 1988. Hoffenberg claimed in a 1993 hearing before a grand jury in Illinois that Epstein came up with the idea ...
whose identity they could not be allowed to know. But Hoffenberg has claimed the mon- ey came from him, and Towers's financial statements for that year show a loan to Ep- stein of $400,000. (Epstein has said he can't remember the details and has dis- puted the accuracy of the Towers financial reports.) Around the same time, Nederlander and Toboroff let Epstein come in with them on a scheme to make money out of Pennwalt, a Pennsylvania chemical company. The plan was to group together with two other parties to take a substantial declared position in the stock. According to a source. Epstein was supposed tj) help Nederlander and Toboroff raise S15 million. He seemed to fail to find uther investors, say those familiar with the deal. (Epstein has said he was merely an in- vestor.) He invested Si million, which he told his co-investors was his own money. But in his 1989 deposi- tion he said that he put in only 5300.000 of his own money. Where did the rest come from? Hof- fenberg has said it came from him. in a loan that Nederlander and Toboroff didn't know about. Two things happened that alarmed Nederlander and Toboroff. After the group signaled a possible takeover. the Pennwalt management threatened to sue the would-be raiders. Epstein was reluctant ini- tially to give a deposition about his share of the money. telling Toboroff there were -reasons- he didn't want to. Then. after the opportunity for new investors was closed. co-investors recall Epstein announcing that he'd found one at last: Dick Snyder. then C.E.O. of the publisher Simon & Schuster. who want- ed to put up approximately 5500.000. (Nei- ther Epstein nor Snyder can now recall the investment. Yet in the 1989 deposition Epstein said that he had recruited Sny- der, whom he had met socially, into the deal.) According to a source. Toboroff and Ne- derlander told Epstein that Snyder was too kite. but, without their realizing it. Hoffen- l.et;. has claimed. Snyder wrot...
Jeffrey Epstein he is winning. Whether in conversations or negotiations, he always stands back and lets the other person determine the style and manner of the conversation or negotiation. And then he responds in their style. Jeffrey sees it in chivalrous terms. He does not pick a fight, but if there is a fight, he will let you choose your weapon." One case is rather more serious. Currently, Citibank is suing Epstein for defaulting on loans from its private-banking arm for $20 million. Epstein claims that Citibank "fraud- ulenly induced" him into borrowing the money for investments. Citibank disputes this charge. The legal papers for another case offer a rare window into Epstein's finances. In 1995. Epstein stopped paying rent to his landlord. the nonprofit Municipal Arts Society, for his office in the Villard House. He claimed that they were breaking the terms of the lease by not letting his staff in at night. The case was eventually settled. However. one of the papers filed in this dispute is Epstein's financial state- ment for 1988. in which he claimed to be worth S20 million. He listed that he owned $7 million in securities. SI million in cash. zero in residential property (although he told sources that he had already bought the home in Palm Beach). and Sll million in other assets. including his investment in Riddell. A co-investor in Riddell says: "The company had been bought with a huge amount of debt. and it wasn't public. so it was meaningless attach a figure like that to it ... the price it cost was about S 1.2 mil- lion.- The co-investors bought out Epstein's share in Riddell in 1995 for approximately S3 million. At that time, when Epstein was asked. as a routine matter. to sign a paper guaranteeing he had access to a few million dollars in case of any subsequent disputes over the sale price. Wexner signed for him. Epstein has explained that this was because the co-investors wanted an indemnity against being sued ...
MURKY WORLD OF CLINTON PAL New York Post. New York, N.Y.: Oct 20, 2002. pg. 010 People: Epstein, Jeffrey, Clinton, Bill, Trump, Donald J, Boardman, Samantha. Truman, James Section: Page Six Text Word 1147 Count Document URL: Abstract (Document. Summary) Leslie Wexner, founder and chair of the Limited clothing-store chain, bought the place in 1989 for $15,000. [Jeffrey Epstein]'s mentor and one of his clients, Wexner is rumored to have sold the palatial digs to him for just $1. Epstein quickly spent $10 million to gut the place and completely redo the interior. SOCIALITE Samantha Boardman ditched her beau, Conde Nast editorial director James Truman 07/26/17 Page 40 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
l'IGVV 111111. %/W. rugc 1 VL J MURKY WORLD OF CLINTON PAL New York Post. New York, N.Y.: Oct 20, 2002. pg. 010 Abstract (Document Summary) Leslie Wexner, founder and chair of the Limited clothing-store chain, bought the place in 1989 for $15,000. [Jeffrey Epsteinj's mentor and one of his clients, Wexner is rumored to have sold the palatial digs to him for just $1. Epstein quickly spent $10 million to gut the place and completely redo the interior. SOCIALITE Samantha Boardman ditched her beau, Conde Nast editorial director James Truman, last year for man-about-town Todd Meister. According to our spies, Boardman ditched Meister after she caught him in flagrante with a 19-year-old coed. But don't feel too bad for her. Women's Wear Daily reports Boardman has a new man - Vanity Fair's Graydon Carter. Truman must not be too pleased. VVhen Boardman dumped him, he needed to recuperate at a Buddhist retreat upstate. Editorial meetings at Conde Nast must be a hoot these days. "DISCO Bloodbath" author James St. James is following up his notorious tell-all about killer club kid Michael Alig with another true-crime tome. He's shopping around "Killer Grandpa," his investigation into a lynching that his grandfather led in 1935. "My grandfather was a sheriff in Fort Lauderdale, and he lynched a black man that allegedly raped a white woman," James told us. "About 100 people gathered to watch, and they passed a gun around and everyone took a shot at the body. It became this big town secret, and I write about what really happened." James, a 1980s club kid who fell in with Alig's inner circle, is played by Seth Green in "Party Monster," the movie adaptation of "Disco Bloodbath." But James said he was "shocked" when he watched a few scenes of Green mincing it up with Macaulay Culkin, who plays Alig. "I didn't know I was so gay! I thought I was more like Steve McQueen, but Seth is flouncing around the whole time. Seth is much cuter than me, actually, and looks ...
INCW 1 VIA 1 VJL One power player who doesn't find Epstein to be all that hard to figure is Donald Trump. "I've known Jeffrey for 15 years," The Donald tells the magazine. "Terrific guy. He's a lot of fun to be with. It is even said that he likes beautiful women as much as I do, and many of them are on the younger side." Another thing Epstein - who's said to pocket at least $75 million a year in fees - and Trump have in common is a taste for extravagant living. Epstein lives in a 45,000-square-foot, eight-story mansion on East 71st Street. Leslie Wexner, founder and chair of the Limited clothing-store chain, bought the place in 1989 for $15,000. Epstein's mentor and one of his clients, Wexner is rumored to have sold the palatial digs to him for just $1. Epstein quickly spent $10 million to gut the place and completely redo the interior. "I don't want to live in another person's house," Epstein told New York. Blind dater CHRIS Noth wasn't lonely on a recent trip to London. The "Law & Order" hunk was set up on a blind date with Rose Keegan, an actress and the daughter of historian Sir John Keegan. The two spent much of the evening at the Century Club, and they were chaperoned by Kyle MacLachlan, who is pals with Noth from their days on the set of "Sex and the City." MacLachlan is in London co-starring in a play with hemp-happy Woody Harrelson. 'Rockets' soars "ROCKETS Redglare!" - a posthumous tribute to the late East Village actor and downtown icon - won the Grand Jury Prize for Best Documentary at the New York International Independent Film and Video Festival. Directed by Luis Fernandez De La Reguera, it features interviews with Rockets' pals Willem Dafoe, Matt Dillon, Jim Jarmusch, Steve Buscemi and Julian Schnabel. Rockets, the beloved 350-pound former bodyguard of punk legend Sid Vicious who appeared in several of Buscemi's and Jarmusch's movies, died last year after years of drug abuse. Bizarre union BOB Crane was a sex addict, but his sec...
S C Even without Ozzy, crowd finds entertainment galore at Ozzfest, 48 Palm Beach chief focus of fire in Epstein case Defendant's lawyers take him on; he slams state attorney By LARRY KELLER Palm Beach Post Staff Writer In the case of Palm Beach financier Jeffrey Ep- stein, it seems, at times, as if two men are accused of wrongdoing: Epstein and Palm Beach Police Chief Michael Reiter. Epstein, 53, was indict- ed last month on a charge of felony solicitation of prosti- tution solely because of Re- iter's "craziness," one of Epstein's lawyers said. His department disseminated "a distorted view of the case" and behaved in a "childish" manner when the grand jury didn't indict Ep- stein on the charges it sought, another Epstein lawyer complained. To hear the Epstein camp tell it, Reiter, 48, is a loose cannon better suited to be the sheriff of Mayber- ry. They whisper that he's embroiled in a messy di- vorce. Reiter did in fact file for divorce from his wife, Jill, last year, after 24 years of marriage. They have a son, 18, and a daughter, 14. The couple is scheduled to go to mediation Wednesday. Nothing in the court file suggests their split is par- ticularly ugly. Reiter incurred the wrath of the Epstein camp as well as the state attor- See REITER, 7B ► 8 d 07/26/17 Page 43 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
THE PALM BEACH POST • M01‘ W S C Colleagues cite chief's professionalism, integrity ► REITER from 1B ney's office for two reasons. First, he pressed for Epstein to be charged with the more serious crimes of sexual ac- tivity with minors. Second, he slammed State Attorney Bar- ry Krischer in blunt language seldom used by one law- enforcement official con- cerning another because of what he perceived as that of- fice's mishandling of the case. In a letter to Krischer written May 1, Reiter called his actions in the Epstein case "highly unusual." He added, "I must urge you to . . consider if good and suffi-' cient reason exists to require your disqualification from the prosecution of these cases." In short, Reiter told the county's top prosecutor for the past 13 years that he ought to get off the case. "It looks like a departure from professionalism," Miami- Dade State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle said of Reiter's letter. Following Epstein's in- dictment, Reiter referred the case to the FBI to determine whether the super-rich, super-connected defendant had violated any federal laws. Reiter won't discuss the case or the broadsides aimed at him. But others almost uniformly use one word to describe the chief: profes- sional. "I have always been im- pressed by Mike's profes- sionalism and his leader- ship," said Rick Lincoln, chief of the Lantana Police Depart- ment and a Palm Beach County cop for 32 years. "The town of Palm Beach has a very professional police department. We all consider Mike to be our peer and a man of integrity." Reiter: Town Manager Peter Elwell says the Palm Beach police chief's well worth his $144,000 sal- ary. Juno Beach Police Chief H.C. Clark II agreed. Al- though he doesn't know Re- iter well, he has met with him on countywide law enforce- ment issues. "I've never seen him lose his cool. I've never seen anything but a profes- sional demeanor from him." Reiter joined the Palm B...
CAL U•111 V VJ. I NU, "V 1 MA I\ A VJ• SEAN "Puffy" Combs confirmed our account of how Heath Ledger scuffled with his bodyguards at the VH1Nogue Awards after-party Combs threw at Lotus. "Heath is from Australia, and he parties hard now," Combs told "Access Hollywood." The two became pals on the set of "Monster's Ball." "He's coming at me, he's like, 'Puff, people don't know that we're the best of friends,' so it's like my security held him up for a second . . . and I was like, 'No, that's my brother.'" Sins of his grandfather "DISCO Bloodbath" author James St. James is following up his notorious tell-all about killer club kid Michael Alig with another true-crime tome. He's shopping around "Killer Grandpa," his investigation into a lynching that his grandfather led in 1935. "My grandfather was a sheriff in Fort Lauderdale, and he lynched a black man that allegedly raped a white woman," James told us. "About 100 people gathered to watch, and they passed a gun around and everyone took a shot at the body. It became this big town secret, and I write about what really happened." James, a 1980s club kid who fell in with Alig's inner circle, is played by Seth Green in "Party Monster," the movie adaptation of "Disco Bloodbath." But James said he was "shocked" when he watched a few scenes of Green mincing it up with Macaulay Culkin, who plays Alig. "I didn't know I was so gay! I thought I was more like Steve McQueen, but Seth is flouncing around the whole time. Seth is much cuter than me, actually, and looks better in drag." Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission. People: Epstein, Jeffrey, Clinton, Bill, Trump, Donald J, Boardman, Samantha, Truman, James Section: Page Six Text Word Count 1147 Document URL: http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/nypost/222493931.html?MAC=90db373aedcb1c36a203f8 bd... 11/30/2005 07/26/17 Page 45 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
HOTSHOT EPSTEIN NOT SO HOT: VF PAUL THARP . New York Post. New York, N.Y.: Feb 4, 2003. pg. 036 People: Epstein, Jeffrey, Hoffenberg, Steve Section: Business Text Word Count 249 Document URL: Abstract (Document Summary) [Jeffrey Epstein], a 50-year-old Ralph Lauren lookalike who claims to manage a billionaires-only fund, has made headlines for his high- society lifestyle; among his attention-grabbing moves was flying President Clinton and Kevin Spacey to Africa on a private jet. The article says that when Epstein worked for [Steve Hoffenberg], he cooked up some of Hoffenberg's questionable financing deals - a claim Epstein has denied. S 07/26/17 Page 46 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
• HOTSHOT EPSTEIN NOT SO HOT: VF PAUL THARP. New York Post. New York, N.Y.: Feb 4, 2003. pg. 036 Abstract (Document Summary) [Jeffrey Epstein], a 50-year-old Ralph Lauren lookalike who claims to manage a billionaires-only fund, has made headlines for his high- society lifestyle; among his attention-grabbing moves was flying President Clinton and Kevin Spacey to Africa on a private jet. The article says that when Epstein worked for [Steve Hoffenberg], he cooked up some of Hoffenberg's questionable financing deals - a claim Epstein has denied. Full Text (249 words) (Copyright 2003, The New York Post. All Rights Reserved) Jeffrey Epstein - a self-proclaimed billionaire who hobnobs with moguls and pledged $25 million to Harvard - is actually a small potatoes ex-bounty hunter with a questionable financial background, says a report. Epstein, a 50-year-old Ralph Lauren lookalike who claims to manage a billionaires-only fund, has made headlines for his high- society lifestyle; among his attention-grabbing moves was flying President Clinton and Kevin Spacey to Africa on a private jet. But a report in the March issue of Vanity Fair, on newsstands this week, unmasks Epstein's mystery image. Epstein wasn't exactly the top gun at Bear Stearns, as he claims - and left the firm amid a swirl of rumors and an SEC violation, the article said. His mentor in high finance was Steve Hoffenberg, the bill collector turned hustler now serving 20 years in prison for running the nation's costliest Ponzi scheme, the report says. The article says that when Epstein worked for Hoffenberg, he cooked up some of Hoffenberg's questionable financing deals - a claim Epstein has denied. Epstein has also been involved in numerous lawsuits, including one in which Citibank is suing him for defaulting on $20 million in loans from its private banking arm. Epstein and his lawyer, Jeffrey Schantz, couldn't be reached for comment on the article. The article said that Epstein keeps all ...
Archives: New York Post Page 1 of 1 SOCIETY GIRL AT TWITS' END Neal Travis. New York Post. New York, N.Y Dec 1, 2000. pg. 009 Abstract (Document Summary) THINGS may be turning sour for gal-about-town Ghislaine Maxwell, daughter of the fat and fraudulent former owner of the Daily News, the late Robert Maxwell. I hear that some of the 39-year-old Ghislaine's friends on the Manhattan and London party circuit are cutting her because she's had so much adverse press over her relationship with Prince Andrew, Fergie's ex, with whom she recently attended a downtown S&M-themed party. Her relationship with "Randy Andy" is said to be platonic, but the socially prominent women in Ghislaine's "set" have recently sworn off any kind of publicity. Full Text (328 words) Copyright New York Post Corporation Dec 1, 2000 THINGS may be turning sour for gal-about-town Ghislaine Maxwell, daughter of the fat and fraudulent former owner of the Daily News, the late Robert Maxwell. I hear that some of the 39-year-old Ghislaine's friends on the Manhattan and London party circuit are cutting her because she's had so much adverse press over her relationship with Prince Andrew, Fergie's ex, with whom she recently attended a downtown S&M-themed party. Her relationship with "Randy Andy" is said to be platonic, but the socially prominent women in Ghislaine's "set" have recently sworn off any kind of publicity. A series of lacerating articles - and the publication of the vapid "Bright Young Things," written by one of their own, Brooke de Ocampo - has portrayed this crowd as a bunch of twits living off their trust funds. Ghislaine's own funds are something of a mystery. Her father lavished money on her and set her up in at least one business in New York. But Maxwell's own ill-gotten gains were seized after he took a dive off his yacht, which was named for her. There are plenty of British pensioners who lost their only means of support in the crash of Maxwell's house of cards and...
Jeffrey Epstein: International Moneyman of Mystery Page 1 of 4 Zbc New Ilork &I,Inter) Home Delivery Click Here To Get 50% Off! 4c_NWYORIC nymag.com FEATURES & COLUMNS TOP STORIES FEATURES Howard Stern, Free at Last By Steve Fishman Coming to you via satellite, a brave new radio world, from the once and future king of all media featuring the Craptacular. The Abortion Capital of America By Ryan Lizza As the pro-life movement intensifies nationwide, New York contemplates its history and future as a refuge. History of The Producers: Part HI By Adam Sternbergh The filming of Mel Brooks's Broadway triumph was supposed to be a rollicking event. But sometimes even in comedy, tragedy intervenes. REA WW1 The Han SEARCH' Select a Guide ,ft riassiricos I PERSONALS I REAL ESTATE I WEDDINGS 11„ SUM SAVE THIS CO EMAIL THIS GiL, PRINT THIS ci*MOST POPULAR Profile Jeffrey Epstein: International Moneyman of Mystery He's pals with a passel of Nobel Prize—winning scientists, CEOs like Leslie Wexner of the Limited, socialite Ghislaine Maxwell, even Donald Trump. But it wasn't until he flew Bill Clinton, Kevin Spacey, and Chris Tucker to Africa on his private Boeing 727 that the world began to wonder who he is. By Landon Thomas Jr. He comes with cash to burn, a fleet of airplanes, and a keen eye for the ladies -- to say nothing of a relentless brain that challenges Nobel Prize—winning scientists across the country -- and for financial markets around the world. Ever since the Post's "Page Six" ran an item about the president's late-September visit to Africa with Kevin Spacey and Chris Tucker -- on his new benefactor's customized Boeing 727 -- the question of the day has been: Who in the world is Jeffrey Epstein? Cash Casual: Epstein dresses down. (Photo credit: Courtesy of It's a life full of question marks. Epstein is Jeffrey Epstein) said to run $15 billion for wealthy clients, yet aside from Limited foun...
COLUMNS THE IMPERIAL CITY Harper's After Lewis Lapham By Kurt Andersen The chronicler of the American twilight is going into semi-retirement. Will Harper's magazine become less of a lefty echo chamber? THE CITY POLITIC The Speech /7,.." Hillary Won't . Give About 2008 By Chris Smith Finally, Hillary Clinton, the most careful of politicians, says what she really thinks. cNWcY OR1c, 11,11•Mkg t Evelytliing guide to (Pearls Jeffrey Epstein: International Moneyman of Mystery Page 2 of 4 open bids for it. Soros. Wasserstein. Kravis. Weill. The Sturm and Drang of their successes and failures has been played out in public. Epstein breaks the mold. Most everyone on the Street has heard of him, but nobody seems to know what the hell he is up to. Which is just the way he likes it. "My belief is that Jeff maintains some sort of money-management firm, though you won't get a straight answer from him," says one well-known investor. "He once told me he had 300 people working for him, and I've also heard that he manages Rockefeller money. But one never knows. It's like looking at the Wizard of Oz -- there may be less there than meets the eye." Mil Flory Florist The VoguE Ap www.mi Says another prominent Wall Streeter: "He is this mysterious, Gatsbyesque figure. He likes people to think that he is very rich, and he cultivates this air of aloofness. The whole thing is weird.' The wizard that meets the eye is spare and fit; with a long jaw and a carefully coiffed head of silver hair, he looks like a taller, younger Ralph Lauren. A Adve raspy Brooklyn accent betrays his Coney Island origins. He spends an hour and fifteen minutes every day doing advanced yoga with his personal instructor, who travels with him wherever he goes. He is an enthusiastic member of the Trilateral Commission and the Council on Foreign Relations. He dresses casually -- jeans, open-necked shirts, and sneakers -- and is rarely seen in a tie. Indeed, those...
Jeffrey Epstein: International Moneyman of Mystery Page 3 of 4 species represents the highest evolutionary form of the political animal. To be up close to him, as he was during the African journey, is akin to seeing the rarest of beasts on a safari. As he put it to a friend upon his return from Africa, "If you were a boxer at the downtown gymnasium at 14th Street and Mike Tyson walked in, your face would have the same look as these foreign leaders had when Clinton entered the room. He is the worlds greatest politician." "Jeffrey is both a highly successful financier and a committed philanthropist with a keen sense of global markets and an in-depth knowledge of twenty- first-century science," Clinton says through a spokesman. "I especially appreciated his insights and generosity during the recent trip to Africa to work on democratization, empowering the poor, citizen service, and combating HIV/AIDS." Before Clinton, Epstein's rare appearances in the gossip columns tended to be speculation as to the true nature of his relationship with Ghislaine Maxwell. While they are still friends, the English tabloids have postulated that Maxwell has longed for a more permanent pairing and that for undetermined reasons Epstein has not reciprocated in kind. it's a mysterious relationship that they have,' says society journalist David Patrick Columbia. "In one way, they are soul mates, yet they are hardly companions anymore. It's a nice conventional relationship, where they serve each other's purposes." Friends of the two say that Maxwell, whose social life has always been higher- octane than Epstein's, lent a little pizzazz to the lower-profile Epstein. Indeed, at a party at Maxwell's house, her friends say, one is just as apt to see Russian ladies of the night as one is to see Prince Andrew. The Oxford- educated Maxwell, described by many as a man-eater (she flies her own helicopter and was recently seen dining with Clinton at Nello's on Madison Avenue), ...
The Free Press -- Independent News Media - Bob Fitrakis THE0FRE.E0PRESS4.0 UCH 35 Page 1 of 2 000.,05' OfIG (.1114 qpi) 0--r Wed Dec 07 2005 th, 63 Tho About Do it! Journal Columns Dispatches Departments Progressive Guide Calendar Online Store Columns Bob Fitrakis The Wexner War August 1, 2003 We can only imagine Limited founder and apparel mag- nate Leslie Wexner's consternation over the leaking of a document entitled, Wexner Analysis: Israeli Communication Priorities 2003. The report was prepared for the Wexner Foundation and provides insight into Wexner's relationship with the state of Israel. As the Cleveland Plain Dealer noted, Wexner keeps his personal life "under padlock." But what has surfaced over the years simply adds to his mystery. In the Shapiro murder file, personally ordered destroyed by Columbus Chief of Police James Jackson, Wexner is listed as an alleged organized crime associate. A December 1995 Architectural Digest article and a follow-up 1996 New York Times report detailed the inner sanctum of Wexner's former Manhattan townhouse, one of the largest in the city. "Visitors described a bathroom reminiscent of James Bond movies: hidden beneath a stairway, lined with lead to provide shelter from attack and supplied with closed-circuit television screens and a telephone, both concealed in a cabinet beneath the sink," wrote the Times. The townhouse is now reportedly owned by Wexner's even more mysterious protégé, Jeffrey E. Epstein. Epstein, who recently loaned his jet to President Clinton, is usually seen in the company of Ghislaine Maxwell, daughter of deceased publishing tycoon Robert Maxwell. After Maxwell fell or was pushed off his yacht in 1991, it was revealed that he was working for the Israeli government and the Mossad, the Israeli Intelligence service. While Maxwell's ties to the Mossad are well-documented, Epstein's connections are less well known. The London Sunday Times quoted a New Yo...
The Free Press -- Independent News Media - Bob Fitrakis Still, the Wexner Analysis emphasizes that "now is the time to link American success in dealing with terrorism and dictators from a position of strength to Israel's ongoing efforts to eradicate terrorism on and within its borders." Lutz, realizing the value of an Arab bogeymen, stresses that "'Saddam Hussein' are the two words that tie Israel to America and are most likely to deliver support in Congress. The day we allow Saddam to take his eventual place in the trash heap of history is the day we lose our strongest weapon in the linguistic defense of Israel. In the "Essential Conclusion" section of the report, Lutz offers 10 recommendations. The first is: "Iraq colors all. Saddam is your best defense, even if he is dead. For a year - a SOLID YEAR - you should be invoking the name of Saddam Hussein and how Israel was always behind American efforts to rid the world of this ruthless dictator and liberate their people." Now, as the occupation of Iraq begins to look like the dreaded quagmire, and American troops are dying at the rate of almost one a day, more scrutiny should come to the role of those who pushed for the attack on Iraq, since Saddam Hussein neither had links to Al Qaeda nor posed a threat to the United States. The Project for the New American Century, the major ideological force behind the illegal attack on Iraq, are generally more concerned with Hussein's threat to Israel than to the United States. Recent reports that Paul Wolfowitz, the Deputy Secretary of Defense, advised President Bush to include the bogus reference to uranium from Niger in the State of the Union address demonstrates a much bigger problem. Lobbying groups like the Mega Group and government insiders like Wolfowitz and Richard Pearle are engaged in a systematic campaign to identify Israeli national security interests with U.S. military and security interests. The Wexner Analysis merely documents this extensi...
Trilateral Commission Members Page 1 of 9 Trilateral Commission Members April 10, 2003 Krister Ahlstrom, Chairman, Ahlstrom Corp. Helsinki Madelaine K. Albright, former Secretary of State Paul Arthur Allaire, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Xerox Corporation Graham Allison, Director, Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, Prof. Of Gov., Harvard. Edmond Alphandery, Chairman, Caisse Nationale de Prevoyance, Paris Dwayne 0. Andreas, Chairman of the Board, Archer Daniels Midland Company Stelios Argyros, former Member of the European Parliament Michael Armacost, President, The Brookings Institution; former U.S. Ambassador to Japan Jarzy Baczynsk, editor-in-chief, Polityka, Warsaw Euan Baird, Chairman, Schumberger Limited Piero Bassetti, former Chairman, Chamber of Commerce and Industry of Milan Riley P. Bechtel, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Bechtel Group, Inc. Erik Belfrage, senior vice President, Skandivanviska Enslikda Banken, Stockholm C. Fred Bergsten, Director, Institute for International Economics; former U.S. Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for International Affairs Susan V. Berresford, President, Ford Foundation Carl Bildt, Member of Swedish Parliament Lord Conrad M. Black of Crossharbour, Chairman of Hollinger International Geoffrey T. Boisi, vice Chairman, JPMorgan Chase Stephen W. Bosworth, former ambassador to the Republic of Korea Ana Patricia Botin, Chairman, Banesto, Madrid Jacques Bougie, President and Chief Executive Officer, Alcoa Aluminum Limited, Montreal Jorge Braga de Macedo, President of the Development Center, Paris Lord Brittan, vice Chairman, UBS Warburg, London Harold Brown, Counselor, Center for Strategic and International Studies; former U.S. Secretary of State John H. Bryan, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Sara Lee Corporation Zbigniew Brzezinski, Counselor Center for Strategic and International Studies; Robert Osgood Professor of American Foreign Affairs, Paul Nit...
Trilateral Commission Members Page 2 of 9 Domingo F. Cavallo, President, Accion por la Republica, Buenos Aires John H. Chafee, Member of United States Senate (now retiring) Morris Chang, Chairman, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufactoring, Taipei Richard B. Cheney, Vice President of the United States; former Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer Halliburton Co.; U.S. Secretary of Defense William Jefferson Clinton, President of the UNited States Cho Suck-Rai, Chairman, Hyosung Corporation, Seoul, South Korea Marshall A. Cohen, Counsel, Cassels Brock & Blackwell, Barristers and Solicitors, Toronto William S. Cohen (R-Me) William T. Coleman, Jr., Senior Partner O'Melveny & Myers; former U.S. Secretary of Transportation William T. Coleman III, Chairman, BEA Systems, Inc., San Jose, Ca. Timothy C. Collins, chief Executive officer, Ripplewood Holdings, New York Richard Conroy, Chairman, Conroy Diamonds & Gold, Dublin Richard N. Cooper, Maurits C. Boas Professor of International Economics, Harvard University; former U.S. Under Secretary of State for Economic Affairs E. Gerald Corrigan, Partner and Managing Director, Goldman, Sachs & Co.; former President, Federal Reserve Bank of New York Alain Cotta, Professor, University of Paris Michael 3 Critelli, Chairman, Pitney Bowes, Inc., Stamford Lester Crystal, NBC/RCA Gerald L. Curtis, Prof. Poli Sci, Columbia Univ. Kenneth Dam, U.S. Deputy Secretary of the Treasury Lynn E. Davis,VP, Dir., Rand Corp., Former U.S. Under Sec. for International Security Affairs Baron Paul de Keersmacker, Chairman, Domo, WDP Lodewijck J.R. de Vink, Chairman, Global Health Care Partners, Peapack, N.J Roberto F. de Ocampo, President, Asian Institute of Management, Manila Andre' Desmarais, President and Co-Chief Executive Officer, Power Corporation of Canada, Montreal John M. Deutch, Institute Professor of Chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; former Director U.S. Central Intelligence Agency Vladi...
Trilateral Commission Members Page 3 of 9 Inc.; George F Baker Professor of Economics, Harvard University; former Chairman, President's Council of Economic Advisors Stanley Fischer, First Deputy Managing Director International Monetary Fund George M. C. Fisher, Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer, Eastman Kodak Company Richard B. Fisher, Chairman, Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Richard W. Fisher, former U.S. Deputy trade representative Jorgen Fitschen, Executive committee, Deutsche Bank, Frankfurt Thomas S. Foley (D-WA) L. Yves Fortier, Senior Partner, Ogilvy Renault, Barristers and Solicitors, Montreal; former Canadian Ambassador and Permanent Representative to the United Nations Paolo Fresco, Vice Chairman of the Board and Executive Officer, The General Electric Company Stephen Friedman, former Chairman and Limited Partner, Goldman, Sachs & Co. Michael Fuchs, Managing Director, Impex Electronic, Berlin Hiroaki Fujii, President, The Japan Foundation Shinji Fukukawa, CEO Dentau Institute for Human Studies Gabriele Galatari di Genola, Managing Director, IFI and IFIL Richard N. Gardner, Of Counsel, Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP; former U.S. Ambassador to Spain and to Italy; Columbia Univ. Lord Garel-Jones, advisor to UBS Warburg, London; Member of the House of Lords Leslie H. Geib, President, Council on Foreign Relations John A. Georges, Senior Managing Director, Windward Capital Partners, L.P; former Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, International Paper David R. Gergen, Editor-at-Large, U.S. News and World Report; former Special Advisor to the U.S. President and Secretary of State Louis V. Gerstner, Jr., Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, International Business Machines, Amonk; RJR Nabisco; Director, New York Times Lord Gilbert, former Minister for Defense, London Frene Ginwala, speaker of the National Assembly, South Africa Joseph T. Gorman, Chairman, Pres, CEO, TRW Inc. Allan E. Gotlieb, Consultant, Stikeman Ell...
Trilateral Commission Members Page 4 of 9 Yoshimasa Hayashi, Member of the House of Councillors Charles B. Heck, former North American Director, Trilateral Commission David J. Hennigar, Chairman, Crownx, Vice Chairman, Crown Life Carla A. Hills, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Hills & Company; former U.S. Trade Representative Richard Holbrooke, Vice Chairman, Credit Suisse First Boston Corporation; former U.S. Ambassador to Germany; former U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for European and Canadian Affairs; former Assistant Secretary of State for East Asia and Pacific Affairs, former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations Robert D. Hormats, Vice Chairman, Goldman Sachs Int. Murray Horn, Managing Director ANZ Bank (New Zealand) Limited Hyun Hong-Choo, senior partner, Kim & Chang, Seoul James R. Houghton, Former Chairman of the Board, Corning Incorporated Claude Imbert, founder, Le Point, Paris Bobby R. Inman, Chmn., Dallas Fed. Res. Bank Joichi Ito, President, CEO, Neoteny Co. Max Jakobson, former Finnish ambassador to the United Nations Baron Daniel Janssen, Chairman, Solvay, Brusseles Sir Michael Jenkins, vice Chairman, Dresdener Kleinwort Wasserstein, London Trinidad Jimenez, Socialist Party, Madrid Josef Joffe, editor, Die Zeit, Hamburg James A. Johnson, vice Chairman, Perseus LLC, Washington Samuel C. Johnson, Director, Mobil Corp. W. Thomas Johnson, President, Cable News Network Han Sung-joo, former Minister of Foreign Affairs, Seoul Vernon E. Jordan, Senior Partner, Akin, Gum p, Strauss, Hauer & Feld Karl Kaiser, Director, Research Inmstitute of the German Council on foreign relations Donald R. Keough, Chairman of the Board, Allen & Company Incorporated; Coca-Cola Co. Henry A. Kissinger, Chairman, Kissinger Associates, Inc.; former U.S. Secretary of State; former Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs Sir John Kerr, Secretary general, European Convention Kim Kihwan, advisor, Goldman Sachs II Sa Kon...
Trilateral Commission Members Page 5 of 9 Count Marice Lippens, Chairman, Fortis, Brussels Winston Lord, Former U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs; former U.S. Ambassador to China E. Peter Lougheed, former premier of Alberta Cees Maas, former Treasurer of the Dutch Government Ahmad Syafill Maarif, Chairman, Muhammadiyah Movement, Indonesia H. Harrison McCain, Chairman of the Board, McCain Foods Limited, Toronto Hugh L. McColl, Jr., Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer, NationsBank Corporation William J. McDonough, President, Federal Reserve Bank of New York Roy MacLaren, former Candian high commissioner to the U.K. Whitney MacMillan, Former Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer, Cargill, Inc. Robert S. McNamara, Lifetime Trustee, former Secretary of Defense, former President, World Bank Antonio Mader, President, San Luis Corporacion, S.A. de C.V., Mexico City Jessica T. Mathews, President, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Abel Matutes, Chairman, Empresas Matutes Francis Maude, Member of the British Parliament Sir Deryck C. Maughan, vice Chairman, Citigroup, New York Jay Mazur, President Emeritus, Union of Neeletrades, Industrial and Textile Employeess, AFL-CIO Peter Mitterbauer, President, the Federation of Austrian Industry, Vienna Kiichi Miyazawa, former prime Minister of Japan Thierry de Montbrial, Director, French Institute for International Relations Sir Mark Moody-Stuart, former Chairman, Royal Dutch/Shell Group Jiro Murase, Managing partner, Bingham Dana Murase Salomon Smith Barney Holdings Inc. Jay Mazur, President, Union of Needletrades, Industrial and Textile Employees (UNITE), AFL-CIO, CLC Yuang Ming, Director, Institute of international relations, Peking University Mario Monti, Director-General, World Trade Organization Yoshiji Nogami, Former Vice Minister for Foreign Affairs, Japan Lucio A. Noto, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Mobil Corporatio...
Trilateral Commission Members Page 6 of 9 Robert D. Putnam, Director of the Saguaro Seminar; Stanfield Professor of International Peace, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University Franklin D. Raines, former Director, Office of Managment and Budget Charles B. Rangel, Member of U.S. House of Representatives Lee R. Raymond, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Exxon Corporation Paul Revay, European Director, The Trilateral Commission, Paris Gunter Rexrodt, Member of the German Bundestag Hartley Richardson, CEO, James Richardson & Sons, Ltd., Winnipeg Rozanne L. Ridgeway, Director, Citicorp. Charles S. Robb, Member of United States Senate; former Governor of Virginia Gianfelice Rocca, Chairman, Techint Group of Companies, Milan David Rockefeller, Founder and Honorary Chairman, Trilateral Commission, Chase Manhattan Bank John D. Rockefeller IV, Member of United States Senate; former Governor of West Virginia Sergio Romano, Columnist, Corriere della Serra, Milan Henry Rosovsky, Prof. Harvard Univ. William V. Roth, Jr., Member of United States Senate David M. Rubenstein, Managing Director, The Carlyle Group Luis Rubio, Director-general, Center of Research for Development, Mexico City William D. Ruckershaus, Chairman, CEO, Browning-Ferris Ind. H. Onno Ruding, vice Chairman Citicorp/Citibank, Brussels Donald H. Rumsfeld, U.S. Secretary of Defense Arthur F. Ryan, CEO, The Prudential Insurance Co. of America Rusdu Saracoglu, President of the Finance Group, Turkey Silvio Scaglia, former Managing Director, Omnitel Henry B. Schacht, Chairman, Lucent Technologies Jorgen Schleimann, Chairman, The Danish European Movement, Denmark Guido Schmidt-Chiari, Chairman, Constantino Group Kurt L. Schmoke, Mayor of Baltimore Pedro Schwartz, Chairman, IDELCO, Madrid Prince Karel of Schwarzenb, former President of the Helsinki Federation for Human Rights William Scranton, New York Times Raymond C. H. Seitz, Vice Chairman Europe, Lehman Brothers; for...
Trilateral Commission Members Page 7 of 9 Sir Martin Sorrell, CEO, WPP Group, London Ronald D. Southern, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer ATCO Ltd., Calgary; Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Canadian Utilities Ltd., Edmonton Myles Staunton, former Member of the Irish Senate David Stockman, Gen Partner, The Blackstone Group Peter Straarup, Chairman of the Executive Board, Den Danske Bank, Copenhagen Barry F. Sullivan, First National Bank of Chicago Peter Sutherland, Chairman, BP, London; Chairman and Managing Director, Goldman Sachs International Tsuyoshi Takagi, Resident, ZENSEN (The Japanese Federation of Textile, garment, Chemical Commercial and Allied Industries Worker's Unions) Strobe Talbott, former Under Secretary of State Akihiko Tanaka, Director, Institute of Oriental Culture, University of Tokyo Naoki Tanaka, President, The 21st Century Public Policy Institute Luis Tellez, Executive Vice President, Sociedad de Formento Industrial (DESC), Mexico City John Thain, CEO, Goldman Sachs Jacques Thierry, Banque Bruxelles Lambert; honorary Chairman of the Board, Interbrew, Brussels G. Richard Thoman, former CEO, Xerox Corporation Lester C. Thorow, Dean, Sloan School if Mgmt., MIT Niels Thygesen, Professor, University of Copenhagen Harri Tiido, former Editor-in-Chief, Radio KUKU Loukas Tsoukalis, Professor, European Institute & Director, Hellenic Observatory Wilson H. Taylor, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer CIGNA Corporation Laura D'Andrea Tyson, Professor Haas School of Business, University of California, Berkeley; former Chairman of the President's Council of Economic Advisors and Director of the National Economic Council Laszlo Urban, Vice President, Business Planning Director, Citibank, New York Cyrus R. Vance, Director, Manufacturers Hanover Mario Vargas Llosa, Writer, London; Member of the Royal Spanish Academy George Vassiliou, Member of Parliament and leader of United Democrats, head of the Nego...
Trilateral Commission Members Page 8 of 9 Karel Vuursteen, Chairman of the Executive Board, Heineken, Amsterdam Antonio Garrigues Walker, Chairman, Garrigues, Madrid Jusuf Wanandi, Member of the Board of Directors, Center for Strategic and International Studies, Jakarta Goro Watanabe, Chairman, Mitsui Chemicals, Inc. Koji Watanabe, Senior Fellow, Japan Center for International Exchange; Executive Advisor to the Japan Federation of Economic Organizations (Keidanren) Glenn E. Watts, President Emeritus, Communication Workers of America, Chevy Chase, MD Serge Weinberg, Chairman of the Managing Board, Pinault-Printemps- Redoute; President, Institute of International and Strategic Studies (IRIS), Paris Heinrich Weiss, Chairman, SMS, Dillsseldorf Henry Wendt, Former Chairman, SmithKline Beecham Arne Wessberg, Director-General, YLE Group, the Finnish Broadcasting Company & Digits OY, Helsinki; President, European Broadcasting Union (EBU) Marina V. N. Whitman, Director, Manufacturers Hanover Norbert Wieczorek, Member of the German Bundestag; Deputy Chairman of the SPD Parliamentary Group, Berlin L.R. Wilson, Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer BCE Inc., Montreal Robert N. Wilson, Vice Chairman, Board of Directors, Johnson & Johnson Robert C. Winters, Chairman Emeritus, The Prudential Insurance Co. of America Paul D. Wolfowitz, Dean, Paul Nitze School of Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins University; former U.S. Undersecretary of Defense for Policy Taio Yakushiji, Professor of Political Science, Keio University, Executive Research Director, Institute for International Policy Studies Tadashi Yamamoto, President, Japan Center for International Exchange, Tokyo, Pacific Asian Director, the Trilateral Commission Emilio Ybarra, Executive Chairman of the Board of Directors, Banca Bilbao-Vizcaya, Madrid Noriyuki Yonemura, Senior Vice President, Fuji Xerox Co., Ltd. Bunroku Yoshino, Senior Advisor, Institute for Internation...
Trilateral Commission Members Page 9 of 9 Donna F. Shalala, U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Strobe Talbott, U.S. Deputy Secretary of State weektc.htm http://www.biblebelievers.org.au http://www.biblebelievers.org.au/weektc.htm 12/7/2005 07/26/17 Page 62 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
Epstein After long probe, rifici billionaire faces °6 solicitation charge By LARRY KELLER Palm Beach Post Staff Writer Palm Beach billionaire Jeffrey Epstein paid to have underage girls and young women brought to his home, where he re- ceived massages and sometimes sex, ac- cording to an investigation by the Palm Beach Police Department. Palm Beach police spent months sifting through Ep- stein's trash and watching his waterfront home and Palm Beach International Airport to keep tabs on his private jet. An indictment charging Epstein, 53, was unsealed Monday, charging him with one count of felony solicitation of prostitution. Palm Beach police thought there was probable cause to charge Epstein with un- lawful sex acts with a minor and lewd and lascivious molestation. Police Chief Michael Reiter was so angry with State Attorney Barry Krischer's han- dling of the case that he wrote a memo See EPSTEIN, 5B ► 07/26/17 Page 63 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
'Mystery money man faces soliciting charge By NICOLE JANOK Palm Beach Post Staff Writer A part-time Palm Beacher who has socialized with Donald Trump, Bill Clinton and Kevin Spacey was jailed early Sunday with accused drug dealers, drunken drivers and wife beaters after he was charged with soliciting a prosti- tute. Manhattan money manager Jeffrey Epstein, 53, was picked up at his home on El Brillo Way at 1:45 a.m. He was released hours later on $3,000 bond. Epstein was indicted last week by a state grand jury, according to state at- torney's spokesman Mike Edmondson. Despite Epstein's arrest, the indictment containing the allegations remained sealed Sunday and Edmondson provid- ed no details. Unlike most accused johns, Epstein was charged with a third-degree felony instead of a misdemeanor. Under state law, a solicitation charge usually is ele- vated to a more serious felony when the defendant has at least two solicitation convictions. However, checks of court records here and in New York Sunday turned up no such convictions. Epstein could not be reached. Ed- mondson said he was being represented by West Palm Beach attorney Jack Goldberg, who declined comment. Epstein is the president of J Epstein & Co., a money management company based in Manhattan that caters to ultra- wealthy clientele, according to pub- See SOLICITING, 68 ► Jeffrey Epstein Indictment related to prostitution. 5 tt y e K a 07/26/17 Page 64 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
mysterious billionaire has been on probation IP. SOLICITING from 113 lished reports. National magazines have described him as a "mysterious billion- aire" who lives in a 45,000- square-foot New York City mansion. He has been in trouble before. In 1993, he and two other defendants were charged in federal court with three counts of postal larceny and theft and one count of property theft. Epstein plead guilty to a single charge of conspiring to steal U.S. Treasury checks from resi- dential mailboxes and re- ceived 5 years' probation. The remaining charges were dropped. Since then, Epstein's name has turned up in New York City's tabloids. The New York Post noted he flew Pres- ident Clinton and Kevin Spacey to Africa on his pri- vate Boeing 727. In 2003, the paper dubbed him one of the Big Apple's "top studs." In 2004, Epstein bid against Trump for a 43,000- square foot Palm Beach es- tate once owned by health- care magnate Abe Gosman. Trump topped Epstein with a $41.35 million bid. Staff ResearcherAngelica Cortez contributed to this story. nicole janok@pbpostcom 07/26/17 Page 65 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
Investor facing felony sex charge By WILLIAM KELLY Daily News Staff Writer Thursday, July 27, 2006 A billionaire investor and part-time Palm Beach resident has been indicted on a felony charge of solicitation of prostitution after police say he had sex with underage girls whom he paid for massage sessions at his El Brillo Way home. A Palm Beach County grand jury found that Jeffrey E. Epstein, 53, "did solicit, induce, entice or procure" prostitution with girls, who were between 14 and 16 years old, on at least three occasions between Aug. 1, 2004, and Oct. 31, 2005. Epstein surrendered at the Palm Beach County Jail Sunday and was released on a $3,000 bond. His attorney, Jack Goldberger, said Wednesday the third- degree felony indictment is based on false accusations and that Epstein wasn't aware the girls were minors. The next step will be an arraignment at which Epstein will enter a plea and a trial date will be set, but an arraignment has not yet been scheduled. Upon conviction, a third- degree felony is punishable by up to five years in prison and a $5,000 fine. A resident of New York, Epstein has owned a five-bedroom, 7,234-square-foot waterfront home at 358 El Brillo Way since 1990. The indictment followed an 11-n that began in March 2005 after a wuna told puiicC, twat her may have been molested by a man in Palm Beach. The investigation also focused on Epstein's assistant, Sarah Kellen, 27, of New York City, and on Haley Robson, 20, of Royal Palm Beach, who police said were paid by Epstein to help facilitate the massages and sex. Robson found and transported the girls to Epstein's house for the massages in an upstairs bedroom, police said. Neither Kellen nor Robson has been indicted or arrested on any charge. Police took sworn statements from five alleged victims and 17 witnesses concerning the massages and alleged unlawful sexual activity. During their visits, the girls were introduced to Kellen, who took their names and phone numb...
Epstein is alleged to have had sexual intercourse with some of the girls on three occasions, and paid one girl $1,000 after she objected during sex, police said. During the investigation, police said they learned of several more young women, all 18 years old or older, who consented to the "same massage routine" when they went to work for Epstein, according to the police report. Police said they learned of these women by searching Epstein's trash, through surveillance of his property and his private jet, and by reviewing telephone message books retrieved during a warrant search of the house. Epstein's spokesman, Sean Cassidy, said Epstein would have no comment for this story. Cassidy and Goldberger declined to answer questions. But Goldberger said in a prepared statement that "the reports and statements in question refer to false accusations that were not charged because the Palm Beach County state attorney's office questioned the credibility of the witnesses." The statement also said that "a Palm Beach County jury found the allegations wholly unsubstantiated and not credible. Consequently, the grand jury chose not to accuse Mr. Epstein of anything beyond the solicitation of a prostitute." Goldberger also said Epstein passed a lie detector administered by a reputable polygraph examiner, in which he said he was unaware the girls were underage. Moreover, the police search of Epstein's home turned up no evidence to support the girls' allegations, Goldberger said. Solicitation of a prostitute is typically a misdemeanor. Epstein was indicted on a third- degree felony solicitation charge applied when there are three or ir.nrz alleged offenses, rr After completing its investigation, ral;-,1 police turned the l'J office several months ago with a probable cause affidavit stating that Epstein should be arrested on four counts of unlav,-f.,:: minor a.,;,1 lascivious molestation, all second-degree fcle:;iL:. Janet Kinsella, spokeswoman for Palm Bea...
letters to the alleged victims and their parents that justice was not served by the indictment and that the case has been referred to the FBI to determine if federal laws were violated. Edmondson said Krischer's office reviewed the police evidence and decided to investigate further. "The prosecutor looks at the witnesses and physical evidence from a broader view," Edmondson said. "Because of the nature of the allegations, in particular the lengthy sexual activity on part of the individuals and elements of financial reward to the individuals, the case was referred to the grand jury. The grand jury heard from law- enforcement officials and witnesses and reviewed all of the evidence before determining that the appropriate charge was felony solicitation of prostitution." Town returned donation Before the police investigation began, Epstein had donated $90,000 to the department for an equipment purchase that was never made. The money was returned to Epstein on Monday, Finance Director Jane Struder said. Epstein has been known to date top models and was once named by the New York Post as one of Manhattan's most eligible bachelors. His rise to wealth has been characterized by some as mysterious. Epstein was a math teacher at Manhattan's posh Dalton School when he started handling the money of billionaire fashion czar Leslie Wexner, who owns The Limited, Victoria's Secret, Express ' — . • ... a' owns a ,Ised to take Si llClin ton a:lci He also owns an $18 million, 7,500-acre ranch in Nov.! acro island in the U.S. Virgin Epstein's Palm Beach home was appraised for tax purposes last year at $6.9 million. He was one of the bidders on the Abe Gosman estate on North County Road, which eventually was sold to Donald Trump for more than $41 million in 2004. In a March 2003 article in Vanity Fair, writer Vicky Ward described Epstein as a charming, enigmatic and calculating financier who accepts only billionaires as clients. 07/26/17 Page 68 of 1...
Epstein is "a man who seems to feel he can win, no matter what the advantage of the other side," she wrote. 07/26/17 Page 69 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
J Download music. To check for avtidability, enlo. your home ptiorw number' ”Suhonit What the Press Calls 'Epstein Sex Scandal' Sounds a Bit More Like 'Rape' / Jossip Page 1 of 7 Jossip Juxtaposition: Jeffrey Epstein Likes His Endings Happy and Underage I Home I Insert Joke About Staten Island E Electricity Here -+ WHAT THE PRESS CALLS 'EPSTEIN SEX SCANDAL' SOUNDS A BIT MORE I — THU, JUL 27, 2006 — Ok, we know we gave Jeffrey Epstein a minor bullet point in our little gossip round-up. But that's because we are just now going through The Smoking Gun report on the Donald Trump role model and fellow scumbag, who not only recently arrested for soliciting sex from a masseuse, but who, according to "a former houseman," received three massages a day from girls who appeared to be, at the most, sixteen or seventeen years old. In case you haven't seen it, things get much worse. He also reported that following Epstein massages he sometimes had to "wash off a massager/vibrator and a long rubber penis" which had been left in a sink. Alfredo Rodriguez, a former house manager, told probers that he "knew" Epstein's masseuses were still in high school. Rodriguez also told of having to "wipe down" vibrators and sex toys post-massage and returning them to an armoire near Epstein's bed. It gets worse. About 22 pages of allegedly underage girls traipsing in and out of the house and engaging in various sexual acts with Epstein worse. The affidavid from a 14 year old girl, who's name is being withheld, names Haley Robinson and Sara Keller as two of the girls involved in this sick story. We can't get into all the details here — we have neither the stomach nor the time to sort through the novella sized account of Epstein's alleged escapades. What did jump out at us, however, more than the egg-shaped penis or the photos of naked underage girls all over his house, was the part which accounts Epstein's alleged rape of a sixteen year old girl. (Yes, all sex with a ...
What the Press Calls 'Epstein Sex Scandal' Sounds a Bit More Like 'Rape' / Jossip Page 2 of 7 breasts and kiss for Epstein to enjoy. Toward to end of this massage, Epstein grabbed [withheld] and turned her over onto her stomach on the massage table and forcibly inserted his penis into her vagina. [Withheld] stated Epstein began to pump his penis in her vagina. [Withheld] became very upset over this. She said her head was being held against the table forcibly, as he continued to pump inside of her. She screamed "No!" and Epstein stopped. Epstein did not ejaculate inside of her and apologized for his actions and subsequently paid her a thousand dollars for that visit. Umm, can you say really, really fucked up? Read the thing for yourself, if you care to, but we just felt it necessary to point out that this story is more than lube and vibrators and massages. This is like, allegedly, really messed up stuff. And we are more than astounded at the press for not bringing these accusations to light. Very, very disappointing. Maybe since he's friends with Bill Clinton, Ron Burkle, and Donald Trump, accusations that he's raping little girls can be omitted from the news. Billionaire In Palm Beach Sex Scandal [The Smoking Gun] READ MORE: BILL CLINTON, CRIME, DONALD TRUMP, JEFFREY EPSTEIN, MEDIA, TOP (o Comments) ED BM LOOKING TO COMMENT? SCROLL HERE. This Minute: Anderson Cooper + Lindsay Lohan + Katie Couric + Conde Nast + New York Times Gossip Industry WebC:4 1.?1Co.3.9C:411? SEND TIPS! TATTLE@JOSSIP.( • Insert Joke About Staten Island Even Having Electricity Here • What the Press Calls 'Epstein Sex Scandal' Sounds a Bit More Like 'Rape' • Jossip Juxtaposition: Jeffrey Epstein Likes His Endings Happy and Underage • Jada Pinkett Smith Admits to Laying Eyes on Suri Cruise Advertise h Jossip. Our readers love tacky ads for tacky products. COMMENTS If you have a TypeKey identity, you can sign in to use it here. POST YOUR COMMENTS Name (req'd, u...
Billionaire In Palm Beach Sex Scandal - July 26, 2006 Page 1 of 5 !NUM WI-VD $200,000 Pr for only $917 Learn Mor "Al `,":" - -• 4 Border XXX'ings Smut, hate lit, Joe Lieberman tape fail to make it into Canada Stripper In Head Bust Six human skulls, one hand • found in N.J. woman's home Sperm Bank Shock• Man sues over hidde camera in "donation ceiling Billionaire In Palm Beach Sex Scandal Investigators: Moneyman Jeffrey Epstein solicited teen masseuses JULY 26--Prepare to take a shower after reading this remarkably sleazy probable cause affidavit filed in the case of Jeffrey Epstein, the billionaire financier who was arrested Sunday for soliciting sex from a masseuse at his Florida mansion. Beginning in mid-March 2005, Epstein became the target of a sexual battery probe conducted by the Palm Beach Police Department, according to the affidavit, which alleges that Epstein, 53, paid a series of underage girls to engage in sexual activity with him. Frankly, there are too many dirty details in the affidavit to properly synopsize, but, if investigators are to be believed, Epstein has a thing for teenagers, vibrators, and assorted massage lotions. Epstein, pictured above in a Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office mug shot, has been indicted on a felony solicitation of prostitution rap. The indictment, which does not allege that the solicited was a minor, charges that the crime occurred between August 2004 and Octob 2005. In a statement, Epstein's lawyer dismissed the affidavit's charges a "false accusations." Jose Alessi, a former houseman, told cops that Epstei would receive three massages daily and that his masseuses were "younger an younger" and "appeared to be sixteen or seventeen years of age at the most also reported that following Epstein massages he sometimes had to "wash of massager/vibrator and a long rubber penis" which had been left in a sink. Alfredo Rodriguez, a former house manager, told probers that he "knew"...
Billionaire In Palm Beach Sex Scandal - July 26, 2006 Page 2 of 5 called the moneyman a "terrific guy" who "likes beautiful women as much as and many of them are on the younger side." Epstein, who reportedly runs a multibillion-dollar investment fund, travels in his own Boeing 727 (upon w he has transported Bill Clinton to Africa) and owns a 45,000-square-foot m on Manhattan's Upper East Side. (22 pages) ®E-mail story to a friend. http://www.thesmokinggun.comiarchive/0726062epsteinl.html 7/27/2006 07/26/17 Page 73 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
Billionaire In Palm Beach Sex Scandal - July 26, 2006 Page 3 of 5 Probable Cause Affidavit Palm Beach Police Department AZtru y OR1' FLO 5e0600 Police Cased: 05-368 (1) Defendant: EaceiSex: DOB: Charges: Jeffrey Epstein White Male 01-20-1953 Unlawful Sexual Activity with a Minor (4) counts Lewd and Lascivious Molestation From March 15, 2005, through February 2006, the Palm Beach Police Department conducts battery investigation involving Jeffrey Epstein. Sarah Kellen and Haley Robson_ Sworn taped state taken from five victims and seventeen witnesses concerning massages and unlawful sexual activity at the residence of Jeffrey Epstein, 358 El Bribe Way, Palm Beach. Several of the victims were IC brought to the residence by Haley Robson to perform massages for Epstein, for which Robson recei monetary compensation. During the visit they would be introduced to Sarah Kellen. Epstein's assis turn would record their telephone numbers and name. The victims would be brought to Epstein's h provide the massage. Epstein would enter the room and order the victims to remove their clothing massage. As the victims complied and provided the massages. Epstein would rub his fingers on thi On occasion, Epstein would introduce a massager/vibrator and rub the victims vaginas as they prow massage. On three separate occasions. Epstein had intercourse and inserted his penis-fingers in the vaginas. At the conclusion of the massages the victims were paid sums of money ranging from S2C The facts. as reported, ate as follows: On 03/15/2005, A fourteen year old white female, hereinafter referred to as her family reported unlawful sexual activity which occurred at a residence within the Town of Palm reported that a subject known to her as "Jeff' had touched her vaginal area with a vibrator/massager his residence. "Jeff" was later identified as Jeffrey Epstein through a photo line up. During a sworn taped intervie d that Haley Robson, deb 04/09/1986, a cousin boyfr...
----- every-thin Epstein's Palm Beach mansion at 358 El Brillo Way. Jeffrey Epstein craved big homes, elite friends and, investigators say, underage girls By ANDREW MARRA, Palm Beach Post Staff Writer WINGED GARGOYLES guarded the gate at Jeffrey Epstein's Palm Beach mansion. Inside, hidden cameras trolled two rooms, while the girls came and went. For the police detectives who sifted through the gar- bage outside and kept records of visitors, it was the lair of a troubling target. Epstein, one of the most mysterious of the country's mega-rich, was known as much for his secrecy as for his love of fine things: mag- nificent homes, private jets, beautiful women, friendships with the world's elite. But at Palm Beach police headquarters, he was be- coming known for something else: the regular arrival of teenage girls he hired to give him massages and, police say, perform sexual favors. Epstein was different from most sexual abuse sus- pects; he was far more pow- erful. He counted among his friends former President Bill Clinton, Donald Trump and Prince Andrew, along with some of the most prominent legal, scientific and business minds in the country. When detectives started Epstein's mysterious lifestyle began to unravel after claims of sexual activity with minors. See EPSTEIN, 6A ► I Epstein's lawyers take on Palm Beach police chief. Local, 1B 07/26/17 Page 75 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
A life of luxury and secrecy TINA FINEBF, Jeffrey Epstein's Manhattan townhouse dominates a block o Side. Thought to be the largest private residence in Manhatt. to have closed-circuit televisian and a heated sidewalk to m Women in his life fa. C.,. THE PALM RFACH POST • MONDAY, AUGUST 14, 2006 Jeffrey Epstein has donated ml to Democratic candidates' campaigns, incluc the reelection campaign of New Mexico Gov. B of Joe Lieberman, Hillary Clinton, Christoph Powerful legal tear `‘10. EPSTEIN from IA asking questions and teenage girls started talking, a wave of legal resistance followed. If Palm Beach police didn't know quite who Jeffrey Epstein was, they found out soon enough. Epstein, now 53, was a quintes- sential man of mystery. He amassed his for tune and friends quietly, always in the background as he navigated New York high society. When he first attracted notice in the early 1990s, it was on account of the woman he was dating. Ghislaine Maxwell, daughter of the late British media tycoon Robert Maxwell. In a lengthy article, headlined 'The Mystery of Ghislaine Max- well's Secret Love," the British Mail on Sunday tabloid laid out specula- tive stories that the socialite's beau was a CIA spook, a math teacher, a concert pianist or a corporate head- hunter. "But what is the truth about him?" the newspaper wondered. "Like Maxwell, Epstein is both flamboyant and intensely private." The media frenzy did not begin in full until a decade later. In Sep- tember 2002. Epstein was flung into the limelight when he flew Clinton and actors Kevin Spacey and Chris Tucker to Africa on his private jet. Suddenly everyone wanted to know who Epstein was. New York magazine and Vanity Fair published lengthy profiles. The New York Post listed him as one of the city's most eligible bachelors and began describing him in its gossip columns with adjectives such as "mysterious" and "reclusive." Although Epstein gave no inter- views,...
.The Associated Press the Upper East 41. it is reported :It fallen snow. we than $100,000 ing John Kerry's presidential bid, ill Richardson and the Senate bids er Dodd and Charles Schumer. 1 stymies detectives fuel extraordinary desires. hi March 2005, a worried mother contacted Palm Beach police. She said another parent had overheard a conversation between their chil- dren. Now the mother was afraid her 14-year-old daughter had been molested by a man on the island. The phone call triggered an extensive investigation, one that would lead detectives to Epstein but leave them frustrated. Palm Beach police and the state attorney's office have declined to discuss the case. But a Palm Beach police report detailing the criminal probe offers a window into what detectives faced as they sought to close in on Epstein. Detectives interviewed the girl, who told them a friend had invited her to a rich man's house to perform a massage. She said the friend told her to say she was 18 if asked. At the house, she said she was paid $300 after stripping to her panties and massaging the man while he mas- turbated. Police interview 5 alleged victims The investigation began in full after the girl identified Epstein in a photo as the man who had paid her. Police arranged for garbage trucks to set aside Epstein's trash so police could sift through it. They set up a video camera to record the comings and goings at his home. They mon- itored an airport hangar for signs of his private jet's arrivals and depar- tures. They quickly learned that the woman who took the 141ear-old girl to Epstein's house was Haley Rob- son, a Palm Beach Community Col- lege student from Loxahatchee. In a sworn statement at police head- quarters, Robson, then 18, admitted she had taken at least six girls to visit Epstein, all between the ages of 14 and 16. Epstein, paid her for each visit, she said. . During the drive back to her house, Robson told detectives, "I...
Ghislaine Maxwell, a fixture at elite parties and the intensely private daughter of a media tycoon, dated Epstein in the 1990s. 'I'm like a Heidi Fleiss.' Haley Rot; told police she WO least six girls to vi;! Epstein, all betweti ages of 14 and li PalmBeachPost.com Read previous stories on the Epstein investig, math teacher at the prestigious Dalton School in Manhattan. The story goes that the father of one of Epstein's students was so impressed with the man that he put him in touch with a senior partner at Bear Stearns, the global investment bank and securities firm. In 1976, Epstein left Dalton for a job at Bear Stearns. By the early 1980s, he had started J. Epstein and Co. That is when he began making his millions in earnest Little is known or said about Epstein's business except this: He manages money for the extremely wealthy. He is said to handle accounts only of $1 billion or great- er. It has been estimated he has roughly 15 clients, but their identi- ties are the subject of only specula- tion. All except for one: Leslie Wex- ner, founder of The Limited retail chain and a former Palm Beacher who is said to have been a mentor to Epstein. Wexner sold Epstein one of his most lavish residences: a massive townhouse that dominates a block on Manhattan's Upper East Side. It is reported to have, among its finer features, closed-circuit television and a heated sidewalk to melt away fallen snow. That townhouse, thought to be the largest private residence in Manhattan, is only a piece of the extravagant world Epstein built over time. In New Mexico, he constructed a 27,000-square-foot hilltop Mansion on a 10,000-acre ranch outside Santa Fe. Many believed it to be the largest home in the state. In Palm Beach, he bought a waterfront home on El Brillo Way. And he owns a 100-acre private island in the Virgin Islands. Perhaps as remarkable as his lavish homes is his extensive net- work of friends and associates at ...
claimed Epstein romise to reim- s of thousands of Ailed investment A judge decided tothing. !mory. I would ver met Jeffrey :hael Stroll, the ident of Williams ;.a Corp. "Suffice ting good to say racteristics most in is a penchant ked to Maxwell, gh-society party w York and Lon- iends are said to Is. Sweden and a fun to be with," New York maga- wen said that he len as much as I hem are on the doubt about it, ocial life." s to Epstein was not a fre- lin Beach social is presence felt. ale donations, he he Palm Beach and $100,000 to he lived in luxu- "rcedes sat in his a green Harley- raked at a hangar mational Airport chef and a small ready. From a insion, he could tracoastal Water- Palm Beach sky- o be a man who tary wealth 'ban rouce uuervieweu live, auegtu victims and 17 witnesses. Their report shows some of the girls said they had been instructed to have sex with another woman in front of Epstein, and one said she had direct intercourse with him. In October, police searched the Palm Beach mansion. They discov- ered photos of naked, young-looking females, just as several of the girls had described in interviews. Hidden cameras were found in the garage area and inside a clock on Epstein's desk, alongside a girl's high school transcript Two of Epstein's former employees told investigators that young-looking girls showed up to perform massages two or three times a day when Epstein was in town. They said the girls were permit- ted many indulgences. A chef cooked for them. Workers gave them rides and handed out hun- dreds of dollars at a time. One employee told detectives he was told to send a dozen roses to one teenage girl after a high school drama performance. Others were given rental cars. One, according to police, received a $200 Christmas bonus. The cops moved to cement their case. But as they tried to tighten the noose, they encountered other forces at work. In Orlando they interviewed a poss...
LAW OFFICE OF GUY FRONSTIN 515 N. FLAGLER DRIVE, SUITE 300 PAVILION WEST PALM BEACH, FL 33401 (561) 447-4011 * (561) 802-4121 (Fax) VIA HAND DELIVERY January 11, 2006 Lanna Belohlavek Assistant State Attorney Office of the State Attorney 401 N. Dixie Highway West Palm Beach, FL 33401 Re: Jeff Epstein Dear Ms. Belohlavek: Enclosed, please find copies of the flight logs you requested. Please contact me should you have any questions or concerns. Very truly yours, Guy P. Frons irri7Et-q. GPF/mw 07/26/17 Page 80 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
JEGE, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Registration Number N908-.1E Type: B-727-31 Pilots: Dave Rodgers, Larry Visoskl Plight EliOn Larry Morrison DATE: , 2005 FROM 031 TO I— S-T Arrival Time Time k I I PASSENGERS Number310 I. Jeffrey Epstein 2- AR ANA C-, LLL- 3. NADV) /v\FWZ.c/JIKONJIA- 4. • tt•itAl_-- 5 . Le..- 6. 7. S. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. FROM Identifier Defined City V\i E i PALM BezPg,0- State or COUntry TO Identifier Defused Ca), -1-1-46/v1P6 State or Country USVI- Nautical Miles 976-°' Statute Miles L I 2 t.), Gallons 3 I o AIRFRAME Pounds 1(3(g-4i 330c)2_, .1 2 370 33o Lt- H . Night 2 , 21_ T/L 1 LI IMC 2. a Approach Flight Time Attitude FL 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 07/26/17 Page 81 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
DATE: -0_, 2004 FROM 11 TO Departure 1. Arrival Trip Time Number 3,21 JEGE, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Registration Number: N908.IE Type: B-727-31 Pilots. Dave Rodgers, Larry Visoski Flight Frigincer. Larry Morrison PASSENGERS L Jeffrey Epstein 2.19kiekisterMewsrett 3. Sarah Kellen 4. /14412/11 att/Zelitif it< 5. 440/t CakrA". 6. 7. S. 9. 10 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. FROM Identifier Delbserl City 31 e}-,j State or Country LIS147-; TO Identifier Defined City S i<3:4 etve7c4 State or Country FL Nautical Miles Q75— Statute Miles 1 1 c?, Gallons 3260_ AIRFRAME Pc`upds esz9474 33094- 3 Flight Time Altitude FL FL 35in 33 6 ve„__e- 20. Night 21. T/L 22. EMC 23. Approach 24. 25. 26. 07/26/17 Page 82 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
JEGE, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Registration Number. N908SE Type: B-727-31 Pilots: Dave Rodgers, Larry Vuottki Flight Eogiricer Larry Morrison DATE: /7 , 2005- FROM Time Dep an 1 6 it Arrival Time PASSENGERS 1. Jeffrey Epstein 2. Glaislitioe Maxwell 3. Sarah Kellen vesi) ./V11) 0-9-.4J - A4L-.9;41 "Re./Wido teC 6. Aft-/1)/f-S4- y 8. / 9 (A9v-IY 10. 11- 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. FROM Identifier Defined City (A.ItSirr -242.1.1 eC,4 State or Country Ft.— TO Idcirtifier Defined City 11/41,-J ya/Lx) State or Country Ay. Nautical Miles 8 7 ,Z Statute Miles 7 0 Gallows 4=2 Li/ AIRFRAME Pounds .=,-7/2- 00 3 34 We, Flight Time jazi-e?Sf Altitude FL ri.370 3.3 0 549b .3 20. Night 21. T/L 22. IMC 23. Approach 24. 25. 26. Par TO 7 M Trapr 07/26/17 Page 83 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
4 5. 6. s. 7. 10. 11 12. 13. 14. 15, 16. 17. 18. 3, A.49-7, /;'? 01,1-7- CIA.//6 /N0/4•c_-4. /17 L/4/ (J/ JEGE, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Type: B-727-31 FROM Arrival : 7reinTrut Time PASSENGERS ). Jeffrey Epstein 2. 574:0z..7-4 19. Pilots: Dave Rodgers, Larry VLsoski Flight Engineer: Larry Morrison TO Number FROM Identifier Defined City Ai e State or Country A,, fri• TO Identifier Defined City AJEs4, /5'&Ple,i7 State or Country Nautical Miles Statute Miles /6021P Gallons 3")Cki e-i-r-A951 AIRFRAME Pounds /Nilo 3.01i .3 Flight Time C2 413 Altitude FL (-----Z--3/1'0 33 c)-57 .5- 20. Night 21. T/L 22. IMC 23. Approach 24. 25. 26. Registration Number. N908.1E DATE: 4-11_, 2003 Fc 07/26/17 Page 84 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
JEGE, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Registration Number: 14908JE Type! R-727-31 Pilots: Dare Rodgers, Larry Viaoski 19.->7 4,-, —1. Plight Engineer Larry Morrison DATE: / - Z 0 2004 FROM TO R/:3 Departure Time : Cl* Arrival Trip Tine Number /f/ PASSENGERS I AeffrerVirstehr 2. Giielaisie44aNwell 3- 12"agtmlie6611 5. 6. 7. 8. 9_ 10. 11. 12. 13. Id. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. FROM identifier Ddincd City "Tk 1340/1.0 State or Country TO Identifier Defined City eittes State or Country ./CI Nautical Mks r Statute Miles ,t9-- Gallons -S-0 ° AIRFRAME Pounds 70 I .3 3 / , Flight Tune 0 + ,Z, sf Altitude PL Z g°6° :33 s" e 20. Night 21. TiL 22 IMC 23. Approach 24. 25. 26. I? /3&--,*c ze" 07/26/17 Page 85 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
JEGE, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Registration Number N908JE Type: R-727-31 Pilots: pave Roditts Larry Visoakl Flight Engineer: Larry Morrison DATE: -2.1 2005 FROM P C134 I TO SST Departure v"F OM) Arrival Time Time Trip Number 315 PASSENGERS I. Jeffrey Epstein 2. N AC)A rAciecxt) Ktnify 3. A111RE..- A FROM Identifier Defined City \NE.51- PALM 5E--K State or Country 5 L TO Identifier Defined City .ST. TV'roMAS State or Country U SN)7.. Nautical Miles 975- Statute Milos ) ) Gallons 32-10 AIRFRAME Pounds a)-1 LA.- 33 OS.. 0 Flight Time + t( z) . Altitude FL 310 3 30'5'4 20. Night 2 2L T/L 1 / 22. IMC • 8_- 23. Approach 24. 25. 26. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 07/26/17 Page 86 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
FROM Identifier Defined City C-of:1 r State or Country O C. TO Identifier Defined City f.(ig5 4- /116'1 Leli State or Country Nautical Miles P70 Statute Miles 93/ Gallons Poimda Flight Time ri__+4/17 Altitude FL 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. AIRFRAME c33ar-? 1 .k 336‹0.r Night T/L Approach JEGE, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Registration Number: N988.fE Type: B-727,31 Pilots: Dave RoditerS, Larry Visoski Flight Engineer. Larry Merriam) DATE: c)-- _3 2005 FROM g" TO Time , „ Time 76,.)._; PASSENGERS Arrival A (D4 Trip Time /it\ -; 7C) PM Number 3f 7 L. Jeffrey Epstein / 2. 5 4 t /7" ."-) 3' A/ 1 114/4i--e1N 4. -ARA/ 5. Oilf//0 thuciexi 6. -4^ 41-€( 8. -7-..)2,44-/ 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. is, 19. 07/26/17 Page 87 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
DATE: __ca..? 7 .2005 Departure ,.-- Tine FROM Pi3-1 Arrival Time TO thre 317 7 Trip Number JEGE, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Registration Number: t4908JE Type: B-727,31 Pilots. Dave Rodgers, Larry Vistiski Flight Phentier: Larry Morrison PASSENGERS 1. Jeffrey Epstein 2..4019-2),/,•9 M 4 4 c/AZ-c Pf.f.AtiA 4. zA4,70 j41 u it &-ki 6. 7. 8. 9_ 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15, 16. 17. 16. 19. FROM Identifier Wined City iS-F PA ( ts-t State or Country r TO Identifier Defined City 10 00 State or Country Nautical Milca Statute Miles Gallons AIRFRAME Pounds 9 P4k 3 3 04.0 . Flight Time 01..,+,5' Altitude FL AG_ 370 33 b 3 . 20. Night 21. T/L 22. IMC 23. Approach 24. 25. 26. 07/26/17 Page 88 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
,P,-•••\ JEGE, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Type: B-727-31 Pilots: Dave Rodgers, Larry Visoski Flight Engineer: Larry Merriam FROM Arrival Time /-1 14 TO P A / AM .- 1 1.1Hufiaber 3 2 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. FROM Identifier Dermed City it/ e v.1 y State or Country dota TO Identifier Defined City (A.Zies 3 r- „Pp /orn 346;10.0 State or Country GL Nautical Miles c 9-- statute miles I Gallons Z 5° 0 G° Pouarls 9° '2 r 7 Flight Time t-f- Altitude FL 3 4 20. Night 21. TYL / / 22. IMC 23. Approach 24. 25. 26. 3DI330 D3X3 1331.4b0 Wid8E :6 471a7 ' 6 '2114 07/26/17 Page 89 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
JEGE, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Type: B-727-31 Pilots: Dave Rodgers, Larry Visoski Flight Engineer: Larry Morrison 8•Alt7•404,..41!", DATE: - 5.F.2005 FROM PZ3_7- TO Departure Arrival AM Trip Time Time 7 : PM Number 3p2 FROM Identifier Defined City war p,444.7 16.41rAt 1 .6 EttE4/ State or C.oni3try cinieo V To Identifier Defined City Alec, /aeoe Stars or Country Al y Nautical Miles c?' ti 8. a Statute Miles l 0 4S) Gauons c=295-5-- AIRFRAME 10. Pounds / 7? 8 3 30 Flight not 42- + /a 12 Altitude FL Fi..396 33 lm 7 13. 20. Night 14. 21. T/L /j__ 15. 22 1MC 16. 23. Approach 17. 24. 18, 25. 19. 26, B'd ON BOLAJO 33X3 133NU3 WUBE:6 S002'6 'aJW 11. 07/26/17 Page 90 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
3. N AM FROM Identifier Defined ST _ 7-1=0443 City State or Country Altroa c/i4itsva. JEGE, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Type: B-'727-31 Pilots: Dave Rodgers, Larry Visosici Flight Engineer. Larry Morris°. DATE: Departure Thne 2005 FROM I/ 5 Arrival Time Trip Number 3e94.,_3 TO Identifier Defined City 6t .S# oA6,7 12 State or Country . Nautical Miles Statute Miles 1/ le. 4. Ad 5.J fl . t-oti Le./ '14, ley Gallons 3 as' AIRFRAME 9. Pounds c2 3S 57 33 c37.0 . Plight rime 401,3 .3 Altitude FL f13 410 330 7a .? 20. Night 02 . 6 21. T/L /.4 22. RAC 23. Approach 24. 25. 26. 30IJ30 D3X3 133NO3 WUBE:6 S002'6 "6W 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 7. 8. 97 6 07/26/17 Page 91 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
4. 5. 6. 7. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. JEGE, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Typo: 1i-727-31 Pilots Dave Rodgers, LarryinwoOd FlightEngkeez: Larry Morrison DATE: 2005 FROM P' 1 TO P .ratl Deputir Arrival Time 2 7 Ativfr Time tfr Nitber 3 Z FROM Identifier Defined ( A I"r P ./Y -1 &—Att'0 City TO Identifier Defined City tdd;4•7 P•SX,1 )3".0 State or Country Nautical Miles Statute Miles Gallons AIRFRAME Pounds 35-613 3- so 7 a . Flip* Time O 7 ,3 Altitude FL 2 (ft "eY3 0-2 3 , / 20. Night 21. T/1, /_/ 22. BAC 23. Approach 24. is. • /Ce 4417- 25. 19. 26. S • d 30I330 D3X3 133NUD 1OLE:6 5002.6 *auw 07/26/17 Page 92 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
DATE: - 1 ,2005 Zirrejok:so JEGE, INC, PASSENGER MANIFEST Registration Number. N9083E Type-. B-727-31 Pilots: gave RodEerg, Larry Visoaki Flight Engineer. Larry Morrison FROM ve-T 12 53 a =ter 3 7.s- Arrival Time FROM Identifier Defined city \iN)..s-5. PALM eg..x4 State or Country TO Identifier Defined City NGvti yoed. State or Country Nautical Miles Statute Miles / ifr 2:1-n AIRFRAME Pounds kil CI y 33 C)7 S Fligbefirae 2. +65 2. Attitude FL 31 ti 3 3 01 5'.2 20. Night 21. T/L 22 1MC , 1 23. Approach 11-5 24. 25. 26. PASSENGERS 1. Jeffrey 2.N fe•NAtter.oK0v4. 3, e.AAIR r\LAJcvlso 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13, 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. V'd 09L'ON 3DIAJO D3X3 733NUO WULE:6 S002'6 'NUW 07/26/17 Page 93 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
JEGE, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Registration Number. N908JE Type: E-727-31 /// gatt "nr." At.es' Pilots: Dow...Rodgers, Larry Visoski Flight Engineer: Larry Morrison DATE; - eJ , 2005 FROM r F K TO e /3 I 2. Departure AM rime : 2y PASSENGERS 1. Jeffrey Epstein G. A 1..c 3. 7),9•1,/dab 4. 4/04 11'1 .lam fr./ ozg 5, itiA, de, %. c ). 4 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12- 13. 14. 15, 16. 17. 18. 19, Trip Number 2. ti FROM Identifier Defined City /1/4) Rg NAr. f") y DR iz State Or Country IV y TO Identifier Defined City t41 ES State or Country FL Nautical Miles .?". Statute Miles S' Gallons 2. n 9 7 AwRAmE Pounds /?,8e b 33o7S7 Flight Time _+_Le ‘Z • 3— Altitude FL ,.J;. e# 33077 20. Night 21, T/L 22. IMC 23. Approach /11. 24. 25. 26. Arrival Thne PI V r"? lit Ai E'd 092;01.1 3DIJJO 33X3 133NUD WULE:6 S002'6 '8UW 07/26/17 Page 94 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
JEGE, INC.
PASSENGER MANIFEST
14-Pm.........A.411
Registration Number N908JE
Type: R-727-31
Pilots: Develittlig
Larry Viaoald
Flight Engineer.
Larry Morrison
DATE: 9 -
2005
FROM P/3--
TO 77.5
Departure
Arrival
,
Trip
Time
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/11/44 e/AX
State or Country
/44
4. Atil4tE27
TO Identifier Defined
5.
City :54. —7.447-Avvol•S•
6.
State or Country
0.3. 141—.
7.
Nautical Miles 517e,,
8.
Statute Miles / 4
e:?••••
9.
Gallons 36,1-42 7 AIRFRAME
10.
Potmds f (P4.40 a
--'30777 • T
11.
Flight Time
+0„P
.
12.
Altitude FL /r71 3 7e) 3347 9
•14
13.
20.
Night
14.
21,
T/L
15.
22.
IMC
16.
23.
Approach
17.
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18.
25.
19.
26.
2'd
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07/26/17
Page 95 of 151
Public Records Request No.: 17-295
JEGE, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Registration Number N908,TE Type: B-727-31 111/f hem....".. .•=0 Dse•-liedgers, Larry Viseeld Flight Engineer: Larry Morrison DATE: - i 2005 FROM Tfo< TO AAA Departure Arrival Trip Time /o : OZ Time / 2 : Yk* Number 33 1 PASSENGERS I. Jeffrey Epstein FROM Identifier Defined 2. ,c 6).-z // city ive IA) y CIA le. 3. vie AAS State or Country N y 4. TO Ideatifler Defined 5. City weg/ P. L.- 236,4 6. State or Country fit-- 7. Nautical Miles 8. Statute milea 1 C 2-Sr• 9. Gallons 3Y,33... AIRFRAME 10. . Pounds 2 3 /5 Y .1 11. Flight Time 07 .7 12. Altitude FL 34317 3.36tG.P 13. 20. Night 14. 21. T/L 15, 22. Imc 16. 23. Approach 17. 24 18. 25. 19. 26. 07/26/17 Page 96 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
JEGE, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST 461,044.4011 Registration Number: N9O8JE Type: 8-727-31 Pilots: Davy Rodgers. Larry Visollti Flight Engineer: Larry Morrison DATE: 3 -4,242--, 2005 FROM PQx TO Vrie Departure 11 Arrival Time ...1_, : i Time PASSENGERS 1. Jeffrey Epstein 2. 4.41.LC•ft A/ 054/S-0 e4 31b--ePt Trip Number 33a,- FROM Identifier Defined City Ales eA-C t State or Comm), F ti 4. 219. yieis- Zderf_AiS s./ -7e-A741-1a 6. 7. S. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. TO Identifier Defined City State or Country Nautical Miles Statute miles fo 2 if Gallons AIRFRAME Pounds 577 33o Flight Time 65) 02— Altitude FL A-2.-Y/Q ,3.34 9 . 0 20. Night 21. T/L 22. 23. Approach 24. 25. 26. 9$‘4 07/26/17 Page 97 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
JEGE, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Registration Number: N9O8IE Type: R-727-31 Pilots: have Rodgers, Larry Visositi Plight Engineer: Larry Morrison DATE: 3 -3J , 2005 FROM Arrival TDrure 8 : 43 IQ Time lCt• TO Par Trip i i : /0 (t) Number 33 PASSENGERS 1. Jeffrey Epstein 2- 4, 3 lotiAr A14,1ew Ell 3. ..PA-vtlt 13C i /LAM FROM Identifier Defined City AKELJ a R.V State or Country N y 4. TO Identifier Defined 5. City4U&Sr— ?*L»,1?-"*“ 6. State or Country FL- 7. Nautical Miles SIVI 8. Statute Miles /OCR !J 9. Gallons if; / 0 a_ AIRFRAME 10. Pounds 4770609 3 309 5-- . I 1. Flight Time _NR 7 ,.., . s.... I2, Attitude FL lit lier) 3 3 oys .L 13. 20. Night 14. 21. T/L / 15, 22. MC 16. 23. Approach 17. 24. ----, 18. 25. 19. 26. 07/26/17 Page 98 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
JEGE, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Registration Number. N90B1E Type: B-727-31 Pilots! Dave Rodierill Larry Viaoski Flight Engineer Larry Morrhoa DATE: - €;$ 2005 FROM f) TO Timec Arrival Time : Number 3 PASSENGERS 1. Jeffrey Epstein 2. SPPA 1-A KeLLJ 3. 0(\)7 MOLL-et') 4. Pi NI2 PC-NOPt nUCtiJSKPi OFW PI 43 ° 6. FROM Identifier Defined City WC. s-T pe)(..ti Bel9Q4 State or Country F L TO Identifier Defined City N 6-vo yoK State or Country te 7. Nautical Miles 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. Statute mks /oa,c Gallons I 1 AIRFRAME Pounds tc321 a .1_ Flight Tirne 2.. +10 2 .2 Altitude FL .Y/ 3 3 t oo , 20. Night 21. T/L 22, !MC 23. Approach 24. 25. 26. 07/26/17 Page 99 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
06/18/2005 12:40 5614786553 JEGE OR HYPERION AIR PAGE 02 JEGE, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Registration Number- N908.JE Type: B-727-31 Pilots: Dave Rodgers, Larry Wreak( Flight Engineer: Larry Morrison DATE: 6:5 _ , 2005 FROM TO Anival Time :c234 Time / 0 :33 PASSENGERS Trip Number I. Jeffrey Epstein 2.5.9,c249,a( /celLEA/ FROMIdentilierDermed City )/0/21 1 ,:il muttEd State or Country AV. 4. /1 A/pRo.troor Al tlAtc-IACC6- TO Identifier betted 5. 2) A ArA 0 a k /v 6-- City cf/..5-r- At3.2,7 t7,,,4 State or Country F-2-- - Nautical Miles i 1.1- Statute Miles /oag Gallons AIRFRAME Pounds /26 41-145 -3 '3 1 / 4/ .6 Flight Time 1- Altitude FL FA- 3$10 33/ / edt, .7_ 20. Night ,c2 . 21. VI, f_l_ 22. EMC 21 Approach 24. 25. 26. 6. Al***ele 2.FF 7- PAW/ e -- a 8. 06(4 .07 a / &. 9. c./ e- NW 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 07/26/17 Page 100 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
City PASSENGERS 1. iliget41311011110 2. FROM Identifier Defined ides-r- PA Ii i 9 JEGE, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Registration Number: N908JE Type: B-727-31 Pilots: Dave Rodgers, Larry Visosla Flight Engineer: Larry Morrison DATE: 2005 FROM Departure 9 Arrival Time 00(i) Time TO c; : Trip Number State or Country FL, TO Identifier Defined City Cdi State or Country Nautical Miles er>7 y7 Statute Miles 315- Gallons 144V AIRFRAME Pounds 331/6-9.' Flight Time + q-s- .47 Altitude FL Pi- 3/0 3 3/17.5- 20. Night 21. T/L 22. IMC 23. Approach 24. 25. # 0 A-s-scovIre.st s 26. in Rd/v(44-1(3J 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 07/26/17 Page 101 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
JEGE, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Registration Number: N908JE Type: B-727-31 Pilots: Dave Rodgers, Flight Engineer: Engineer: Larry Morrison DATE: 0 - O 2005 FROM LC TO Lcq Departure' Time M Time Arrival AM Trip 3 (+3 Number PASSENGERS 2. FROM Identifier Defined City LR L c2zr( State or Country FC, 3. 4. TO Identifier Defined City Ca/7 State or Country FL Nautical Miles Statute Miles 0 Gallons AIRFRAME Pounds 13-133 33111 . 5_7 Flight Time _Lila (./ Altitude FL qi (-5 .3 11 .0 20. Night 21. T/L 22. IMC 23. Approach 24. 25. 26. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 07/26/17 Page 102 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
JEGE, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST 9.44 honikamb Registration Number: N9418.1E Type: B-727-31 Pilots: I),. direct, Tarry Visoski Flight Engineer Larry Morrison DATE: /0 _/.5- 2005 Tpiu)earturYe: 30f?_(g PASSENGERS I 2. 411111111111. FROM ,4 C efQ TO Z C (S FROM Identifier Defined City 7/ .1•)&" Arriral Time Trip Number 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. State or Couutty TO Identifier Defined City /1-./4416- State of Country Nautical Mika statute Miles O Gallons Pounds 341:2t 5" + flight Tixae Altitude FL 20. Night 21. 22. IMC 23. Approach 24. PAA its4 25. FLT -46( 26. AIRFRAME 33119 • a, 3 3 1) ci.__••=A 07/26/17 Page 103 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
JEGE, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Registration. Number. N908JE Type: B-727,31 Pilots: is:diaas , 46 Larry Vlaoski Flight Engineer: Larry Morri,on DATE: 104 7 , 2005 FROM 2 C Q TO tIER Departure Time j t9 Arrival Time Trip Numbcr 3445- PASSENGERS 1.0:Wire,490119#11 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10, 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. FROM Ideatttler Deflaed State or Country ,Z4A- el-cs FL City TO Idettfiller Detimed A/O.0 OPtil N. v. State or Country Nautical Miles 7 Ls) Statute Miles g 7 lit Gallons 7 50 AIRFRAME Pounds M,1290 /I.? 4e2 Flight Thoe ___L+7-? _R. Altitude FL n 3S0 31/ . _a 20. Night 21. T/L 22. IMC 23. Approach 24. AY) /),I5'S4:F;v4 GAS 25. _Zr2_14- frtrrePli4-14ICG 26. City 07/26/17 Page 104 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
91/09/2005 15:15 5614786553 JEGE OR HYPERION AIR PAGE 05 HYPERION AIR, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Registration Number: N909JE Type: G-1159B DATE: I - , 2005 Deprture Time a 2 : I PASSENGERS 1..Teffrey Epstein 2. Sarah Kellen 3. Nadia Mareinkova 4. David Mullen 5. "LT NTH- BRouKts 6. 76.(1) iv Luc. S RoNct... 7, 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. COMMENTS Pilots: Dave Rodgersz Larry Visosld TO P eT oct AM Trip Number FROM Identifier Delinod C n WRLLaLAKE State or Country AN GuiLLA TO Identifier Deflated City wc.-.5T pr3LY\ Se.PiCH State or Country 0-7 3 \ AIRFRAME Pounds 1 03 4-S- G1103.3 2- 4_513 3 0 4-3o 9-106 3 TAKE-OFF POWER Night Flex Take-Off T/L Min Take-Off . IMC Condition Approach Arrival Time FROM Tq PF Nautical Miles Statute Miles Gallons 0 Flight Time Altitude FL 07/26/17 Page 105 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
81/09/2005 15:15
5614786553
JEGE OR HYPERION AIR
PAGE U4
HYPERION AIR, INC.
PASSENGER MANIFEST
Registration Number: N909JE
Type: G-11598
Pilots: Dave Rodgers, Larry Visoski
DATE: / 3 , 2005 FROM
P
TO Tea
Departure
Time
. 0
Arrival
Time
A
Trip
a?_(*.FL Number
/75'0
PASSENGERS
1. Jeffrey Epstein
2. Sarah Kellen
3. Nadia Marcinkova
4.6h ,51A,,,(
LL
te XlvL
6.
7.
8.
9.
10
11.
12.
13.
COMMENTS
FROM Identifier Define('
City Gins; atft,
State or Country FL.
TO Identifier Defined
City
4ER atil3
Statc or Country
Nautical Miles 9 00
Statute Miles 03S
Gallons /goo AIRFRAME
Pounds
‘4S.71)
Flight Time
A..5"
Altitude FL ."-2
76 F .
TAKE-OFF POWER
Night ( . 0
Flex Take-Off T/L
Min Take-Off IMC
Condition
Approach
07/26/17
Page 106 of 151
Public Records Request No.: 17-295
Departure 9 a2... Time Arrival ` ~ Time t Titer (Is) 91/09/2005 15:15 5614786553 JEGE OR HYPERION AIR PAGE 03 HYPERION AIR, INC_ PASSENGER MANIFEST Registration Number N909JE Type: G-115913 DATE: ( -6 , 2005 FROM I-6 8 Pilots: Dave Rodgers, Larry Visoski TO Pel PASSENGERS 1. Jeffrey Epstein FROM Identifier Defined 2. D6NPY City -1-e--"VCR (13Q,eo 3. State or Couutiy PZY 4. 5. 6. TO Identifier Defined City WES1 PALM 15c;Pc1-4 State or Country FL Nautical Miles 900 Statute Miles Gallons \ ye 0 9015 2._ Flight Time +-2.B Altitude FL 4 lo TAKE-OFF POWER Flex Take-Off 2 Min Take-Off • Condition AIRFRAME CI gob 8 2- 45.- I 1. 3 Night 2...S T/L IMC L .6 103S- Pounds Approach 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. COMMENTS 07/26/17 Page 107 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
@1/09/2005 15:15 5614786553 JEGE OR HYPERION AIR FIAUt tic HYPERION AIR, INC. • PASSENGER MANIFEST Registration Number. N9093E Type: G-1159B Pilots: Dave Rodgers, Larry Visoskl DATE: / - 7 .2005 FROM PaT- TO Rs La Departure ,...,- A, (AD Arrival AM Trip Time : 6 7 PM Time P 4.1 C :LP M Number / 7 ,5"- • PASSENGERS FROM Identifier Defined City eAgsi ,A1 (94 3. State or Country re- TO Identifier Defined 5. City W • n yeit5 6. State or Country FL . 7. Nautical Miles 89 8. Statute Miles 1 0 9. Gallons ATDO AIRFRAME 10. Pounds c9/ P f 11. Flight Time +eV .1/ 12. Altitude FL rcza.40 9-711.3_ 13. TAKE-OFF POWER Night Flex Take-Off . T/L Min Take-Off . IMC Condition Approach COMMENTS 2. 07/26/17 Page 108 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
DATE: ( -
Departure u ..sc,
Time
2005 FROM Ks vo
Trrieal
Time y
Trip
tier
\ S 3
u
TO P
01/09/2005 15:15 5614786553
JEGE OR HYPERION AIR
PAGE 01
HYPERION AIR, INC.
PASSENGER MANIFEST
Registration Number. N909JE
Type: G-1159B
Pilots: Dave Rodgers, Larry Visoski
3.
4,
PASSENGERS
1.
FROM Identifier Defined
MY0e5
2.
City
State or Country
E
TO Identifier Defined
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13_
COMMENTS
City V.) &SI PALM 13.14er:
State or Country
Fc
Nautical Miles
89
Statute Miles ( 02
Gallons
C)
AIRFRAME
Pounds
en )
.1
Flight Time
+23 . ("4
Altitude FL
cn
TAKE-OFT POWER
Night
Flex Take-Off
T/L
Min Take-Off IMC
Condition
Approach
Kc)r\
(6PASC Pti.)
pisp(--_cTiod
07/26/17
Page 109 of 151
Public Records Request No.: 17-295
10. 12. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 3. 4. HYPERION AIR, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Ix:NE R Registration Number: N909JE Type: G-1159B Pilots: Dave Rodgers, avatti DATE: 2 - I 0 , 2005 Departure co .31 Time FROM pfn TO F'191 Arrival G Trip TimeI :2,0 PM Number PM I -S1-1-- PASSENGERS FROM Identifier Defined 2. 3.1.4.rcrs 13. COMMENTS -toss F LV..7 6. WA cv6L FCdw Pt vio PI.LerT City WeV3 PALL lasePic4i State or Country TO Identifier Defined City \..)6.51 LIA 6 ePAvi- State or Country F L Nautical Miles Statute Miles Gallons 8 So AIRFRAME Pounds 000 cn t 2. Flight Time + yS . Altitude FL IS° 2 9 TAKE-OFF POWER Night Flex Take-Off . I T/L MM Take-Off IMC Condition Approach FL 07/26/17 Page 110 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
HYPERION AIR, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST eLf eGaukeG Registration Number: N909JE Type: G-115913 Pilots: Dave Rodgers, •birrryitiees4ii- DATE: a- - 19 , 2005 FROM ?el TO Departure Time 05 Arrival Trip Time I _zo_x 51 Number 1 PASSENGERS COLLe I%) FROM Identifier Defined 2. "V CCriPCC-. City Voc-5-r PA Lek ecAori State or Country F L 3. 4. TO Identifier Defined City ST. 1 oitiV)S State or Country U S Nautical Miles Statute Miles Gallons 1200 AIRFRAME Pounds OJ CA1 12.. 9 Flight Time +11_ 2. 12. Altitude FL 430 11 k S. 13. TAKE-OFF POWER Night Flex Take-Off 2- .1C T/L Min Take-Off IMC Condition Approach COMMENTS 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 07/26/17 Page 111 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
Trip Number Ils‘ T/L / TAKE-OFF POWER Flex Take-Off e . Min Take-Off Z . HYPERION AIR, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Registration Number: N909JE Type: G-1159B DATE: 2 -19 , 2005 FROM Tr—S1- Time G PASSENGERS 1, CT e Of*<vict--L 2 EvPr (IN0e055c*) 3. cc L=IJP5 00 015-ttu 4. MCC YR- °C) .LN 5 VALO&'2_ 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. COMMENTS GARY 12<xeuecrt1 Pilots: Dav e Roars, dverrry-101317STI1 TO FROM Identifier Defined City ST. I' }'rot,ARS State or Country V S TO Identifier Defined City W6.-51 fie feecv4 C AIRFRAME 1(95c, 91 is' 1 Flight Time 2- cl 2 Altitude FL 2-A)b 1 I . Condition Wr..POS l'Clif41— Approach Arrival AM Time .7 Nautical Miles Statute Miles Gallons 400 Pounds Night \ 1M C State or Country 07/26/17 Page 112 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
04/07/2005 16:53 5614786553 JEGE OR HYPERION AIR PAGE 01 HYPERION AIR, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST B. N A•A" &to Registration Number: N9O9JE Type: G-1159B Pilots: Brao46•41earei, Larry Visosid DATE: 4!::%2 2005 FROM 405 TO Departure Time /0 : 3 Arrival Time 104 : 5- Trip Number /157 PASSENGERS 1. Jemmy Epstein 2. Sarah Kellen 3. Nadia Marcinkova 4. )4n115- k 5V-Ai? 5. 1..56,04; A S-114AtIG.7. 6. 7. 54.1-Aci(E,9 8 • A4 ///-40 A4 Oa &AI 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. COMMENTS FROM Identifier Defined City W65 State or Country FL TO Identifier Defined City 76-714E4 A90/4.) State or Country Nautical Miles Statute Miles Gallons 77/Do AIRFRAME Pounds eg9s- 9727 7 Flight Tittle Ahitude FL FL 5x0 TAKE-OJT POWER Night Flex Take-Off T/1, / Min Take-Off EMC Condition Approach 07/26/17 Page 113 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
DATE: A cp,L, 2005 Departure Time : re TO _/' /75-1 FROM Arrival Time 3 Trip Number 04/07/2005 16:53 5614786553 JEGE OR HYPERION AIR PAGE 02 HYPERION AIR, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Registration Number. N909JE Type: G-1159E1 Pilots: Dave Rodgers, Larry Visoski PASSENGERS 1. Jeffrey Epstein 2. Sarah Kellen 3 Nadia Marcinkova 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. FROM Identifier Defined City °7-61C—la aorta State or Country IV J2 TO Ideotifter Defined City C441C's 1305AcAlt State or Country Nautical Miles Statute Miles Gallons /5-00 AIRFRAME Pounds ?ILL-- 97Ao. 0 11. Flight Time (2 12. Altitude FL Q 9. 7402601._ 13. TAKE-OFF POWER Night Flex Take-Off T/L Min Take Of IMC Condition Approach COMMENTS 07/26/17 Page 114 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
04/07/2005 16:53 5614786553
JEGE OR HYPERION AIR
PAGE 03
HYPERION AIR, INC.
PASSENGER MANIFEST
Registration Number N909JE
Type: G-1.159B
Pilots. Dave Rodgers, hewer *MOM"
DATE: 3
- 8 2005
FROM P (31.
TO SA N
=we 4; 19416
Arrival
Time
PASSENGERS
11.111111111.1111
2. Ghislaine Maxwell
Trip
Number
11 Sc'
FROM Identifier Defined
City w E-51- PM wit 13e oci4
3.
State or Country
4.
TO Identifier Defined
City SAN OTC& 0
State or Country
C Pr
Nautical Miles
Statute Miles
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
Gall. 3 2q
AIRFRAME
10.
pounds 1 °V-{1:1
91 22 (,
Flight Time S 4-210
Altitude F43
91
2
11.
12_
13.
TAKE-OFF POWER
Night
`-
Flex Take-Off
.
T/L
Min Take-Off
.
IMC
. 3
Condition
Approach LOC
COMMENTS
07/26/17
Page 115 of 151
Public Records Request No.: 17-295
04/07/2005 17:29 5614786553 JEGE OR HYPERION AIR PAGE 05 HYPERION AIR, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Registration Number. N909,IE Type: G-1159B Pilots: Dave Rodgers, Larry Visoaki DATE: 474 -.1_, 2005 FROM S/q V TO pAzz- 3 6 Arrival Trip Time 5 :CPrn vi Time •5 5 Number I 7(2‘) PASSENGERS 1. lefirel-gpstaia 2. FROM Identifier Defined City SAV/ 61 110$14 A 3. State or Country 6 A 4. TO Identifier Defined 5. City tA) C..rS PA-Levki7 EACA__ 6. State or Country FL 7. Nautical Miles 8. Statute Miles 9. Gallons AIRFRAME 10. Pounds 9 73(0 g 11. Flight Time ___L+ at) / 0 12. Altitude FL R. 32o 737. p 13. TAKE-OFF POWER Night COMMENTS Mil/AJICA-1/41‘31- RePtS 711bA/ Flex Take-Off T/L Min Take-Off . IMC Condition Approach 07/26/17 Page 116 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
04/07/2005 17:29 5614786553 JEGE OR HYPERION AIR PAGE 06 HYPERION AIR, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Registration Number: N909JE Type: G-115911 Pilots: Dave Bailers, Larry Visoski DATE: (4 -S 2005 FROM pea. TO PP'} artute AM Arrival L( 5_416Y) Trip I c :S( ' 61 Time Number V PASSENGERS 11111111111111 2. Ghislaine Maxwell 3. 10. FROM Identifier Defined City_ eDLavk K-f)C)-) State or Country TO Identifier Defined City P LRNT Stale or County Cr Pt Nautical Miles Statute Miles Gallons 9 o AIRFRAME Pounds ()Goo 9137 .9 4, 5. 6. 7. S. 9. I I. Flight Time +2=1— H 12. Altitude FL LI to 1 I. 13. TAKE-OFF POWER Night COMMENTS Flex Take-Off T/L Min Take-Off 2 . INC Condition Approach 07/26/17 Page 117 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
Flight Time 017 Altitude FL FL430 '7'.3 z.3 9. Gallons I 4c5c Pounds if> 3 4o AIRFRAME 9 'No e9 04/07/2005 17:29 5614786553 JEGE OR HYPERION AIR PAGE 08 HYPERION AIR, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Registration Number. N909JE Type: G-115913 B. flAnplovp Pilots: ffsve Badges, Larry Visoski DATE: 4 , 2005 FROM TE3 TO P133:- Departure Time Arrival Time lQ OaP AM Trip Number I 7 Co PASStINC;ERS 1. Jeffrey Epstein 2. existhcizre 111:233=i1 3. 5:wadi 141041:1k 4. WAD/A ARe..);/ givA 5. s mae&A hlus.;.siklA 6. 7. 8. FROM Identilier Defined City / 6 °A" o State or Country TO Identifier Defined City &J&57 PALS) ,e6-34;C 3 State or Country tr-L. Nautical Miles Statute Miles 13. COMMENTS TAKE-OFF POWER Night . Flex Take-Off TIL / Min Take-Off . IMC Condition Approach 07/26/17 Page 118 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
05/20/2005 13:00
5614786553
JEGE OR HYPERION AIR
PAGE 10
HYPERION AIR, INC.
PASSENGER MANIFEST
Registration Number: N909..TE
Type: G-115913
Pilots: Pere-fteelgaws, Larry Visoski
DATE:
- ,h23 , 2005 FROM P/3 X
TO
17,5 7
Departure
AM Arrival
c:24046/1
1 Trip / 7a
Tirne
46
Time
Number
)
PASSENGERS
1. Jeffrey Epstein
2. Sarah Kellen
3. ANMEA
FROM Identifier Defined
City 10 Sr Pg" g‘Act-i
State or Country
4. /1441)41 ..4A/r CAA.fkd La.
TO Identifier Defined
5,
City 5 r
46-)",4s
6.
State or Country
7.
Nautical Miles 9 7 5-
8.
Statute Miles / / a
Gallons 1 oa AIRFRAME
Founds __(4Y,c2__7 747/3 /
Flight Time c"-
p2../
Altitude FL FeWO ? 7 ("5 .01
13.
TAKE-OFF POWER
Night
Flex Take-Off
Min Take-Off TMC
Condition Approach
COMMENTS
9.
10.
11.
12.
07/26/17
Page 119 of 151
Public Records Request No.: 17-295
05/20/2005 13:08 5614786553 JEGE OR HYPERION AIR PAGE 06 HYPERION AIR, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Registration Number. N909JE Type: G-11590 Pilots: Deirelitodgerg Larry Visoski DATE; 3217 , 2005 FROM 7-e_e TO Pay' Departure e-N 4 Time 7 ;it PM Arrival r.) A/94 Trip Time / :JP P Number /779_ PASSENGERS 1. Jeffrey Epstein 2. Ghislaine Maxwell 3. (.7•197.12.4 0(<10 422340,4 R tv2 /S 5. /441AILE 6. / "mike& 7. 7‘ ,P C4F 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. COMMENTS FROM Identifier Defined city_- 6?e.ezz&co State or Country Air TO Identifier Defined City co4r r State or Country Nautical Miles Statute Miles FL_ Gallons c2/ 60 AIRFRAME Pounds _I/ o15- Sic' e .7 Flight Time 4:2_2tY6 • 7 Altitude FL 47 Vet. 7 737 . 3 TAKE-OFF POWER Night Flex Take-Off . T/L Min Take-Off 1MC Condition Approach 07/26/17 Page 120 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
05/20/2005 13:00 5614786553 JEGE OR HYPERION AIR PAGE 04 HYPERION AIR, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Registration Number: N909JE Type: G-115911 DATE: Li 1 2005 FROM Par Pilots: pave Rodgers, Larry Visoski TO TIST Departure 48 2.2 AM Arrival Time Time Trip Number 11'73 PASSENGERS 1 Jeffrey Epstein 2. 3.- 4. N 0 Rc-- RNA muca.40 S. v ALI) COT( IJJ 6. TAIT ANA 7. eARN)Ue$41 51-Ce7TER 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. COMMENTS FROM Identifier Defined ecp,c4 State or Country EL TO Identifier Defined City ST. 1r),Notv\A5 Stale or Country U S Nautical Miles Statute Miles AIRFRAME Pounds e906 cllsk 3 Flight Time a +CO (b 2_. Altitude FL S(C) 91S-5.4 TAKE-OFF POWER Night 2.... \ Flex Take-OH-I^ T/L / Gallons Min Take-Off Emc Condition Approach 07/26/17 Page 121 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
PAGE 17 JEGE OR HYPERION AIR 05/ 20/2005 13:00 5614786553 Pilots: Dave Rodgers, Larry Vlsoski Registration Number: N909JE Type: C-115913 TO -7-E8 / Trip Number / 7-76- TO Identifier Defined City 4VES7r State or Country 4. AvarzeA Mos/it's 444 5 „I-7_45'4141*dr 6 10i_e/00 MUI 1006 13. 4? -3 TAKE-OFF POWER Night HYPERION AIR, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST DATE: J _ 6 , 2005 FROM Arrival 113-nne 9 : e LLA5 Time PASSENGERS 1. Jeffrey Epstein 2. Nadia Marcinkova 3. ScI10-4$4 ik/Eart/ AIRFRAME sC44, 517573 FiightTime +4=, 02.3_ Altitude FL Irfl...3C1 175 . 6 8 9. 10. Nautical Miles Statute Miles Gallons 500 Pounds 11. 12. Flex Take-Off T/L j // Min Take-Off . Condition Approach _ FROM Identifier Defincd City Agri7I wet9 4410 State or Country &Li COMMENTS 07/26/17 Page 122 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
17 6 a 0 Night T/L IMC Approach 05/20/2005 13:00 5614786553 JEGE OR HYPERION AIR PAGE 15 HYPERION AIR, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Registration Number: N909JE Type: G-1159D Pilots: Dave Rodgers, Larry Visoski DATE: - 10 , 2005 FROM Pf31. TO T“ Departure Tune 1_ .3.1 Arri Trip Time val :51_01 Number PASSENGERS 1. Jeffrey Epstein FROM identifier Defined 2. Sarah Kellen City PAL-r\ 311111=1.11111111.1 State or Country F L 4. David Mullen TO Identifier Defined 5. OC>ST\TT bU21\35 city "rd-legeoKt1 6. State or Country 7. Nautical Miles 8 Statute Miles 9_ Gallons 1300 AIRFRAME Pounds ct 260 q 151 10. Flight Time :2 Altitude FL (lc() TAIL-OFF Tak O o_off FF PO I WE . R is, Min Take-Off Condition 11. 12. 13. COMMENTS 07/26/17 Page 123 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
05/20/2005 13:00 5614786553 JEGE OR HYPERION AIR PAGE 13 HYPERION AIR, INC_ PASSENGER MANIFEST Registration Number: N909.1-E Type. G-1159B faLL v)amelomo Pilots: Dave Rodgers, IMEMOMM DATE: S - 1 E FROM 1 , 2005 TO Pts1 Departure Time 0 ,2411 ) Trip Arrival Time Number PASSENGERS 1. Jeffrey Epstein FROM Identifier Defined 2. Sarah Kellen 3 ptOKIStO tvwc:LoS0 City -1-ciefloR State or Country 4. TO Identifier 1Delined City \/46-s3 0;Ln Scq(-14 State or Country FL 7. Nautical Miles 8. Statute Miles Gallons t (--41C4(1‘ AJAFRAME Pounds T18'2- 916?--. Flight Time 2..20 2-, Altitude FL 434'3 91 6 (-1 ._3 TAKE-OFF POWER Night Flex Take-Off 2 .1C Min Take-Off Condition Approach 5. 6. 9. 10. 11_ 12 13. COMMENTS 8 07/26/17 Page 124 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
DATE: 5 -cP 54, 2005 FROM Pal— TO Time p : / Time 0/ Number .27 7,1r Departure Arrival Trip PASSENGERS Jeffrey Epstein FROM Identiller Defined 2. Sarah Kellen City ''Sr b_ke-Awri. a_c Zug ILA, State Of Country FL 4. TO Identifier Defined City 7—e7-e-.12 acti/?a State or Country AZ LT 5. 6 7- 8. 9. 10. 12. 13_ COMMENTS Nautical Miles Statute Miles Gallons /360 AIRFRAME Pounds '7931 76Y.3 Flight Time Artii *23_ . 3 Attitude FL /:e VS-0 9 7 k) TAKE-OFF POWER Night Flex Take-Off . T/L. Min Take-Off I MC Condition Approach 07/26/17 Page 125 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
Pilots: Dave Rodgers, Larry Visoski Registration Number. N909JE Type: G-I159B Pounds //oT9 9770 HYPERION AIR, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST PASSENGERS I. Jeffrey Epstein 2. David Mullen 3. h j _s_44;A, e MAX fr.J6C.(.. 4. AA F,4.. ./il 1.1ArtuAgt tit+ 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. COMMENTS FROM Identifier Defined City ST 7-A41) ,7"-T State or Country O. S. V. 2. TO Identifier Defined City eAde-sr. PAI-", ert-c4 State or Country L . Nautical Miles 7 Statute Miles //it / Gallons 5 -4.41 AIRFRAME Flight Time 0, .5 Altitude FL Fe_4(00 7 7 72 . TAKE-OFF POWER Night Flex Take-Off 171. Min Take-Off IMC Condition Approach 5. 6. 7. Arrival Time PM TO P x Trip Number a 0 DATE: 5 t7. 7' , 2005 FROM IXPUN= Time 07/26/17 Page 126 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
Pilots: Dave Radar's, Larry Visoaki Registration Number* N909JE Type: G-115913 PASSENGERS I. Jefrivy Epstein 2. Nadia Marcinkova FROM Identifier Defined City W eR LPN es FL. State or Country aP R r44 Muc ts Pt 13. COMMENTS TAKE-OFF POWER Night Flex Take-Off T/1.- HYPERION AIR, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST TO identifier Defined City °VC. TGP EIGIR 0 State or Country Nautical Miles Statute Miles 9. I0. 163K3 AIRFRAME Gallons Flight Time 2 , I q 2.. 5 Altitude FL L4 911 LI 9 12. Min Take-Off . IMC Condition Approach 4. 5. 7. 8- Pounds 4/ ° C11T2-- 6 FROM Arrival Time TO TE (3° Number 8 I DATE: 2005 Time DepEtrture (.4 3 ) 07/26/17 Page 127 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
HYPERION AIR, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Rte li(Asemv4 Type: C-1159B Pilots fitiv•ifiedgers, Larry Visoski FROM --rag TO Per- Trip Number FROM identifier Defined City FE/V-1e 42 a fa0 State or Country /sti. TO Identifier Defined City et) PA L/so\ 8E-Aelc/4. State or Courtly F. L. Nautical Miles Statute Miles Registration Number. N909JE , 2005 =Ere ? /51 Arrival Time ASSENCERS Jeffrey Epstein Sarah Kellen OuRAAr Gallons /4406 AIRFRAME Pounds 943(74 77 V F Flight Time z2+th_ al .3 Altitude FL ,CZ$3O 7-27 7 TAKE-OFF POWER Night Flex Take-Off T/L Min Take-Off IMC Condition Approach MENTS 07/26/17 Page 128 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
PASSENGERS I. Jeffrey Epstein 2. (55,..vr". 4 / 4e:-/Ltsrti 3.2#114-0/19"" iScolietAocr 4 / t"t**11A 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 12. 13. COMMENTS HYPERION AIR, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Registration Number N909JE Type: G-11590 Pilots: Dave Rodgers, Larry Visoski DATE: 6 „az, 2005 FROM Paz- TO Departure Time Arri Time 6 : Number /7 ij FROM Identifier Defined City 644.163-7- 246,7 Regx•e-4 State or Country Fre., TO Identifier Defined City reoree.—/Set044 State or Country Al . Nautical Miles Statute Miles Gallons / 51>b AIRFRAME Pounds Ss-37 9 77 Flight Time c, +/S.' AA 3 Altitude FL ,CL 41%.5-b 777 . TAKE-OFF POWER Night Flex Take-Off T/L MM Take-Off 1MC Condition Approach 07/26/17 Page 129 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
Type: G-1159B Pilots: Dave Rodgm Larry Visoski Arrival Time lc) _43±A PASSENGERS 1. Jeffrey Epstein 2 SAgNA iN) FROM Identifier Defiuned City .-c-&TEkeoeo 7. 5)00 Nautical Miles 9. AIRFRAME Gallons 1 -100 10. Pounds 43863 cfl e 11. 2 '2— Flight Time Time 2- + 1 I HYPERION AIR, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Registraticai Number. N9093E DATE: L' 36 2005 Time 1 : FROM -Ws TO Pert IsZnber 1 1 e City \N EST PALM 6‘-N.1-1 State or Country FL Statute Miles / 6 3 5— Altitude FL TAICE-OFT POWER Flex Take-Off . Min Take-Off Condition 1MC 12. 13. COMMENTS 5. 6. S. T/L Approach N 3 OP0,IFY ISUKN 4. Fa MALE- State or Country TO Identifier Defined 07/26/17 Page 130 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
Arrival Number Trip DATE: 7 - 5:2005 FROM Departure Time _a___: _PM 1777 cit) -76-7 ezaB 0 an State or Country S. l #/14.1 6. VAMP gOilll4.5 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. COMMENTS HYPERION AIR, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Registration Number: N909.1E Type: G-1 1S9B Pilots: Dave Rodgers, Larry VisosIcl PASSENGERS 1. Jeffrey Epstein 2. Sarah Kellen 3.A REAA•A ill US/AI S A FROM Identifier Defined City we-sr P41-011 /96-4e,v State or Country 4. / e-m-7 tet- L4E- TO Identifier Defined Nautical Miles 5.),C)0 sta4te Miles /1 35 / 3 00 Poupds 9197 Flight Time c) +17 Akitude FL /11_,.V/C) TAKE OFF POWER Flex Take-Off Min Take-Off Condition AIRFRAME q7kJ, . 7 A ,3 Night T/L IMC Approach 07/26/17 Page 131 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
HYPERION AIR,. INC,
•
PASSENGER MANIFEST
Registration Number: N1909JE
Type: G-11598
DATE: 7 - /57, 2005
Departure
Time 0 7 "64
PASSENGERS
1. Jeffrey Epstein
2. 504444d9/1 ,ZEZLedd
3. DAB a(igALS
4.
5-
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
COMMENTS
Pilot : Dirrefiedrars, Larry Visoeki
TO Par-
Trip
Number
FROM Identafkr Defined
cii41 -FE Te.e /en
qtntr• or Country
A/ %.0/
TO Identifier Defined
City Gt..)457- ?PA
State or County
Natitical Wes 9 ("0
Statute Miles JO 35°
GalIons J.3 C10
AIRFRAME
Pminth
85 9 774
Flight Tune eel -Fa__
2
Altitude FL A-1-4450 VO 0 .3
TAKE-OFF POWER
Night
Flex Take-Off
.
TIL
at
Min Take-Off
IMC
Corklition
Approach
FROM
Arrival
Time
79O
07/26/17
Page 132 of 151
Public Records Request No.: 17-295
HYPERION AIR, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST i// Abiow. "%or, Registration Number: N909JE Type: G-1159B Pilots: ors, Larry VLsoski DATE: 7 - / G , 2005 FROM P TC ? Departure Arrival ;AM Tni Time (: 03 AM Tune / 0 PM Number / 7 9./ PASSENGERS I . JefErey-giatein FROM Identifier Defined 2. Davtd-Meiren City CA/ etT ? 3. rn err e "14 NC c State or Country F C- 4. TO Identifier Defined 5. City tok) 6. State or County f: L. 7. Nautical Mies Z 8. Statute Miles 9. Gallons 3 a o AIRFRAME 10. Pounds / Ce 2 1 11. Flight Time C) + 0 Altitude FL TAKE-OFF POWER Night Flex Take-Off T/L Li I Min Take-Off IMC Condition Approach I 12. I3. COMMENTS 07/26/17 Page 133 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
AM Pilots: Dave Rodgers, Larry 'Visoski TO 14.1 Tri) Number HYPERION AIR, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Registration Number: N909JE DATE: 16 2005 TD5Paitizre 9 ime LI Adb PASSENGERS 1. Jeffrey Epstein 2. SqR141) KELLtJ 3. OAM B upeNs COMMENTS FROM Identifier Defined City We•ZI" eALtet H FL TO Identifier Defined City TET6-..k Q 6 a State or Country NZ" Nautical Miles ? 0 statute Miles / 0 3 S Galioas I 5-00 Pounds Ct 114n L Flight Time 2— +26 Altitude FL 4...5 TAKE-OFF POWER Flex Take-Off . I C T/L Min Take-Off IMC Condition Approach SI.3 Type: G-1159B Pal L :15 1-1 92 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. State or Country AIRFRAME Z. 4- .9802_ ciL Night FROM Arrival Time 07/26/17 Page 134 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
AM I I : 2,6 AIRFRAME City v•4,;trr. 'P Lrt (36Ackk State or Country FL Nautical Miles O Statute Miles / 0 3 SOO 10. goiloy .8 Pounds Ct Cs61 Night 2. HYPERION AIR, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Registration Number. N909.IE Type: G-1159B DATE: - 2- 2-- 2005 FROM T8 43 eiLL RAMOONO Pilots: Dave Rodgers, 11111.11111111 TO ITS Time CI Arrival Time Trip Number PASSENGERS 1. Jeffrey Epstein 2. SR §.1 N 3. DctoPs 130/ZtJ 4. 'CF}-MANA 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. FROM Identifier Defined Ch Tal-c-Re 0 it 0 State or Country NT TO Identifier Defined 12. 11. Flight Time Altitude FL Lisp 80 24152 . 3 Min Take-Off IMC Condition Approach COMMENTS TAKE-OFF POWER Flex Tako-Off 2 . I C T/L t / 13. 07/26/17 Page 135 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
HYPERION AIR, INC.
PASSENGER MANIFEST
ILL Vi*Mt1 woo
Registration Number: N909JE
Type: G41598
Pilots: Dave Rodgers,
DATE: _205-2005 FROM (it.•
TC
6•--
Departure
T S c,ci AM
Arrival
Trio 1 I,
ime
Time
Nu_nber
PASSENGERS
1. Jeffrey Epstein
2. S ARAM \<.4E.L.L6..0
3. DANA iSL2N.5
4. TA-TLNPI
FROM Identifier Defined
City w te -r ("Rt.. ti• ecaGAA
•
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FL
TO Identifier Defined
5.
eaRo
6.
State or County
Nautical Miles
Statute Miles
f\13-
7.
8.
o 3 5
9.
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AIRFRAME
Potuods NOoSek cMoi.
Flight Time 2 +24— Z. +
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Flex Take-Off 2... I
T/L
Miu Take-04
IMC
Condition
Approach
10.
12.
13.
COMMENTS
07/26/17
Page 136 of 151
Public Records Request No.: 17-295
Tune 1 : 1 1 Nz State or Country 9. AIRFRAME Gallons 46 Pounds et 6(2.4. cit.2.1.0 Flight Time 2 4-61 2 Altitude FL Li SO 98 2.9. HYPERION AIR, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Pit its: Dave Rodgers, Larry Visoski Registration Number: N9O9JE Type: G-115913 DATE: 8 I qs 2005 PASSENGERS FRo.arE a TO eel Amvai tc165 =her lac) (-4-- 1. Jeffrey Epstein 2. Roithr414 itnucltisi< 3. Prt ...PS . Mu a. mik5 u cz. is) s )(A- S. etPnlyt4A‘c 55-T6it 6. WPADTPY tAikt C-LOKOVA 7. 8. FROM Identifier Defiled City T~=''~V\ C1R el TO Identifier Defined wcs-c of Le ecr-c State or Courny E L Nautical Miles 900 Statute Miles TAKE-OFF POWER Night Flex Take-Off . TIL Mm Take-011 IMC Condition Approach 10. 11. 12. 13. COMMENTS 07/26/17 Page 137 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
gesso swk saik. Dsw- 2-riters, LAITY Viwelci Registration Number: N909JE Type: 0-1159B DATE: 2p - 21, 2005 FROM ,t3 / HYPERION AIR, IN PASSENGER MANIFE T Departure Time (A16 4 PASSENGERS 1. Jeiiireritiptilein 2. Da" TUMen 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. Arrival AM T Time 4Z50 N FROM Idea City State OT CO TO Identifk City State or Co Nautical Statute Miles Gallons Pounds Flight Time Altitude FL ber P' Defined 1,1r Rio /Ars fil- Defined Or 'Pots Pa". fi V. rg AIRFRAME to_7 SOP 98 e 13. TAKE-OFF WER Night Flex Take-0 T/L Min Tak Condition Approach a COMMENTS 410911,04, 07/26/17 Page 138 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
Type: G-1159B Registration Number. N9O97E Pilots: Dave Rodgers, Larry Visoski Tr g:. Number Statute Miles State or Comuy TO Identifier Defined City 're-/2 13 42 1' 0 State or Cowry Al J. Nautical Miles 900 /63.3 9. Gallons //no AIRFRAME Pounds 9533 Fhaci, a 3 13. Night T/L IMC COMMENTS TAKE-OFF POWER Flex Take-Oft Min Take-Off HYPERION AIR, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST DATE: g _/-11:?_2005 Departure Time 157 P 1V ~t3 /4904i FROM Arrival Time PASSENGERS 1. Jeffrey Epstein 2.A/A DIA AlARCIAlkgVet_ 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. FROM IdeptIller Defined City 64i4e‘57 . P424-7 1-?c Condition Approach Flight Time c32 +149_ Altitude FL ,CL 41-5-0 10. 11. 12. 07/26/17 Page 139 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
HYPERION AIR, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Registration Number: 19909.1E DATE: 8 - 2_1 2005 FROM 7- 3•&ABA lime tree Arrival --rIsT TO Pal l'ype: G-1159B Pilots: Dave Rodgers, Larry Visoski jpg, ZIPnbc7 1 8 1 1 FROM Identifier Defined City ST. THOMAS State or Co ml USVT TO Identifier Defined City VieS1 fOU'l 43‘..-PZ State or Country FL Nautical Miles Statute Miles Gallons 1300 Pounds 9939 Flight Time 2 -42w-k Altitude FL1184:16 TAKE-OFF POWER Night COMMENTS Flex Take-Off L. 1 T/L WT-440 5 (4-re..P F.}Q:rr ftemcv Min Take-Off IMC Condition Approach /9, cir/v PASSENGERS 1- 1111111111111.1 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. AIRFRAME 3(1 2. Lf- 9836 a 07/26/17 Page 140 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
09/14/2005 14:16 FAX HYPERION AIR, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST AJii 17i t .••• 7,',,"1 0 ?MO M-Vt-Rottgers, Larry Visoski DATE: - , 2005 FROM PAS TO r 'sr AM Arrial Trip trui° Time v 7 : 3 4.6 Number /.5v. Z.. Registration Ntanber N9O9JE Type: G-1159B PASSENGERS 1. JrfErtEpswisk 2 A' 0 3. 4. 5- 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12_ 13. COMMENTS FROM Identifier Defined City /fide-1-4.7- .,?;._0.0%c State or Country TO Identifier Defined City 57.- / A *Am" vi-„g_ Slate or Country ie-.5 Nautical Miles Q S'S Statute Miles / 333 Gallons / G 5- a AIRFRAME Pounds ??85 ne_Sk Flight Tune _+, Altitude FL C17 0 TAKE-OFF POWER Night Flex Take-Off T/L / / I Mill Take-Off . . / Condition Approach 07/26/17 Page 141 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
/3 I // /4111....-. Imo,- • Nab Pilots: Dinax./irodgers, Larry Visoski Trip Number t 13 '09/14/2005 14:16 FAX Q1005 HYPERION AIR, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Registration Number: 11909JE Type: C-115913 DATE: 2005 FROM r 1ST Departure Time : Arrival Time Z :_i_kj.k3 M PASSENGERS 1. Jeffrey Epstein 2. Pier AtIs 011 / /eel 3. IlA,R et go it .00friv a wit Ns 5. 6. -7. 117./ A Ad 7. 8. FROM Identifier Defined City ST 7— pip A State or Country TO Identifier Defined CO' &a-sr PA e.4.0-% J-1-eneAk State or Country Nautical Miles 9 2 5 Statute Miles / 1 3 L. 9. 10- 11. 12. 13. COMMENTS Gallons SOO AIRFRAME Pounds Flight Time 2+21 9 Altimde FL 9_3 a 9e3Y3 - CP TAKE-OFF POWEI( Night Flex Take-Off TIT Min - Take-Off WIC Condition Approach 984W 07/26/17 Page 142 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
Arrival Time Departure T 5 •.:54_,'§tsrl isil ime AM Trip G rli_ Number 191V State or Cormtry FROM Identifier Dented City i.A) c...5 7 PASSENGERS 1. Jeffrey Epstein 2. •as pi4 .3X v 3. /2/1 13 v ^LS C ro‘/S. X .9- 4. r ",c.r9Na 5. e• P." A' 14.-- 6_ City / e-7-24e-/t.-A30 /z- TO Identifier State or Country 7. 515- Nautical Miles 09/14/2005 14:16 FAX x004 HYPERION AIR, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Bill Hanunond, R 1":" 4-,-"Zb Pilots! -Datee-Redgert, LintryAlistrski TO T ers stame miles 0 9 "7 G-aons / Y Z.S" pounds 4/ 7 7 62- 1•light Tim Z 2-- Akitude FL WO TAKE-OFF POWER Night -- Flex Take-Off T/L f / / Min Take-Off IMC Condition Approach 8_ 9_ 10. 11. 12. 13. COMMENTS AfRFRAME N909JE Type: G-115911 DATE: - , 2005 Registration Nnmbo; FROM / A 07/26/17 Page 143 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
1 1 -1 9 State or Country Nautical Nfiles 1 0 Z. Statute Miles S 0 AnzFRA.mx 9. Gallons 10. Pounds 9.59 0 9a1/.5Z21 11_ Flight Time Z+V 2 3 12_ Altitude FL ys 0 93 I fe? 09/14 / 2005 14:16 FAX 12003 HYPERION AIR, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Registration Number. N909JE Type: G-11398 DATE: - , 2005 FROM r 6,6 Departure Arrival Time f 0 a p Time Bill Hammond Pilots: Ads, Larry Visoski TO f3 I t 2 : 2 Z. TriP Number IS FROM Identifier Defined City / "r--f3 tz fr" V 1 -P. S A. A State or Country PO TO Identifier Defined City e's -r- P ;e-A-G. A- PASSENGERS 1. Jeffrey Epstein 2. A-' 00 .1. 3. /4 "P JA-0•149- 5. 6. 7. TAKE-OFF POWER Flex Take-Off Min Take-Off Night 2.3 171. IMC 13. COMMENTS Condition Approach i" 07/26/17 Page 144 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
09/14/2005 14:16 FAX [002 HYPERION AIR, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST 1441411=Mved Registration Number N909..YE Type: G-1159B Pilots! Dave Rodgers, Larry Visoski Trip Number Departure Time .4aolt Arrival Time 9- :36 AM DATE q - , 2005 FROM TO PASSENGERS 1. Jeffrey Epstein FROM Identifier Defined 2- AD46---A7-Apf /AL tflus/ty.fitie) City ivEs-r PAL" 3. NAP/11- nan-clit-lK6vA- State or Country FL, TO Identifier Defined City -r-4 6. State State or Country 05 Nautical Miles Smite Miles 761.3 9. Gallons /300 AIRFRAME 10. Pounds .i's-.3.R. 9'1 4/P. / 1l_ Flight Time 07 ±,-2,3 a? .3 12. Altitude FL -u./--e3 9Y 5-- 0 .g TAKE-OFF POWER Night Flex Take-Off . T/L Min Take-Off . IMC Condition Approach COMMENTS 4. 5. 8. 07/26/17 Page 145 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
Gallons Pounds Flight Timee--2 AIRFRAME ‘Q Altitude FL f.14 7.4" 7144 HYPERION AIR, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Bill Hammond Registration Number: N909JE Type: G-1159D Pilots: -Dime-Rodgers, Larry Visoski DATE: 9 a l , 2005 FROM 71.e13 TO PS-1- Departure g AM Arrival Time Time Trip Number 14s)g7 PASSENGERS _Jeffrey Epstein 2 7.479/#"tiA 3 A 72447 6-"Vol_ US/4/4 #e4 4. _i_re74.*-G6 5. JYAZY:_e_ FROM Identifier Defined city 7 d5rB ot a el State or Country TO Identifier Defined city k)E37- a-Lin gavtic41 State or Country . 7. Nautical Miles Statute Miles / / 7? 9. 10 12 _ 13. TAKE-OFF POWER Night Flex Take-Off T/L / COMMENTS Min Take-Off IMC Condition Approach 07/26/17 Page 146 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
DATE; /0 - y 2005 Time : 91/ (44 FROM 1.22 /3 Trip Y Z :654 Number /43 2,? .Arrival Time TO 7-E" /3 HYPERION AIR, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Rill lisminoad Registration Number: N9O9JE Type: G-115913 Pilots: Daye.liledenirs, Larry Vitiodd PASSENGERS 1. Jeffiey Epstein 2. eirCeit •.....v .4 r L.0...1/ .41.4 #9 3. P da-to, A%) ALS 4. 8. 9. 10. 11 12. 13. COMMENTS FROM Identifier Defined City AS' 47- P., 4. ..e-• ".1.2dire0C State or Country TO Identifier Defined City / 411*' ditarsaO ose StateorCanity A.0.1 Nautical Miles / 0 Stange Miles // 7 9 Gallons / Y Sr 0 AIRFRAME Pounds C,S-A Flight Time Z. ‘r Altitude FL YSV 987/.6 TAKE-OFF POWER Night Flex Take-Off T/L Min Take-Off , Condition Approach 07/26/17 Page 147 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
r. HYPERION AIR, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Bill Ratutrand Registration Number: N904.TE Type: G-11598 Pacts: likaisdisdipar, Larry Viaaeld DATE: - 4:7 , 2005 FROM 7:E-8 TO Departure Timt Arrival Time Trip Number /2079 PASSENGERS 1. Jeffrey Fpstein 2. 5a4R/=) k jklE L L EA/ 3. A-IR E-A-A A Mustil .i/14 5 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. COMMENTS FROM lAeurfficr Dcfutal city 7-64a&4960eci State or Country /11/: TO Identifier Refined City /14 MA State or Country rt.., Nautical Miles 9sit Staudt Miles jog Gallons / 7 d Q AIRFRAME °411-49- 9 2 4 Flight Tune c2____+‘; C2 411 5- Aittlude FL-,0-6 TAKE-OFF POWER Night Flex Take-Off T/L Min Take Off IMC Condition Approach 07/26/17 Page 148 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
HYPERION AIR, INC. PASSENGER MANIFEST Rill llianinaond Registration Number: N909JE Type: G11S9B Pilots: DiriviniUmlinos, Larry Visoeki DATE: /0 - 6 , 2005 FROM TO 7: 15,T Departure .3.44 5..) M Arrival ( 5 Trip Time Time : Number a 36 FROM ItienUTDer Defined 2- _34-044 /412E21 ary A4/4/4/ 3- 2.4.4Ii4 6 C/12 AA5 State or Comm}, ,07,„.. • 4. TO Identifier Defined City sr -T-A07.44-J. 6. State or ConatrY J. V•Z. 7. Nautical Miles 96),9..._ stamemiles /OL, Gallons /30o AIRFRAME Pc'uuds 99 Flight Time +d5— A . 5— Althude F-z-vz 2126_.k_ TAKE-OFF POWER Night a. C) Flex Take-Off T/L / Min Take-Off IMC Condition Approach 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. COMMENTS PASSENGERS 1. Jeffrey Epstein 5. 07/26/17 Page 149 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
www.myspace.com/ Page 14 of 14 The ribbon on my wrist says do not open before.... 12/22/2005 8:53 PM About I FAO I Terms I Privacy I Safety Tips I Contact Myspace I Report Inappropriate Content I Promote! I Advertise ©2003-2006 MySpace.com. All Rights Reserved. http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewProfile&friendID=31027962 2/9/2006 07/26/17 Page 150 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
• ' \ • • 07/26/17 Page 151 of 151 Public Records Request No.: 17-295
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Objects: Text | Text: Later in April, Recarey walked | into a prosecutor's office at the state | att
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484 x 453
Objects: Text | Text: Now the mother was afraid her | molested by a man on the island. | The phone c
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Page 77
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document
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Objects: Text | Text: Wexner sold Epstein one of his | most lavish residences: a massive | townhouse
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document
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Page 78
document
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Objects: Text | Text: Little is known or sa | Epstein's business except | manages money for the e |
Page 78
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document
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document
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document
485 x 232
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document
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Objects: Text, Handwriting | Text: Instead of being slapped with a | charge of unlawful sexual activ
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document
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Objects: Text, Newspaper, Page | Text: on. | They said the girls were permit- | ted many indulgences
Page 79
document
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Objects: Text | Text: Two of Epstein's for | employees told investigators | young-looking girls show
Page 80
document
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Objects: Page, Text | Text: JEGE, INC. | PASSENGER MANIFEST | Type: B-727-31 | Pilots: Dave Rodgers,
Page 92
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Objects: Page, Text, Animal, Bird | Text: JEGE, INC. | PASSENGER MANIFEST | Type: B-727-31 | Pilots:
Page 93
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Objects: Page, Text | Text: JEGE, INC. | PASSENGER MANIFEST | Registration Number: N908JE | Pilots:
Page 93
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718 x 1580
Objects: Page, Text | Text: 3 | DATE: | 2005 | FROM | Departure
Page 94
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Objects: Page, Text, Animal, Bird | Text: JEGE, INC. | PASSENGER MANIFEST | Type: B-727-31 | Registr
Page 95
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Objects: Page, Text | Text: JEGE, INC. | PASSENGER MANIFEST | B HAMMIND | Registration Number N908JE
Page 96
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Objects: Page, Text, Book, Publication | Text: JEGE, INC. | PASSENGER MANIFEST | Bill HAMMOND | Regi
Page 97
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Objects: Book, Publication, Page, Text | Text: JEGE, INC. | PASSENGER MANIFEST | Pilots: | Dave Rodg
Page 98
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Objects: Page, Text, Book, Publication | Text: JEGE, INC. | PASSENGER MANIFEST | Registration Number
Page 98
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331 x 203
Objects: Text, Handwriting, Number, Symbol | Text: 33095 | 6 | 14 | 1
Page 99
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Objects: Book, Publication, Text, Page | Text: JEGE, INC. | PASSENGER MANIFEST | Registration Number
Page 100
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Objects: Page, Text, Book, Publication | Text: 06/18/2005 12:40 | 5614786553 | JEGE OR HYPERION AIR
Page 101
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Objects: Page, Text, Book, Publication | Text: JEGE, INC. | PASSENGER MANIFEST | Type: B-727-31 | Pi
Page 102
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Objects: Page, Text, Book, Publication, Document | Text: JEGE, INC. | PASSENGER MANIFEST | GEORGE GE
Page 103
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Objects: Page, Text, Book, Publication | Text: JEGE, INC. | PASSENGER MANIFEST | Registration Number
Page 104
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Objects: Page, Text, Book, Publication | Text: JEGE, INC. | PASSENGER MANIFEST | Type: B-727-31 | Pi
Page 105
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Objects: Text, Document, Receipt, Book, Publication, Page | Text: 01/09/2005 15:15 | 5614786553 | JE
Page 106
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Objects: Text, Page, Document | Text: 01/09/2005 15:15 | 5614786553 | JEGE OR HYPERION AIR | PAGE |
Page 107
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Objects: Text, Document, Receipt, Page | Text: 01/09/2005 15:15 | 5614786553 | JEGE OR HYPERION AIR
Page 107
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342 x 205
Objects: Text, Number, Symbol, White Board | Text: Gallons | 1400 | Pounds | 2.28 | Flight Time
Page 108
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Objects: Text, Page | Text: 01/09/2005 15:15 | 5614786553 | JEGE OR HYPERION AIR | PAGE | HYPERION A
Page 109
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Objects: Text, Book, Publication, Page, Document, Receipt | Text: 01/09/2005 15:15 | 561 4786553 | J
Page 110
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Objects: Text, Document, Receipt, Page | Text: HYPERION AIR, INC. | PASSENGER MANIFEST | PETE RATHGE
Page 111
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Objects: Text, Page, Book, Publication, Document, Receipt | Text: HYPERION AIR, INC. | PASSENGER MAN
Page 112
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Objects: Text, Page, Document, Receipt | Text: HYPERION AIR, INC. | PASSENGER MANIFEST | Registratio
Page 113
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Objects: Page, Text, Menu | Text: 04/07/2005 16:53 | 561 4786553 | JEGE OR HYPERION AIR | PAGE 01 |
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Objects: Book, Publication, Text, Page | Text: 04/07/2005 16:53 | 5614786553 | JEGE OR HYPERION AIR
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Objects: Text, Document, Receipt | Text: 04/07/2005 16:53 | JEGE OR HYPERION AIR | PAGE | 03 | HYPER
Page 115
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326 x 204
Objects: Text, Number, Symbol, White Board | Text: 5.4
Page 115
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332 x 211
Objects: Text, Number, Symbol, Gas Pump, Machine, Pump | Text: Pounds | 19427 | Flight Time | 5.26 |
Page 116
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Objects: Text, Page, Book, Publication | Text: PAGE 05 | 5614786553 | JEGE OR HYPERION AIR | 04/07/2
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Objects: Text, Document, Receipt, Page, Book, Publication | Text: JEGE OR HYPERION AIR | PAGE | 06 |
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Objects: Text, Book, Publication, Page, Document | Text: PAGE 08 | JEGE OR HYPERION AIR | 04/07/2005
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Objects: Page, Text, Menu | Text: 05/20/2005 13:00 | 561 4786553 | JEGE OR HYPERION AIR | PAGE 10 |
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Objects: Text, Page, Book, Publication | Text: 05/20/2005 | 13:00 | 5614786553 | JEGE OR HYPERION AI
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Objects: Text, Document, Receipt, Page | Text: 05/20/2005 13: 00 | 561 4786553 | JEGE OR HYPERION AI
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Objects: Page, Text | Text: 05/20/2005 | 13:00 | 5614786553 | JEGE OR HYPERION AIR | PAGE 17
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Objects: Text, Document, Receipt | Text: 05/20/2005 13:00 | 5614786553 | JEGE OR HYPERION AIR | PAGE
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Objects: Text, Book, Publication, Page, Document, Receipt | Text: 05/20/2005 13:00 | 561 4786553 | J
Page 125
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Objects: Page, Text, Book, Publication, Document | Text: DATE: 5 24 2005 | FROM PBI | TO TEB | Depar
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Objects: Book, Publication, Text, Page, Document | Text: HYPERION AIR, INC. | PASSENGER MANIFEST | R
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Objects: Text, Book, Publication, Page, Document, Receipt | Text: HYPERION AIR, INC. | PASSENGER MAN
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Objects: Text, Page, Book, Publication, Document | Text: HYPERION AIR, INC. | PASSENGER MANIFEST | R
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Objects: Text, Page, Book, Publication | Text: HYPERION AIR, INC. | PASSENGER MANIFEST | Registratio
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Objects: Text, Book, Publication, Document, Receipt | Text: HYPERION AIR, INC. | PASSENGER MANIFEST
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Objects: Page, Text, Book, Publication | Text: HYPERION AIR, INC. | PASSENGER MANIFEST | Registratio
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Objects: Text, Page, Document, Receipt | Text: HYPERION AIR, INC. | PASSENGER MANIFEST | Registratio
Page 132
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Objects: Page, Text, Book, Publication | Text: HYPERION AIR, INC | PASSENGER MANIFEST | B. HAMMAND |
Page 132
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Objects: Page, Text, Document, Receipt | Text: HYPERION AIR, INC | PASSENGER MANIFEST | B. HAMMAND |
Page 133
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Objects: Page, Text, Book, Publication | Text: HYPERION AIR, INC. | PASSENGER MANIFEST | Bill HAMMON
Page 133
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Objects: Page, Text, Document | Text: HYPERION AIR, INC. | PASSENGER MANIFEST | Bill HAMMOND | Regis
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Objects: Text, Book, Publication, Page, Document, Receipt | Text: HYPERION AIR, INC. | PASSENGER MAN
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Objects: Text, Document, Receipt, Book, Publication | Text: HYPERION AIR, INC. | PASSENGER MANIFEST
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Objects: Text, Page, Document, Receipt | Text: HYPERION AIR, INC. | PASSENGER MANIFEST | BILL HAMMON
Page 135
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456 x 258
Objects: Text, White Board | Text: FROM | TEB | Arrival | AM | Time
Page 135
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Objects: Text, Page, Document, Receipt, Book, Publication | Text: HYPERION AIR, INC. | PASSENGER MAN
Page 136
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Objects: Text, Document, Receipt, Page | Text: HYPERION AIR, INC. | PASSENGER MANIFEST | BILL HAMMON
Page 136
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Objects: Text, Document, Receipt, Page | Text: HYPERION AIR, INC. | PASSENGER MANIFEST | BILL HAI |
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Objects: Page, Text, Book, Publication, Document, Receipt | Text: HYPERION AIR, INC. | PASSENGER MAN
Page 137
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1560 x 2392
Objects: Text, Document, Receipt, Page | Text: HYPERION AIR, INC. | PASSENGER MANIFEST | Registratio
Page 138
document
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Objects: Text, Page | Text: HYPERION AIR, INCL | PASSENGER MANIFEST | Pilots: Bill | Registration Nu
Page 138
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1552 x 2404
Objects: Text, Page, Document, Receipt | Text: HYPERION AIR, INC | PASSENGER MANIFEST | Bill 4n - |
Page 139
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Objects: Page, Text | Text: HYPERION AIR, INC. | PASSENGER MANIFEST | Type: G-1159B | Pilots: Dave R
Page 139
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Objects: Page, Text, Document, Receipt | Text: HYPERION AIR, INC. | PASSENGER MANIFEST | Pilots: Dav
Page 140
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Objects: Text, Page, Document, Receipt | Text: HYPERION AIR, INC. | PASSENGER MANIFEST | Registratio
Page 141
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Objects: Text, Book, Publication, Page | Text: 09/14/2005 14:16 FAX | 006 | HYPERION AIR, INC. | PAS
Page 142
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Objects: Text, Page | Text: 09/14/2005 14:16 FAX | 005 | HYPERION AIR, INC. | PASSENGER MANIFEST | R
Page 143
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Objects: Text, Page, Document | Text: 004 | 09/14/2005 14:16 FAX | HYPERION AIR, INC. | PASSENGER MA
Page 144
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Objects: Text, Page, Book, Publication, Document, Receipt | Text: 003 | 09/14/2005 14:16 FAX | HYPER
Page 145
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Objects: Text, Page, Book, Publication, Document | Text: 002 | 09/14/2005 14:16 FAX | HYPERION AIR,
Page 146
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Objects: Text, Book, Publication, Page | Text: HYPERION AIR, INC. | PASSENGER MANIFEST | Bill Hammon
Page 147
document
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Objects: Book, Publication, Page, Text, Document | Text: HYPERION AIR, INC. | PASSENGER MANIFEST | B
Page 148
document
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Objects: Page, Text, Book, Publication | Text: HYPERION AIR, INC. | PASSENGER MANIFEST | Bill Hammon
Page 149
document
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Objects: Page, Text, Book, Publication | Text: HYPERION AIR, INC. | PASSENGER MANIFEST | Bill Hammoo
Page 150
portrait
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Objects: Page, Text, Animal, Bear, Mammal, Wildlife, Person, Envelope, Mail, Publication | Faces (1)
Page 150
portrait
838 x 1040
Objects: Book, Publication, Comics, Advertisement, Poster, Adult, Bride, Female, Person, Wedding | F
Page 151
document
2040 x 2620
Objects: Book, Publication, Text, Page, Document | Text: 05 002546 ORIGINAL - NEW | 1410 N WESTSHORE
- Abe Gosman (p.65) 95%
- Abe Gosman (p.68) 95%
- Abel Matutes (p.58) 95%
- Abigail Koppel (p.15) 95%
- Abigail Koppel (p.34) 95%
- About Staten (p.70) 25%
- About Staten (p.71) 25%
- Academy George (p.60) 95%
- Access Hollywood (p.45) 5%
- Ace Green (p.16) 95%
- Ace Green (p.35) 95%
- Ace Greenberg (p.14) 95%
- Ace Greenberg (p.33) 95%
- Ace Greenberg (p.51) 95%
- Actors Studio (p.17) 25%
- Actors Studio (p.36) 25%
- Adjunct Senior (p.57) 50%
- Advanced International (p.54) 5%
- Advanced International (p.61) 5%
- Aeurfficr Dcfutal (p.148) 5%
- ...and 2449 more
- 0443 City St (p.91) address
- 1 Leli St (p.87) address
- 1 Nz St (p.137) address
- 103 Bear St (p.17) address
- 2006 Lanna Belohlavek Assistant St (p.80) address
- 305 Bear St (p.36) address
- 358 El Bribe Way (p.74) address
- 358 El Brillo Way (p.66) property
- 358 El Brillo Way (p.75) property
- 457 Madison Avenue (p.24) address
- 7 Nautical Miles St (p.112) address
- AAA Departure Arrival Trip (p.96) location
- Africa (p.13) location
- Africa (p.32) location
- Africa (p.73) location
- Africa than his movie (p.17) location
- Africa than his movie (p.36) location
- Africa without wanting attention (p.24) location
- After long probe (p.63) location
- Alfleck (p.17) location
- ...and 546 more
- File Path
- additional_files/Epstein Part 17 (Redacted).pdf
- File Size
- 45,096 KB
- Processed
- 2025-12-21 02:44
- Status
- completed
-
059.pdf
Unknown - 710 pages
91 shared people 40 shared places -
074.pdf
Unknown - 338 pages
76 shared people 34 shared places -
166.pdf
Unknown - 160 pages
79 shared people 30 shared places -
171.pdf
Unknown - 175 pages
75 shared people 34 shared places -
146.pdf
Unknown - 92 pages
78 shared people 28 shared places -
153.pdf
Unknown - 94 pages
77 shared people 28 shared places -
205.pdf
Unknown - 91 pages
76 shared people 29 shared places -
795 (1).pdf
Unknown - 338 pages
30 shared people 18 shared places -
795.pdf
Unknown - 338 pages
30 shared people 18 shared places -
787-01.pdf
Unknown - 73 pages
25 shared people 23 shared places -
2020.11 DOJ Office of Professional Responsibility Report.pdf
Unknown - 348 pages
24 shared people 15 shared places -
Interview Transcript - Maxwell 2025.07.24 (Redacted) (6).pdf
Unknown - 263 pages
23 shared people 14 shared places -
Interview Transcript - Maxwell 2025.07.24 (Redacted) (1).pdf
Unknown - 263 pages
23 shared people 14 shared places -
Interview Transcript - Maxwell 2025.07.24-cft (Redacted).pdf
Unknown - 103 pages
23 shared people 14 shared places -
Interview Transcript - Maxwell 2025.07.24-cft (Redacted) (1).pdf
Unknown - 103 pages
23 shared people 14 shared places