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1.88 MB
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Extraction Summary

2
People
1
Organizations
0
Locations
2
Events
1
Relationships
4
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Book chapter / investigative account
File Size: 1.88 MB
Summary

This document is an excerpt from Chapter 26 of a book (page 108) discussing Jeffrey Epstein's business practices in 1984. It details his shift toward high-commission tax-avoidance schemes for the wealthy and recounts a specific 1984 legal dispute where Michael Stroll sued Epstein to recover roughly $440,000, which Epstein claimed was payment for a horse. The right-hand page is heavily truncated but outlines the financial dispute and Epstein's defense.

People (2)

Name Role Context
Jeffrey Epstein Subject
Financial advisor evolving his business model to tax avoidance; defendant in a lawsuit.
Michael Stroll Plaintiff/Client
Former associate who entrusted money to Epstein and subsequently sued him.

Organizations (1)

Name Type Context
W...
Company run by Michael Stroll (name partially cut off in text).

Timeline (2 events)

1982
Epstein sold relatives and others on an investment idea; Michael Stroll participated.
Unknown
1984
Michael Stroll sued Jeffrey Epstein for the return of funds.
Court

Relationships (1)

Jeffrey Epstein Business/Adversarial Michael Stroll
Stroll put $450,000 into an Epstein venture; later sued Epstein in 1984 for $440,000.

Key Quotes (4)

"How did Jeffrey Epstein make all his money?"
Source
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Quote #1
"Epstein spent most of his time coming up with creative new ways for the rich to avoid paying taxes."
Source
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Quote #2
"He'd charge a flat fee. No fancy math. No percentages."
Source
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Quote #3
"Epstein told the judge that... actually the payment for a horse..."
Source
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Quote #4

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