This document contains pages 226 and 227 from a book (likely James Patterson's 'Filthy Rich'), marked as evidence for the House Oversight Committee. Chapter 59 details an analysis by Dr. Anna Salter from November 2015, where she explains the psychology of child sex offenders like Jeffrey Epstein using an analogy of a car's motor (impulses) versus its brakes (control). The text also explicitly links Prince Andrew to Epstein, questioning their public association and shared accusations.
| Name | Role | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Jeffrey Epstein | Subject |
Described as a powerful man accused of sexual offenses; referred to as 'dear friend' of Prince Andrew.
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| Prince Andrew | Subject |
Mentioned alongside Epstein as a powerful man accused of doing similar things; noted as Epstein's 'dear friend'.
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| Dr. Anna Salter | Expert Witness / Psychologist |
Studies child sex offenders professionally; educated at Harvard; provided analysis on offender psychology in November...
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| Patterson | Author |
Name appears in header (likely James Patterson, author of 'Filthy Rich').
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| Name | Type | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Harvard |
Institution where Dr. Anna Salter was educated.
|
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| House Oversight Committee |
Source of the document (indicated by footer stamp).
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| Location | Context |
|---|---|
|
Location of Dr. Anna Salter's office.
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"Why do powerful men do the things that Jeffrey Epstein and Prince Andrew have been accused of doing?"Source
"Consider a car... There's a motor, and there are brakes. We all have sexual impulses we don't think it would be a good idea to act on."Source
"Sexual offenses and inappropriate sexual behavior are sometimes the result of a bad motor—for example, an attraction to prepubescent children or eleven-to-fourteen-year-old pubescent children... But they are always the result of bad brakes."Source
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