A letter, likely from Jeffrey Epstein to interior designer Alberto Pinto, refusing to accept Pinto's resignation from the 'island project' (Little St. James). The sender complains about missed deadlines (Christmas, July), unfinished work (wooden crates in the living room), and lack of communication from an employee named Jean. The letter emphasizes the personal nature of their relationship ('family member', 'friend') while insisting that Cabinet Pinto is professionally obligated to complete the 'Moroccan style' interior work.
| Name | Role | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Alberto | Recipient / Designer |
Addressed as 'Alberto', likely Alberto Pinto based on context of 'Cabinet Pinto'. The writer refuses his resignation.
|
| Jeffrey Epstein | Sender (Implied) |
The author of the letter (unsigned but implied by the 'Island project' and file source) writing to a contractor/desig...
|
| Jean | Employee |
Employee of Alberto/Cabinet Pinto who assured the project would be complete by July.
|
| Name | Type | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Cabinet Pinto |
The firm Alberto belongs to; the entity the sender claims to have the 'total relationship' with.
|
| Location | Context |
|---|---|
|
Refers to the 'island project' and 'big house Island project', likely Little St. James.
|
"I cannot accept your 'resignation'."Source
"it is not that simple to abandon a 'family member', no matter how frustrating or good-looking he may be."Source
"till this day there are still wooden packing crates for side tables in the living room"Source
"drawings in a Moroccan style"Source
"I have my total relationship not with Jean, but with Cabinet Pinto"Source
"I remain your friend"Source
Complete text extracted from the document (2,328 characters)
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