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2.05 MB

Extraction Summary

5
People
2
Organizations
2
Locations
0
Events
2
Relationships
7
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Email thread
File Size: 2.05 MB
Summary

An email chain from January 2013 between Mohamed Waheed (then President of the Maldives) and Jeffrey Epstein. Waheed seeks advice regarding a suspicious offer to deposit $4 billion into the Maldives Central Bank by an anonymous manager who demands upfront fees and meetings in Bangkok. Epstein correctly identifies this as 'advance-fee fraud,' provides a definition, and advises Waheed to request a detailed memo to expose the scam and embarrass the political opponents pushing for the deal. Waheed responds by thanking Epstein and calling him his 'savior.'

People (5)

Name Role Context
Mohamed Waheed Hassan President of Maldives (implied by 'President's iPad' and context)
Asking Epstein for financial/political advice regarding a suspicious loan offer.
Jeffrey Epstein Advisor
Advising Waheed that the offer is an 'advance-fee fraud' scam.
Finance Minister of Maldives Government Official
Unidentified individual pushing the fraudulent deal to Waheed.
Leading Politician/Coalition Leader Political Rival
Unidentified individual supporting the deal; described as a leading contender for presidency.
Anonymous Funds Manager Suspected Scammer
Individual offering the 4 billion dollar deposit.

Organizations (2)

Name Type Context
Central Bank (Maldives)
Proposed location for the 4 billion dollar deposit.
US House Oversight Committee
Source of the document (indicated by footer).

Locations (2)

Location Context
Country governed by Waheed; location of proposed deposit.
Location where the funds manager insists on meeting the finance minister.

Relationships (2)

Mohamed Waheed Hassan Advisor/Client Jeffrey Epstein
Waheed asks for advice on state matters; calls Epstein 'my savior'.
Mohamed Waheed Hassan Political/Professional Finance Minister (Maldives)
Minister is pressuring Waheed to accept the deal.

Key Quotes (7)

"You are my savior. I will do exactly what you said."
Source
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Quote #1
"this from a fraud web site, your mimister will get upset that you dont want to at least try"
Source
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Quote #2
"The essential fact in all advance-fee fraud operations is that the promised money transfer never happens"
Source
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Quote #3
"My finance minister is telling me that he has an anonymous funds manager who is willing to deposit 4 billion dollars in Maldives"
Source
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Quote #4
"I am also told that the funds manager would be charging Maldives upfront a certain percentage of the amount lent."
Source
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Quote #5
"Why would anyone want to deposit such a large amount here when we don't have a credit rating and public debt is so high."
Source
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Quote #6
"Sent from President's iPad"
Source
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Quote #7

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (2,819 characters)

From: Mohamed Waheed [REDACTED]
Sent: 1/27/2013 4:33:18 AM
To: Jeffrey Epstein [jeevacation@gmail.com]
Subject: Re:
Importance: High
Thank you. You are my savior. I will do exactly what you said.
Sent from my iPhone
On Jan 27, 2013, at 9:29 AM, Jeffrey Epstein wrote:
this from a fraud web site, your mimister will get upset that you dont want to at least try, what do we have to lose , always the pitch. THe following from the fraud site. --The essential fact in all advance-fee fraud operations is that the promised money transfer never happens—because the money does not exist. The perpetrators rely on the fact that, by the time the victim realizes this (often only after being confronted by a third party who has noticed the transactions or conversation and recognized the scam), the victim may have sent thousands of dollars of their own money, and sometimes thousands or millions more that has been borrowed or stolen, to the scammer via an untraceable and/or irreversible means such as wire transfer.[13] Stay away, however if you want to embarass your possible opponent , you might set it up so that he looks like a fool, ask for amemo of why he thinks you should agree , have it include as many detials as possible, so that when you prove its a fraud,, you will make him look very silly as opposed to his saying , you missed an opportunity, anyway,, glad you are well
On Sat, Jan 26, 2013 at 10:49 PM, Mohamed Waheed Hassan <[REDACTED]> wrote:
Jeffrey,
Need your advice.
My finance minister is telling me that he has an anonymous funds manager who is willing to deposit 4 billion dollars in Maldives and that they are willing to lend a percentage of that in exchange for government promissory notes. The 4 billion would be deposited in the Central Bank. But they want us to set up a special purpose vehicle, a construction company fully owned by the government to receive the loan. Such a company can only be set up under a presidential decree.
I am also told that the funds manager would be charging Maldives upfront a certain percentage of the amount lent.
I don't feel I have enough information on this. I don't know who is this funds manager. They always want the finance minister to meet them in Bangkok or some place outside. Why would anyone want to deposit such a large amount here when we don't have a credit rating and public debt is so high. I feel very uncomfortable about this.
What do you think I should do. I am very uncomfortable. In addition to the finance minister, a leading politician and leader of the coalition parliamentary group is behind it. He could be my leading contender for presidency.
Does this sound all ridiculous to you. I have a strange feeling about this whole thing.
Best regards
Waheed
Sent from President's iPad
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