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Ruben Toledo
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Franca Sozzani
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This document is a page (marked 12) from an address book, commonly referred to as Jeffrey Epstein's 'Black Book'. It contains contact information including addresses, phone numbers, and emails for high-profile individuals such as Richard Branson, Flavio Briatore, Hamish Bowles (Vogue), and members of the Brandolini and Brachetti families. The entries cover international locations including London, Paris, New York, Rome, and Cape Town.
This document (page 196) appears to be an investigative narrative detailing the 39-day period Edward Snowden spent in the Moscow airport transit zone in 2013. It discusses his living conditions with Sarah Harrison, the costs of the capsule hotel, and the possibility that he was actually housed in VIP quarters used by Russian security services (FSB/KGB). The text outlines the media frenzy and futile search for Snowden by reporters who bought tickets and bribed staff to find him.
This document appears to be page 113 of a House Oversight Committee report or narrative regarding Edward Snowden. It details his transition from a technician to a media figure in Moscow, his support network (including Julian Assange and Sarah Harrison), and his media appearances. The text critically analyzes his escape to Russia, suggesting it was not accidental but likely involved cooperation with Russian intelligence (FSB/KGB) and President Putin in exchange for NSA secrets. The text contains several typographical errors (e.g., 'denting' instead of 'denying', 'far trial' instead of 'fair trial').
This page, marked with a House Oversight Bates stamp, details the events of mid-June (likely 2013) regarding Edward Snowden's leak of NSA files. It describes Laura Poitras realizing she was being surveilled in Hong Kong and subsequently fleeing to Berlin on June 15th. Simultaneously, the document notes Snowden was finalizing his assessment of stolen files and contacting Julian Assange to arrange his own exit from Hong Kong.
This document is page 275 from a book or report, containing endnotes for a chapter titled "The Vanishing Act." The sources listed all pertain to Edward Snowden, his activities in Moscow, and interviews with him and his associates like Sarah Harrison and Julian Assange. Despite the user's prompt, the document contains no information whatsoever related to Jeffrey Epstein, but is labeled 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020427' in the footer, suggesting it is part of a larger government file.
This document is page 252 of a larger work, containing a list of citations for a chapter titled 'Fugitive'. The sources, dated from 2013 to 2015, are from various media outlets and reference events and reporting surrounding NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden and, to a lesser extent, Julian Assange. Despite the user's prompt, the document contains no information whatsoever related to Jeffrey Epstein.
This document is page 251, which contains a list of citations for "Chapter Thirteen: Enter Assange." The citations reference various articles and interviews from publications like The Guardian, Newsweek, and Vanity Fair, primarily concerning Julian Assange, Edward Snowden, and related individuals.
This document is page 250 of a book, containing the endnotes for 'Chapter Twelve: Whistle-blower'. The notes exclusively cite sources related to Edward Snowden, his NSA revelations, and interactions with journalists and filmmakers in locations like Hong Kong and Moscow. Despite the prompt's framing, this document contains no information whatsoever related to Jeffrey Epstein.
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