| Connected Entity | Relationship Type |
Strength
(mentions)
|
Documents | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
person
George Maloof
|
Employment |
5
|
1 |
A screenshot of a computer desktop showing a confirmation page from the Australian Cyber Security Centre (ACSC) dated July 23, 2019. The user filed a report (No. CIRS-20190723-30) regarding potential fraud, which was referred to the Queensland Police. The document bears the Bates stamp EFTA00020851, suggesting it is part of a larger discovery cache, possibly related to the Epstein estate or associated litigation given the 'EFTA' prefix.
This document discusses the psychological concept of "confirmation theory," illustrating it with the public's reaction to Lee Harvey Oswald and applying it to the polarized views on Edward Snowden. It also addresses the inherent deception within intelligence agencies, referencing Winston Churchill and citing James Clapper's testimony to the Senate Intelligence Committee regarding NSA data collection.
This document appears to be a page from a memoir or testimony by Paul Krassner, detailing his harassment by the FBI during the late 1960s. It describes his placement on the FBI's Round-up Index, a poison-pen letter sent to Life magazine by an agent in 1968, and the creation of a fake WANTED poster featuring Krassner and Yippie founders Abbie Hoffman and Jerry Rubin inside a swastika to cause community rifts. The document bears a House Oversight stamp.
This document page, labeled HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_015429, contains a biographical narrative about a man named George (likely a scientist). It details his experiences in 1954 with McCarthy-era security at the Signal Corps, his drafting into the 82nd Airborne at Fort Bragg where he created a 'Helicopter Square Dance Team,' and his later work on the SCORE communication satellite. The text includes retrospective quotes comparing the lack of information in the 1950s to the modern Google era.
This document appears to be a page from a biography or memoir stamped with a House Oversight Bates number. It recounts the career of a man named "George" (likely George Gilder based on external context of known Epstein associates, though only "George" is present in text) working as a civilian scientist for the Army Signal Corps in 1957. It details his reaction to the Sputnik launch and his subsequent founding of the first Space Electronics organization at age 29.
A correspondence from David Grosof to an associate (identified by the property tag 'JEE' as Jeffrey Epstein) providing advice on three main topics: investing in early-stage life sciences, improving personal cybersecurity to avoid a 'Podesta' style leak, and managing publicity for philanthropy. The document contains a confidentiality disclaimer asserting the content is the property of JEE and lists the email address 'jeevacation@gmail.com'. The sender emphasizes the persistence of web articles and recommends using Signal and secure archiving.
This document contains a fragment of an email from David Grosof to an individual identified as 'JEE' (likely Jeffrey Epstein). Grosof advises the recipient on life-science investments (CRISPR, brain-computer interfaces) and urgently recommends enhanced cybersecurity measures, specifically citing the Podesta email leaks as a reason to delete webmail archives or move them offline. The email includes a legal disclaimer stating the communication is the property of JEE and provides 'jeevacation@gmail.com' as a contact.
This document is an email from David Grosof to an unnamed recipient (implied to be Jeffrey Epstein via the 'JEE' property disclaimer). Grosof advises the recipient on investing in life-science technologies, urges strict cybersecurity measures (citing the Podesta hack and recommending Signal), and discusses publicity for the recipient's philanthropy. The document includes a legal disclaimer identifying the content as the property of 'JEE' and directs errors to 'jeevacation@gmail.com'.
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