| Date | Event Type | Description | Location | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| N/A | N/A | Broadcast of the TV show or documentary 'Jane Fonda in Five Acts'. | HBO (network) | View |
| N/A | N/A | Broadcast of a documentary titled 'Jane Fonda in Five Acts'. | HBO | View |
This document is a page from a book (likely James Patterson's 'Filthy Rich') detailing a period in the early 1980s after Jeffrey Epstein left Bear Stearns. It describes his living situation at the Solow Tower and the formation of his company, International Assets Group (IAG). The text focuses on his interaction with a woman named Ana (identified as Ana Obregón on the adjacent page), who sought Epstein's help to recover family money lost in the Drysdale investment scheme.
This document is an email chain dated August 19, 2013, ending with Terry Kafka forwarding a joke email titled 'shortest books of all time' to Mark L. Epstein (Jeffrey Epstein's brother), Jeffery Edwards, and Warren Eisenstein. The content of the email contains political and cultural satire targeting figures such as Tiger Woods, Jane Fonda, Cindy Sheehan, and George Soros. The document is stamped with 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_026517', indicating it was part of a congressional investigation.
This document is a scanned page from the April 2012 issue of Avenue Magazine, bearing a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' Bates stamp, suggesting it was included in a document production for a congressional investigation (likely related to Epstein, though he is not mentioned on this specific page). The text is a society column or diary recounting the author's experience around the 2012 Academy Awards, discussing various celebrities including Meryl Streep, Woody Allen, and Michelle Williams. It mentions a 'Harvey' (likely Weinstein) campaigning for Streep and details casual encounters at the Beverly Hills Hotel.
This document is a page from a book (likely James Patterson's 'Filthy Rich') bearing a House Oversight Committee stamp. It details Jeffrey Epstein's life shortly after leaving Bear Stearns, describing him living in the Solow Tower and forming a small company called International Assets Group (IAG). The narrative focuses on his meeting with a Spanish woman named Ana (identified as Ana Obregón in the margins), whose father and other Spanish elites lost millions in the Drysdale investment scheme, and Epstein's offer to help recover the funds.
This document is a JSON-like data structure for an Apple News article about the HBO show 'Jane Fonda in Five Acts'. It contains the article's descriptive text, broadcast time (8 p.m.), and links to the full content, sourced from the Los Angeles Times. The footer 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028364' indicates it was collected as evidence in a congressional investigation, but the content itself is unrelated to Jeffrey Epstein.
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