| Date | Event Type | Description | Location | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021-01-14 | N/A | Toyota announces settlement of U.S. probe into delayed emissions. | Washington | View |
A screenshot of text messages from July 12 and 15 (EFTA00038725). The conversation involves coordinating a Lyft ride for the recipient. The sender provides details about the driver (Josh) and vehicle (Toyota Camry), and the recipient confirms their location at a 'confrence center entrance' while smoking.
This document is an internal email dated January 14, 2021, containing 'SDNY Press Clippings' circulated within the Department of Justice. It aggregates news headlines relevant to the Southern District of New York, including a Toyota settlement, the Capitol riots arrests, Trump's impeachment, and a variety article about a scripted adaptation of the 'Hunting Ghislaine' podcast. The email highlights media coverage of ongoing legal and political events of interest to the SDNY office.
This document is a printed page from the Albuquerque Tribune Online, dated March 7, 2006 (with a URL suggesting data from December 2002). It lists sixteen separate donations, each in the amount of $5,000, from various individuals and corporations including Phillips Petroleum, Albertsons, and the American Society of Anesthesiologists. The document bears a DOJ stamp (DOJ-OGR-00031290) and appears to be part of a larger discovery or FOIA release (Public Records Request No.: 17-295) likely related to political fundraising in New Mexico.
This document appears to be page 138 of a book or essay regarding social physics, AI, and data science, bearing a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016941' Bates stamp. The text discusses concepts such as 'social sampling,' 'credit-assignment functions,' and building 'trust networks for data' to create a 'human AI' or smarter society. It references the U.S. Census, Toyota's continuous improvement methods, and U.N. Sustainable Development Goals as examples of data standardization and feedback loops. While no specific individuals are named, the content is consistent with academic work often associated with figures like Alex Pentland (MIT Media Lab), which may explain its inclusion in Epstein-related oversight documents.
This document is a log of electronic messages from August 1, 2018, between 'jeeitunes@gmail.com' (an alias associated with Jeffrey Epstein) and a redacted individual. The conversation focuses on China's geopolitical strategy, specifically the concept of 'weaponizing' their consumer base, digitizing consumer behavior (likely referring to social credit systems), and the ability of the Chinese state to instantly stop the sale of Western products like Microsoft, contrasting this power with US political influence.
This J.P. Morgan market commentary from October 2012 discusses global energy developments, specifically China's strategic relationship with Iran and the struggles of the electric car industry. It details failed projections for EV adoption, manufacturing setbacks for companies like Toyota, Fisker, and A123 Systems, and provides a biography of energy scholar Vaclav Smil alongside a list of sources.
This document appears to be page 161 from a book or academic text discussing network theory, 'power law distributed' systems, and the growth strategies of tech giants like Facebook (specifically the 'seven friends in ten days' metric). It references works by Chamath Palihapitiya, Brian Arthur, and Albert-Lazlo Barabási. While labeled with a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' stamp, indicating it is part of a congressional investigation cache, the text itself discusses sociological and economic theories behind social media dominance rather than specific criminal activities.
This document appears to be a page from a scientific essay or transcript included in a House Oversight Committee investigation file (likely related to MIT Media Lab/Epstein). The text discusses 'social sampling,' 'human AI,' and the creation of 'trust networks' for data, drawing comparisons to the U.S. Census and Toyota's continuous improvement methods. The author (unnamed on this page, but utilizing first-person language like 'I refer to as') advocates for digital ID badges and quantitative feedback to improve organizational decision-making.
| Date | Type | From | To | Amount | Description | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021-01-14 | Paid | Toyota | PRC / US Government | $180,000,000.00 | Settlement for delayed emissions defect reports | View |
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