| Connected Entity | Relationship Type |
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(mentions)
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|---|---|---|---|---|
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organization
Booz Allen
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Adversarial hacked |
5
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person
Booz Allen Hamilton
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person
Julian Assange
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Supportive |
5
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person
Tim
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Editor contributor |
5
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1 |
| Date | Event Type | Description | Location | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025-11-17 | N/A | Anonymous author lived in Thailand for dental treatment. | Thailand | View |
| 2016-04-01 | N/A | Anonymous supposed to take down Trump's page. | Online | View |
| 2011-07-11 | N/A | Anonymous Hackers Breach Booz Allen Hamilton | Cyber/Online | View |
| 2011-01-01 | N/A | Hacker group Anonymous attacked Booz Allen Hamilton servers. | Cyberspace | View |
| 2010-12-01 | N/A | Operation Avenge Assange: Anonymous launched a denial-of-service attack. | Cyberspace | View |
This document contains page 311 of the endnotes from the book 'How America Lost Its Secrets' by Edward Jay Epstein (indicated by the ISBN in the footer). The text provides citations for Chapters 6 ('Hacktivist') and 7 ('String Puller'), detailing sources related to Edward Snowden, Julian Assange, the Tor network, and the Silk Road. While the footer filename includes 'Epst' (referring to the author Edward Jay Epstein) and 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT', the content focuses on national security leaks and cyber-surveillance, referencing interactions between Snowden and journalists like Glenn Greenwald and Runa Sandvik.
This document is page 217 of a book (identified by the filename ISBN as 'Epstein: Dead Men Tell No Tales') included as an exhibit in a House Oversight Committee investigation (Bates stamped). The text details systemic cybersecurity failures within the U.S. intelligence community's vetting process, specifically focusing on contractors USIS and Booz Allen Hamilton, and the OPM's e-QIP system. It highlights how these vulnerabilities allowed foreign actors (China and Russia) and hacker groups (Anonymous) to access sensitive personnel data, noting that Edward Snowden used these compromised systems to update his clearance in 2011.
This document appears to be a proof page (p. 63) from a book, likely 'How America Lost Its Secrets' by Edward Jay Epstein (indicated by the ISBN in the filename). The text details how Edward Snowden, using the alias 'Anon108', established initial contact with filmmaker Laura Poitras in January 2013 by using Micah Lee as an intermediary to bypass NSA surveillance. The document bears a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' footer, suggesting it was included in a congressional investigation file.
This document appears to be page 49 of a book manuscript (likely by Edward Jay Epstein, indicated by the footer code) submitted as evidence to the House Oversight Committee. The text comprises the beginning of Chapter 6, titled 'Hacktivist,' which discusses the cultural rise of the hacker hero, referencing Edward Snowden, the fictional Lisbeth Salander, and the group Anonymous.
This document is page 2 of a legal letter from Alan Dershowitz's legal team (Emery Celli Brinckerhoff & Abady LLP) complaining that the plaintiff (Giuffre) leaked selective, confidential information to the Washington Post to damage Dershowitz. The letter attempts to discredit a specific redacted witness (Ms. [Redacted]) by citing her 2016 emails which contained outlandish conspiracy theories involving the CIA, 'the Russians,' and 'Special Agents Forces Men.' The document details the witness's claims of possessing compromising sexual evidence against high-profile figures including Bill Clinton, Prince Andrew, Richard Branson, and Donald Trump.
This document is a printout of a Google Alerts email notification bearing the Bates stamp HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_031711. The alert highlights an article from the 'Independent Journal Review' regarding the hacker group Anonymous claiming possession of compromising video footage of Bill Clinton. The snippet explicitly links Clinton to Jeffrey Epstein, citing 26 trips taken on Epstein's planes and boats.
This document is an email thread from March 20, 2016, between Joi Ito (Director of MIT Media Lab) and Jeffrey Epstein, with Martin Nowak copied. Epstein informs Ito that he and 'Barnaby' will visit on April 1st. Ito confirms he is around and makes a remark about the hacktivist group Anonymous planning to take down Donald Trump's webpage on that same day.
An email dated March 18, 2016, from Joichi Ito to Jeffrey Epstein (using the alias jeevacation@gmail.com) marked with high importance. Ito asks 'Are you tracking this?' and provides a link to a Mic.com article regarding the hacker group Anonymous launching a cyberattack against Donald Trump.
This document details severe security failures and misconduct within USIS and the Office of Personnel Management (OPM), including employees falsifying background checks and massive data breaches attributed to Chinese and Russian hackers. It highlights specific incidents such as the 2011 hack of Booz Allen Hamilton by "Anonymous" and the compromise of over 19 million employee records via the E-QIP system.
The document details the initial encrypted communication methods established between Edward Snowden (using aliases Anon108 and Citizen Four) and Laura Poitras in early 2013. It describes how Snowden utilized Micah Lee of the Freedom of the Press Foundation as an intermediary to obtain Poitras' PGP key. The text also critiques Snowden's initial claims to Poitras regarding his seniority and status within the intelligence community.
This document is a page of endnotes from a chapter titled "The NSA's Back Door," identified by the footer "HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020419". It cites various articles and reports from 2004-2015 concerning U.S. national security, cyber warfare, government contractors like Booz Allen Hamilton and USIS, and intelligence figures such as Edward Snowden. Despite the user's query, this document contains no mention of Jeffrey Epstein or any related individuals or events.
This document is page 242 of a larger work, containing the citations for a chapter titled 'Hacktavist'. The citations refer to articles and books about hacktivism, Anonymous, Edward Snowden, Julian Assange, Silk Road, and the TOR browser, with publication dates ranging from 2011 to 2015. The document makes no direct mention of Jeffrey Epstein or his known associates, and its relevance to the Epstein case is not evident from the page's content alone.
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