A confrontational memo, likely from Jeffrey Epstein to Leon Black, discussing the mismanagement of Black's office and financial affairs. The author complains about an employee named Eileen, details the rescue of a financial situation involving 'Carlyn's mess' costing $30 million, and negotiates future compensation while leveraging their 'close friendship' and the threat of future financial peril.
This document is a printed email from Jeffrey Epstein (implied) to Leon Black (addressed as Leon) dated February 24, 2015. Epstein harshly criticizes the management of Black's $6 billion family office, comparing the chaotic operations to the low overhead costs. He quotes a previous note from 2014 where he suggested installing Larry Delson to manage the office ('Your family office needs a daddy') and complains about an employee named Eileen providing bad information.
This document is a contentious letter, likely from Jeffrey Epstein to Leon Black, discussing the mismanagement of Black's financial office. Epstein defends his 'architecture' of Black's finances, criticizes Black's employee Eileen for incompetence and insubordination, and justifies his high fees by citing the 'dire circumstances' he resolved (including a $30 million issue involving 'Carlyn'). The letter highlights Epstein's deep involvement in Black's tax and estate planning ('GRAT administrator', 'art partnership') and asserts that despite their friendship, Epstein will no longer work for free.
This document contains a series of emails, likely between Jeffrey Epstein and associates of Leon Black (given the references to Apollo, Phaidon, and family office management). The sender provides harsh criticism of the recipient's family office management, stating it 'needs a daddy,' and suggests installing Larry Delson to take charge under the sender's supervision. The document outlines specific tasks for review including accounting, trusts (TRA, BRH), tax filings (FBAR, FATCA), and 'children meetings,' while also mentioning a financial agreement that ended months prior and an unfunded art partnership.
This document is a correspondence (likely an email) from an advisor (contextually Jeffrey Epstein) to a wealthy client (contextually Leon Black), written approximately one year after a previous memo dated February 17, 2014. The writer critiques the recipient's chaotic family office management, referencing a 'vast multitude of LLCs,' planes, and trusts with insufficient oversight. The writer reminds the recipient of past advice to hire Larry Delson to take charge, criticizes an employee named Eileen for poor performance and 'obfuscation,' and notes that the recipient chose to save money rather than hiring the writer's team to handle complex issues.
This document is a memo or email, likely from Jeffrey Epstein to Leon Black (referred to as 'Leon'), dated approximately one year after February 17, 2014. The writer admonishes Black for ignoring previous advice regarding the management of his family office, specifically criticizing an employee named Eileen and the refusal to hire Epstein's team to handle complex issues. The text highlights financial disagreements where Black negotiated down Epstein's fees despite the difficulties encountered, and references specific operational failures involving JPMorgan accounts and tax characterization.
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