| Connected Entity | Relationship Type |
Strength
(mentions)
|
Documents | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
organization
Lipper
|
Subsidiary company of |
7
|
1 | |
|
person
David Ingram
|
Employment |
6
|
1 | |
|
person
Carlo Allegri
|
Employee |
5
|
1 | |
|
organization
JEE
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Communication |
5
|
1 |
| Date | Event Type | Description | Location | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2019-01-01 | N/A | Announcement of the 69th annual Hillman Prizes | New York | View |
| 2016-04-28 | N/A | Reuters plans to publish story on lawsuit | N/A | View |
This document is an announcement of the 2019 Hillman Prize winners, detailing awards given to journalists for investigative reporting. While Jeffrey Epstein is not named directly, the document is significant to the Epstein case because it lists Julie K. Brown and Emily Michot of the Miami Herald as winners for 'Perversion of Justice,' the investigative series that exposed Epstein's plea deal and reignited the case against him. The document also highlights other winners covering topics like MS-13, the Flint water crisis, and military housing hazards.
This document is a press release from the Sidney Hillman Foundation announcing the 2019 winners of the Hillman Prizes for journalism. It specifically highlights the Miami Herald's investigation into Labor Secretary Alex Acosta's 'sweetheart deal' with Jeffrey Epstein. The document originates from House Oversight Committee files.
The document appears to be a printout of a digital news digest or email newsletter, likely captured as evidence for the House Oversight Committee (stamped HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_021109). It contains headlines from LIFE, WSJ, and Opinion sections, covering topics such as John McCain's views on Putin, the Mueller investigation involving Ford records, and FBI surveillance of the 2016 Trump campaign. The images in the document are missing/broken links, but a caption identifies House Intelligence Committee Chairman Devin Nunes at CPAC.
This document appears to be a page from a financial newsletter (likely Axios, based on the links) from approximately mid-March 2018, stamped as part of a House Oversight investigation (HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_021102). It details upcoming public offerings, specifically the IPO of Deutsche Bank's asset management arm (DWS), as well as IPOs for blank check companies Opes Acquisition and Tiberius Acquisition. It also notes liquidity events involving shareholder activism by Carl Icahn and Darwin Deason regarding Xerox Corp.
This document appears to be a page from a business newsletter (likely Axios) from early 2018. It covers legal developments in the AT&T/Time Warner antitrust case, venture capital news regarding Niv Dror and Masha Drokova (highlighting sexism in the industry), and fundraising activities by Softbank's Vision Fund in the Persian Gulf. The document bears a House Oversight bates stamp.
This document is a raw JSON data file representing the structure and content of a Reuters news article published on September 24, 2018. The text discusses legal actions and investigations taken by state officials, specifically Mississippi AG Jim Hood and Missouri AG Josh Hawley, against Google and Twitter regarding data privacy and antitrust concerns. While the document bears a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' footer, the content on this specific page contains no mention of Jeffrey Epstein or his associates.
The document contains raw JSON data representing a news article about a U.S. Justice Department "listening session" regarding social media bias and consumer protection. The meeting, called by Attorney General Jeff Sessions, involves state attorneys general discussing concerns about the suppression of conservative ideas on platforms like Facebook, Twitter, and Google.
The document contains raw JSON data representing a news article about a U.S. Justice Department "listening session" regarding social media bias and consumer protection. The meeting, called by Attorney General Jeff Sessions, involves state attorneys general discussing concerns about the suppression of conservative ideas on platforms like Facebook, Twitter, and Google.
This document is a raw JSON data file, likely metadata for a web article or CMS entry, stamped with Bates number HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_033474. It contains formatting configurations (fonts, margins) and content strings for a news item titled 'U.S. Justice Department to discuss consumer protection at social media meeting,' updated on September 24, 2018. The data includes a caption for a file photo of the DOJ logo taken by Reuters photographer Carlo Allegri in 2013.
This document is a text capture (likely a web article or internal news summary) containing HTML tags, produced to the House Oversight Committee. It details conflicting media reports regarding Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein's potential resignation or firing amidst the Special Counsel investigation into the 2016 election. The text cites various outlets (Axios, WSJ, NBC, Reuters) offering differing accounts of a meeting between Rosenstein and John Kelly following a New York Times report alleging Rosenstein had considered secretly recording President Trump.
This document is a text capture (likely a web article or internal news summary) containing HTML tags, produced to the House Oversight Committee. It details conflicting media reports regarding Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein's potential resignation or firing amidst the Special Counsel investigation into the 2016 election. The text cites various outlets (Axios, WSJ, NBC, Reuters) offering differing accounts of a meeting between Rosenstein and John Kelly following a New York Times report alleging Rosenstein had considered secretly recording President Trump.
This document is a screenshot of a webpage titled 'Pictures of the Week 6.6.19', dated June 6, 2019. The footer contains the Bates number 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_033555', indicating it is evidence from a U.S. House Oversight Committee investigation. The document itself is sparse, showing only the title and a link to a gallery, with the actual images not being visible.
This document is an email dated August 8, 2018, from Jeffrey Epstein to Steve Bannon, sourced from a House Oversight investigation. Epstein replies to a forwarded news article about China-Iran business ties with a cryptic message, "passing along not covered >?", and an unrelated link to a water pump for sale online. The original article was shared by Anders Corr in a Google Group named "Fanell's Red Star Rising".
Steve Bannon forwards an email from Anders Corr to Jeffrey E. The original email, sent to a Google Group called "Fanell's Red Star Rising," contains a Reuters news snippet from August 8, 2018, about China defending its business ties with Iran after threats from U.S. President Donald Trump.
This document is a raw data file, possibly an application or web content snippet, labeled "HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028474". The content consists of metadata and text from several unrelated news articles from September 2018, sourced from The New York Times and Reuters. The topics include a medical device, a trip by Pope Francis to Lithuania, recipes, and lifestyle tips, and do not contain any explicit information related to Jeffrey Epstein.
This document, labeled 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028471', is a raw data dump from a news application containing snippets from New York Times articles dated September 22-23, 2018. The content focuses on international politics, specifically U.S. foreign policy under President Trump towards Europe and the declining domestic approval of French President Emmanuel Macron. Despite the framing of the request, this document contains no information related to Jeffrey Epstein.
This document is a data file, likely from the Apple News app, containing metadata and summaries of several business news articles from September 23-24, 2018. The topics include the U.S.-China trade war, a rape accusation against JD.com's founder, Amazon's testing of new models in Seattle, and a potential $2 billion acquisition of Versace by Michael Kors. The document is labeled 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028458' but its content does not contain any information directly related to Jeffrey Epstein.
This document is a JSON-like code snippet that appears to be data from a news application, detailing the content and layout of several article fragments. The text covers Donald Trump's diplomatic activities concerning North Korea, an opinion piece on Kim Jong-un as a potential economic reformer, and China's efforts to control Christianity, including a recent deal with the Vatican. A document control number is present in the footer.
This document is a standard financial disclaimer page from a JPMorgan Chase & Co. publication dated 2012. It details the risks of various investment products, states that the firm does not provide tax advice, and provides contact information for prospectuses. The Bates stamp 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_022358' indicates this page was included in materials for an investigation by the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Oversight, which is its primary relevance to the Epstein case document trove.
This document is page 256, containing the endnotes for "Chapter Sixteen: The Question of When." It lists eleven sources, including books like "Spy Wars," articles from the New York Times and Reuters, a PBS program, and interviews conducted by the author with individuals such as Victor Cherkashin, Tyler Drumheller, and anonymous officials from the PFIAB and NSA. The citations cover topics related to espionage, including the NSA, KGB, Edward Snowden, and Robert Hanssen.
This document is page 247 from a book or report, containing the endnotes for a chapter titled "Raider of the Inner Sanctum." The citations exclusively reference sources of information about Edward Snowden, his hiring as an NSA contractor by Booz Allen, and the methods he allegedly used to leak classified information. Contrary to the prompt's framing, the document contains no information related to Jeffrey Epstein.
This document is page 238 of a larger work, containing the endnotes for "Chapter Five: Contractor." It lists thirteen sources for information about Edward Snowden, including articles from publications like The Guardian and Vanity Fair, author interviews with individuals like Tyler Drumheller and anonymous sources, and social media posts from Lindsay Mills.
This document is page 232 of a report, consisting of endnotes for a chapter titled 'The Crime Scene Investigation'. The citations reference sources used to detail the investigation into Edward Snowden's leak of classified information from the NSA, covering events from 2013 to 2015. Despite the user's query, this document page contains no information, names, or keywords related to Jeffrey Epstein; its content is exclusively about the Snowden affair.
This document is page 231 of a report, identified by the footer 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020383', and consists of a list of citations. The citations reference a range of sources from 1900 to 2015, focusing on intelligence, whistleblowing, and historical events, with multiple references to Edward Snowden, Lee Harvey Oswald, and Director of National Intelligence James Clapper. Notably, it cites two books by Edward Jay Epstein: one comparing Snowden to Lee Harvey Oswald and another on deception involving the KGB and CIA.
This document is page 230 of a larger report, likely from the House Oversight committee, and consists entirely of endnotes or citations. The citations reference news articles, government hearings, books, and legal filings from 2013 to 2017, all focused on the national security implications of the Edward Snowden leaks. The document contains no information related to Jeffrey Epstein.
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