A photograph depicting Jeffrey Epstein driving a vehicle, identified by the Mercedes-Benz logo on the steering wheel. He is shown in profile, smiling, wearing a grey hoodie. The background shows an arid, rural landscape with sparse vegetation. The image is marked with the identifier EFTA00003662.
This document is a FedEx invoice dated December 23, 2002, detailing three shipments charged to Jeffrey Epstein's account. The shipments were sent to Sophie Biddle, Edwina Simmonds, and Heidi Freiler (Mercedes Benz USA). Notably, the shipment to Edwina Simmonds lists Les Wexner as a sender alongside Epstein, originated from zip code 43230 (Columbus, Ohio area), and was signed for by '.MAXWELL' upon delivery.
This document is a transcript of an interview with a woman named Saige, dated July 26, 2017. Saige recounts her recent interactions with another woman, Haley, which involved discussing a rich man, watching a movie at Haley's house, and making plans to go shopping with an expected payment of $300. The transcript concludes with Saige describing how Haley, accompanied by an unnamed female friend, came to pick her up the next day.
This document appears to be a page from a book (identifiable by content as Tim Ferriss's 'The 4-Hour Workweek') included in a House Oversight Committee evidence file (Bates stamped HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_013824). The text narrates the story of 'Hans,' a lawyer who quit his job to open a surf company in Brazil, and begins a chapter titled 'The Power of Pessimism.' The document discusses lifestyle design and entrepreneurship, with no direct textual reference to Jeffrey Epstein or his associates on this specific page, despite its inclusion in the oversight file.
Discussion 0
No comments yet
Be the first to share your thoughts on this epstein entity