| Date | Event Type | Description | Location | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2016-01-01 | N/A | Gawker goes bankrupt following lawsuit. | USA | View |
This document, marked as a House Oversight record, draws parallels between private military contractor Erik Prince (Blackwater) and Osama Bin Laden as intelligence assets. It details the controversial legal defense of Jeffrey Epstein by Ken Starr and others, specifically highlighting the sweeping immunity granted by the Southern District of Florida non-prosecution agreement. The text explicitly suggests Epstein's light sentence is best explained by the use of children for 'government-sponsored sexual blackmail.'
This document is a printout of a Gawker article discussing potential new federal child trafficking charges against Jeffrey Epstein shortly after his release from jail on state solicitation charges. The article cites reporting from The Daily Beast's Conchita Sarnoff and mentions that Epstein's associate, Jean Luc Brunel of MC2 modeling agency, is also under investigation regarding models allegedly enlisted for Epstein's private jet. The text also references Epstein's friendship with Bill Clinton and details regarding his previous plea deal.
An email exchange between attorney Paul Cassell and Michael Bilton (likely a journalist) from January 2015. Bilton confirms sending files analyzing Virginia Roberts' (VR) travel coinciding with Prince Andrew's engagements. Cassell acknowledges receipt and shares a Gawker article discussing flight logs linking Clinton and Dershowitz to the case, expressing hope that the truth will come out.
An email dated November 22, 2013, from Steven Sinofsky to Jeffrey Epstein (jeevacation@gmail.com) with the subject 'Bitcoin and DC'. Sinofsky shares a Washington Post article titled 'Here’s how Bitcoin charmed Washington' and boasts that he is 'up 50%' on his Bitcoin investment. The article text discusses Senate hearings on Bitcoin, the Silk Road marketplace, and Senator Chuck Schumer's previous comments on cryptocurrency.
This document appears to be the final page of a printed online news article (likely from The New York Times given the UI elements and author) included in a House Oversight Committee document production (Bates stamp HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_029457). The text captures a quote from a male subject regarding the 'Gawker sale,' stating a desire to preserve rather than destroy the archives. The author is identified as David Streitfeld. The document does not explicitly mention Jeffrey Epstein, though it is part of a larger discovery batch.
This document, labeled as a House Oversight exhibit, appears to be a news article detailing Peter Thiel's political and legal activities. It covers his $300,000 donation to Missouri Attorney General Josh Hawley (who subsequently investigated Google), his move from San Francisco to Los Angeles, and his secret financing of Hulk Hogan's lawsuit which bankrupted Gawker Media. The document explores Thiel's motivations regarding Silicon Valley culture and his grievances with Gawker.
Discussion 0
No comments yet
Be the first to share your thoughts on this epstein entity