This document appears to be a page from a draft memoir or manuscript (likely by Alan Dershowitz, given the reference to his book 'The Genesis of Justice'). It details personal anecdotes involving former President Bill Clinton, including a humorous encounter with the Secret Service regarding a car hood in Edgartown and a dinner party conversation about the Bible that was misreported by Vanity Fair journalist Gail Sheehy as being about the Lewinsky scandal. It also mentions a request from John Kennedy Jr. to write an article for George magazine.
This document appears to be a page from a manuscript draft (likely by Alan Dershowitz, given the reference to his book 'The Best Defense') submitted to the House Oversight Committee. It details two specific legal cases involving attempted murder: one involving the 'factual impossibility' of killing a corpse, and another utilizing a biblical analogy (the 'Abraham Defense') regarding a man who threatened his sister's abuser but was stopped by police. Both cases highlight complex legal defenses regarding intent and impossibility, resulting in the clients going free.
This document appears to be a page (page 86) from a manuscript draft, dated April 2, 2012, bearing a House Oversight Bates stamp. The text is a philosophical and legal essay discussing the value of dissent, analyzing the First Amendment through the lens of a debate between Justices Hugo Black and Felix Frankfurter regarding the words 'Congress' and 'no.' The author (writing in the first person) expresses admiration for biblical and historical figures who challenged authority.
This document is page 258 of a book (likely Ehud Barak's memoir), bearing a House Oversight stamp. It details the events of February 25, 1994, specifically the Cave of the Patriarchs massacre in Hebron committed by Baruch Goldstein. The narrator (identifying as the IDF Chief of Staff) describes rushing to the scene via helicopter, meeting with Palestinian leaders to express condolences, and managing the subsequent violent protests and security lockdown in the West Bank.
This document is page 139 of a larger manuscript (Bates stamped HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_013639). The text is an abstract essay drawing analogies between condensed matter physics (specifically 'crystalline' vs. 'glassy' states and the concept of 'frustration' in atomic arrangements) and extreme human sociological/religious behaviors (sexual predation by priests, terrorism, and fundamentalism). It appears to be part of a pseudo-scientific or philosophical work, possibly authored by or sent to Jeffrey Epstein given his interest in theoretical physics and the Edge Foundation circles.
This document appears to be a page from a memoir or narrative report (Bates stamped HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_013628) describing a visit to a charismatic 'Bible Church' in a warehouse in Tulsa, Oklahoma. The text details the background of Pastor Carl Austin (a reformed addict), the strict tithing habits of the congregation which supported the Pastor's yellow Cadillac and a Mexican orphanage, and describes an intense worship service focusing on healing and forgiveness.
Discussion 0
No comments yet
Be the first to share your thoughts on this epstein entity