| Date | Event Type | Description | Location | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| N/A | N/A | Lunches at Milton Kronheim's office restaurant. | Kronheim's office restaurant | View |
An email from Jeffrey Epstein (using the alias Jeffrey E./jeevacation) to 'Ed' (identified by context as journalist Edward Jay Epstein) dated December 19, 2015. Epstein responds to an email containing a WSJ article written by Edward Jay Epstein about conspiracy theories. In his response, Jeffrey Epstein asks to hire the journalist to 'organize my story into a coherent presentation,' estimating it to be a 'six- 9 moth job.'
This document is an email sent on December 19, 2015, from 'Ed' (journalist Edward Jay Epstein) to Jeffrey Epstein. The email contains the full text of an article Edward published in the Wall Street Journal the previous day titled 'They're Not Really Out to Get You.' The article reviews Rob Brotherton's book 'Suspicious Minds' and discusses the psychology behind conspiracy theories, distinguishing between real criminal conspiracies and 'pseudo-conspiracies.'
This document appears to be a page (p. 160) from a manuscript or memoir, dated April 2, 2012, in the header. It narrates the author's time as a law clerk (likely Alan Dershowitz) for Supreme Court Justice Arthur Goldberg in the 1960s. The text details the legal research into the constitutionality of the death penalty, discussions with Justice Goldberg about the political risks of opposing it, and a specific meeting with Justice Brennan to present arguments based on the 'cruel and unusual punishment' clause and racial disparities in execution statistics. The document bears a House Oversight Bates stamp.
A page from a manuscript (likely by Alan Dershowitz, based on context) recounting his time as a Supreme Court clerk for Justice Arthur Goldberg during the JFK assassination in 1963. The text details the moment the court learned of the shooting, the narrator driving Goldberg to the White House to advise LBJ, a tense encounter with a guard over a toy gun, and Goldberg's private explanation of the political motivations behind the formation of the Warren Commission. The document suggests LBJ believed in a conspiracy but used the commission to push the 'lone gunman' theory for national security reasons.
This document appears to be a page from a memoir (likely Alan Dershowitz's, based on the clerkship history) dated April 2012. It recounts the author's experiences clerking for the Supreme Court in 1963, including an interview with Justice Harlan regarding anti-Semitic hiring practices on Wall Street. It also details the author disobeying Chief Justice Earl Warren's order to avoid the March on Washington, choosing instead to attend MLK's 'I Have a Dream' speech with Judge Bazelon.
This document is page 48 of a draft manuscript (dated 4.2.12), likely written by Alan Dershowitz, recounting his time as a law clerk for Chief Judge David Bazelon in Washington D.C. starting in the summer of 1962. The text describes the political atmosphere of the Warren Court era and details Bazelon's social circle, specifically weekly lunches hosted by liquor distributor Milton Kronheim attended by Supreme Court Justices and Senators. The page concludes with the beginning of a joke about Kronheim's fame.
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