EFTA00307966.pdf
dataset_9 pdf 1.8 MB • Feb 3, 2026 • 19 pages
It's an absurdly vast house, among the largest in Manhattan, but the
dining room is windowless, creating a hermetic or stop-time sense, broken
only by the household help ferrying in time-of-day-appropriate foods and
beverages.
In sweatshirt, draw-string pants, palm beach slippers, and half glasses,
Jeffrey Epstein sits at the head of the table. He spends most of his day in the
dining room, remote from the world, in front of a lap top and beside a row of
reading glasses (there are a lot of them in case, apparently, he misplaces a
pair, but being quite meticulous he never does) advising, or instructing, a
startling collection of the rich and powerful, slotted in on an hourly basis.
The apartness of Epstein's dining room might seem to offer some
buffer in this leveled, angry age for a super rich man who attends to even
more fabulously rich men (and the occasional fabulously rich women). On
the other hand, with the paparazzi often posted near by, the outside world
seem dangerously close too. (Once I arrived for a visit and found several
police cars blocking the street and thought the worst—they'd come for
Jeffrey. But it was a security detail for a controversial head of state, also
visiting him.)
His subject for the morning is "hyper wealth." His subject is always
wealth—how capital should react to the given global political, economic,
and cultural moment. The otherwise baronial dining room is disturbed by an
ever-present white board, on which he scribbles calculations and notes,
conducting perhaps the world's most rarified economics class, often to many
of the world's finance ministers and foremost economists.
Epstein's apartness or parallel life reflects much of the other-worldly
characteristics of the wealth revolution that began in the late 1970s and that
continued through the Wall Street boom of the 80s, the tech boom of the
90s-surviving, to often bitter attack, the banking crisis—and that has now
seen the emergence of the international billionaire and oligarch class.
Epstein's way to riches was to become a canny student of such wealth
as it's grown to an unanticipated and disruptive scale. His stock in trade is
not precisely the making of money, but the issues that arise when money, at
a heretofore unimaginable rate, makes itself, altering many basic economic,
social and personal calculations.
He recounts a dinner he had two nights before. It is, like much of what
he does, a conspiracist's fantasy. The six men at this dinner, all technology
entrepreneurs, represented, together, several hundred billion dollars.
"In the past, only governments had this kind of money," says Epstein
making something of a pedagogical point, "money of a reality altering scale.
In fact, it used to be that the rich, reaching a certain point of philanthropy,
EFTA00307966
merely hoped to help make the world a better place, now they want to
change the world. Rockefeller and Carnegie were, as examples of social-
engineering philanthropy, unique. They alone had such resources and will.
Now you have legions of people who have to give away vastly larger
fortunes than Rockefeller or Carnegie had at their disposal, or might even
have imagined.
"Except that it's actually hard to give away this kind of wealth,
without unintended consequences that can cause more problems than you're
solving."
Epstein's long-time business thesis is that the rich know very little
about money. They may know about their own businesses, but the great
sums that are the result are an ultimate after thought and demand an entirely
different sort of intellectual discipline. The Forbes 400, says Epstein, not
immune to an amount of wonder, increased their wealth by $500 billion last
year, meaning, in effect, that on average every Forbes-list billionaire makes
more than another billion every year. And, points out the 62-year-old
Epstein, they will almost all be dead in 40 years, most well before that,
meaning $4.2 trillion, compounding everyday, will have to be given away.
"So, to understand the future, what you have to begin to do is follow the
money, not in Watergate-like terms backwards, as in who has gotten it, but
forwards to where it will go and who will get it."
Epstein can find himself echoing aspects of Thomas Piketty on the
inequities of the accumulation of wealth ("the divide is between people with
assets, which appreciate, and people without assets, who fail to advance—
that is, of course, the miracle of compounded interest"), except for the fact
that Epstein, knowing the rich, understands a curious point that Piketty
doesn't: "Nobody, nobody, wants to give it all to their children. Everybody
now has the modern appreciation that one of the curses of great wealth is
that it can make your kids weird and fucked up."
Epstein's position in this private allotment of a decent fraction of the
U.S. Gross Domestic Product is not as philanthropist but as a higher sort of
banker or guru or brain—a rich whisperer—making him, in addition to rich
himself, arguably, among the most influential people you've never heard of.
Though, likely, you have heard of him, but not for his prowess with
high abstraction, but for a scandal of such luridness that he is, for a great
many, the poster child of the lawlessness of privilege, and for a much
smaller circle, the poster child for what can happen when you become the
target of a resentful world. He is that Epstein, according to the Daily Mail—
among his most dogged and hyperbolic antagonists—"one of America's
most notorious sex offenders."
EFTA00307967
And yet the mighty and powerful, apparently evaluating the nature of
disgrace on their own terms, beat a path to his door. It's a fantastic conclave
of influence in his dining room: financiers, billionaires, heads of state,
economic ministers.
He surely represents the kind of insiderism that is mostly just a
figment in outsiders' fantasies. Except for the fact that, straining credulity,
Epstein is real. His is an ultimate sort of fantasy of power, wealth, and
secrecy. (In 2004, when the then owners of this magazine put it up for sale, I
was involved with a group trying to buy it—an effort in which Epstein
volunteered to invest $20 million. New York was subsequently sold to
another wealthy investor.) Were the International Jewish conspiracy to
actually exist, it might be here in his dining room (while not everybody in
his circle is Jewish, an obvious "think Yiddish" point of view prevails).
Without ever being asked to keep what I have heard here off the
record, I've willingly done so, least I not be invited back. And, too, to
protect him. Who would understand Jeffrey? Who could explain him?
Certainly Epstein's past encounters with the press (and in many ways
with the entire outside world) have been about as disastrous as any could be,
helping to open a Pandora's box of lifestyle vulnerabilities that sent him to
prison on a prostitution charge in 2008.
And yet here he is, in his 50,000 square foot mansion, dispensing
advice to world leaders and business titans.
Indeed, Epstein has been advising Bill Gates on a new way to increase
the already vast clout of the Gates Foundation by adding funds from other
wealthy individuals that can use the Gates resources (the Gates Foundation
now employs 1,200 people), but which can be directed to separate causes
and goals. And it is Gates who at the end of the summer began prodding
Epstein to begin a process of public rehabilitation.
Hence, as part of an effort to get "out in front" of the unfavorable
notice that might greet Gates' public association with him, Epstein agreed to
several on the record conversation with me, in the hope, on his part, that,
after five years since his release from prison, he might be able to leaven his
reputation. And with the hope on my part of learning more about how and if
the rich are different than you and me (although we can fairly dispense with
the if).
Then, just before the New Year, Epstein forwarded me a heads-up
email that Alan Dershowtiz, one of Epstein's long time friends—they have a
bickering brotherly relationship—and occasional legal advisors, had
EFTA00307968
received from a reporter at Politico and forwarded to Epstein. The Politico
reporter had been following Epstein-related court filings (there is a
determined contingent of Epstein reporters) and found a new one added to
an old law suit with some rather jaw-dropping claims.
Eight years after the original suit, a Florida lawyer was now seeking
to add new plaintiffs to the old case. This new filing was accompanied by
allegations connecting a catch-all of bold-faced names associated with
Epstein more than ten years ago, including Dershowtiz and Britain's Prince
Andrew, to a "sex slave" ring—indeed, that Epstein's purported sex slaves
had had sex with Dershowitz and the Prince at Epstein's command.
This seemed to me to be merely a desperate, even comic-book,
filing—just a lawyer trying to revive a dead case. I responded to Epstein that
I doubted this would be seen as credible by anyone.
Epstein, who sometimes seems to have an out-of-body attitude to his
own fate and bad press, said he thought it might be "quite a show."
Two days later, the Daily Mail, which has become the effective
ground zero in the English language for anti-privilege, and moral
opprobrium (the more salacious the better), and whose editor Paul Dacre has
a long time feud with Prince Andrew, put the story on its front page.
(Epstein also has a long relationship with the family of disgraced press
baron, Robert Maxwell, another reliable target of the British press.) Flimsy
and far-fetched court filings in the U.S. by settlement-hungry plaintiffs
might be discounted by skeptical U.S. reporters, but, the U.K. media,
constrained by onerous rules about legal proceedings in the U.K., promptly
went into tabloid frenzy (even the normally sniffy Guardian, in full anti-
royal and anti- billionaire fever, joined the tabloid show) and effectively
exported the story back to the U.S., where Epstein's connection to Bill
Clinton, and, hence as a shadow over Hillary, became the news.
"I told you," said Epstein.
There is Epstein in his inner world, trying, quite ostrich like, not to
look out. Little beyond his strict realm seems palatable or even in a sense
familiar to him. He's a foreigner out here. Not too long ago, I met him for
lunch in the West Village, the first time in more than ten years, he said, he'd
been out to lunch in a restaurant (a not particularly pleasant experience for
him and we were out in 30 minutes).
Then there is the outside world pressed to the glass, appalled and
titillated by the monster inside the big house—a kind of Boo Radley of the
Upper East Side. I have taken friends by the Epstein mansion, and the
reaction to its other-worldly size in Manhattan is almost always the same:
EFTA00307969
audible disbelief (everybody makes their own particular odd noise). Press
accounts, seldom supplying new information, ever recycle and repeat the
mysterious (and monstrous) billionaire mythology, with brief glimpses of
him stepping out of the house (the same photos endlessly republished), and
the assumption of depravity inside.
In fact, the life in the house, without wife or children or conventional
domestic demeanor, in some way conforms to the most scripted fantasies: a
life somewhere between Daddy Warbucks and Eyes Wide Shut.
The domesticity of the house, and the background of Epstein's
problems, centers around a group of young women who act as his support
staff and companions. Some have worked for him for many years, marrying,
having children, and continuing as part of his business and household
infrastructure. One woman, on an afternoon when I was there, recently
married, had just returned from an around the world honeymoon that Epstein
had arranged for her. Some are his romantic interests. His present girl friend
is in dental school. One former girlfriend, Eva Andersson Dubin, a Swedish
model and Miss Universe finalist, became a doctor and married hedge
fonder Glen Dubin and together they finance the Dubin Breast Center at
Mount Sinai Hospital. Most at one time will travel with him to his floating
residences—the ranch in New Mexico, the vast apartment in Paris, the Island
in the Caribbean, the house in Palm Beach.
This is so outside of conventional living or staffing or romantic
relationships that it is hard to describe in a straightforward or straight-faced
way. It sometimes seems part of Epstein's implicit challenge: not just look at
me, but do you even believe what you see? Or it seems he is just oblivious to
what others are thinking. A willful and perhaps fatal tone deafness.
But Hefnerian prurience can also be quite businesslike: poised young
women in a mansion on the Upper East Side with various office
responsibilities—in some sense not that different from any of the art
galleries in the surrounding neighborhood.
Epstein's young women mingle freely with his powerful guests, not so
much as hostess or, in tabloid language, harem-like (or as "sex slaves"), but
often as attentive students (that, of course, might be regarded as having its
own fetish-like attraction).
Once, Epstein invited me to sit in on a day of presentations to him in
his dining room by various "quants." Quant theory involves making
investments based solely on mathematical and statistical models. This
method can often have uncanny predictive powers. But the problem is it
doesn't scale very well—the market, having discerned a pattern of
successful investing, quickly copies and discounts the advantage. Epstein's
EFTA00307970
effort was to identify a dozen or so promising algorithms (each quant is
effectively hawking his secret sauce algorithm) and invest up to $5 million
with each. I knew paltry little about this and so rather found myself
identifying with the young women to whom Epstein was explaining the
basic math and mechanics—out of my league, but grateful for the lesson.
The Epstein house/office is, by careful design, exclusive and club like,
part hang out, part secret society. Along with the difficulty in explaining
why, even after his jail term, the rich and powerful have yet beaten a path to
his door, it's also notable in the fixed hierarchy of who comes to whose turf,
that everybody, when they went to see Epstein, comes to him.
A week in late September, U.N. week as it happened, began, on
Sunday, at Epstein's house with a colloquial for billionaires—Gates, TK,
TK, TK.
Epstein, preternaturally responsive to both the price of oil and to the
politics of the middle of East, entertained that evening a delegation from
Qatar, including Sheikh Hamad, the foreign minister. Hamad, indeed, lives
across the street in a similarly furnished house—he and Epstein have the
same decorator. Epstein, in his relaxed and amused demeanor, kept
prodding: "Why are you financing the bad guys? What do you get out of
that?"
The Qatarians, in some mild diplomatic discomfort, seemed most
worried that their bid for the World Cup might be compromised by bribery
allegations.
At 9:00 next morning, Epstein is joined for breakfast in the dining
room by Reid Weingarten, who's represented among other fat cats in
trouble, Worldcom's Bernie Ebbers and Goldman Sach's Lloyd Blankfein.
Weingarten, horse, with a cold, and dejected, is just back from a failed
defense of former Connecticut Governor John Rowland. (Epstein: "You
actually believe he was getting fucked?" Weingarten: "From minute one.
I'm not a virgin. But his was the worst I've ever seen. It was like an
assassination.)
After a short discussion of the Qartarian's visit—Epstein is serving
the chocolate, made from pistachios grown on the Shakes farm—and
speculation about who actually controls ISIS, I am asked to leave the room.
Twenty minutes later, after what ever business has been transacted or
particular confidences, shared I am asked back in.
"Why?" I asked Weingarten, when Epstein briefly steps out of the
room, "do some many people keep coming back here, everything
considered."
EFTA00307971
"Why we camp out here? I find that question as mysterious as you
do," says Weingarten.
Shortly after Weingarten leaves, Epstein tells me that Eric Holder will
resign by the end of the week—which he does.
Epstein summons in the next person cooling his heels in the ante-
room. It's a young man named Brook Pierce, a former child actor, and
dotcom high flyer—a principle in a gaming company called DEN, a
notorious dotcom burnout, with its own sex scandal—who is now a leading
investor in Bitcoin. He describe himself as the "the most active investor in
the field."
And, indeed, is the first clear explanation I actually get about Bitcoin.
It is so good that Epstein stops him and checks to see if his next appointment
is here. And seconds later, Larry Summers, the former treasury secretary and
President of Harvard, enters the dining room. Summers, off Diet Coke, digs
deep into the Shakes chocolates, focuses in on the Bitcoin investor.
"Okay," he says, after listening for a bit, "I have opportunities here.
But an additional feature of my decision problem roughly speaking is that
the worst that could happen to you is that you could lose all the money you
put into it. Whereas, I could go—I mean I don't look that great now—but I
could go from being seen as a figure of some probity and some intelligence
to being a figure of much less intelligence and much less probity..."
"Well," says Pierce in what in some dramatic understatement, "you
are going to have some low quality characters playing the space..."
That evening, there is a small cocktail party, which includes the former
Prime Minister of Australian, Kevin Rudd, and Thorbjcsm Jaglandthe head
of the Noble Peace Prize Committee, who offers an affable, but general
scathing, critique of U.S. diplomacy (and a brief defense of Obama's Peace
Prize award) and to whom Epstein offers a ride back to Europe on his jet.
The next morning, it's Ehud Barack, the former Israeli Prime Minister
and Israel, for breakfast. Barack is, over his omelet, able to defend both
Obama and Putin. Then Kathy Ruemmler, who has just left her job as White
House Counsel joins. She is already in the mix as a possible next attorney
general, but, in fact, will withdraw from consideration in part to work with
Epstein.
Larry Summers wife, Elisa New, drops by. She teaches American
poetry at Harvard and is putting together a proposal for a series on poetry
that WGBH in Boston may produce and Epstein is advising on where she
might go for added support (he also makes mince meat of her budget).
MORE...TK
EFTA00307972
Perhaps it's just the ultimate feminist nightmare: Men (and a few
opportunistic women) continue to come to Epstein's because, no matter their
public bows to modern manners, they simply don't care that he offends
every aspect of feminist sensibility
Or, it's a guilty pleasure. People who know Jeffrey exchange
"Jeffrey" stories. "That's Jeffrey," says Mort Zuckerman, the real estate
billionaire and publisher of the Daily News (ever vitriolic in its coverage of
Epstein), with a twinkle in his eye and obvious enjoyment, to tales of
Epstein escapades. It is an outreness that Epstein seems delighted to
cultivate. In Epstein's Paris apartment, 10,000 square feet on the Avenue
Foch, a neighborhood otherwise occupied by foreign potentates, there is a
stuffed baby elephant in his living room—that is, the elephant in the room.
(At the same time, Epstein is a major supporter of cancer research and the
elephant, he says, is also a reminder that elephants have 23 copies of tumor
suppressor genes and humans have only 1.) The single book on his bedside
table is Lolita (he is, beyond the joke, a great Nobokov fan).
Or, in a more sophisticated view, it's a two tier understanding of the
world. There is a media version of the world, which most of us live in and
largely accept, and are certainly influenced by. And then there are those
people who live in the media itself and therefore know that it's mostly bunk.
If the media says it, as likely some version of the opposite is true. I might
guess too that for many of his visitors there's an order of identification: there
but for the grace of God. Any hyper-prominent person might, at any time,
run afoul of prosecutors, the political moment, the media, or the Internet hoi
polloi.
Epstein is the Dreyfus of the rich.
And then there is the glue of wealth. Once, at lunch in the Epstein
dinning room with Bill Richardson, the former Governor of New Mexico,
and past Presidential aspirant, when Epstein left the room for a few minutes,
I asked the obvious question, the one everybody asks each other, "How did
you meet Jeffrey?" Richardson seemed surprised: "Jeffrey," he said, as
though stating what should have been perfectly obvious, "is the biggest
landowner in New Mexico."
And then there is Epstein's yet more structural explanation as to why
after prison and with continuing tabloid infamy he can maintain his valued
place. It comes back, not unexpectedly, to the nature or the needs of money:
"At a certain level of finance, almost everyone is allied with an
institutional interest. You are part of government, or you want to be in
government, or you are connected to a bank or other portfolio, or you have
key relationships with certain corporations or industries. Because of my
EFTA00307973
situation, I have none of that. I have no institutional bona fides which makes
me in some sense one of the few independent sources of information and
actual honest brokers. That's the usefulness of disgrace."
And then there is too, that he is right. Since I began working on this
piece in September, Epstein predictions about the price of oil, yen, ruble,
and euro have all born out. (If I had invested $100,000 the way Epstein said
I should in early September, by the end of January I would have made $2.3
million. Alas, I did not.)
And something else, which perhaps also surely accounts for Epstein's
continuing relationships with the rich and powerful:
Most everyone who is now of a certain age and certain ambition and
certain status grew up in, and found they were temperamentally suited to, the
new age of wealth that started in the late 1970s. A meritocracy on steroids,
or, as Vanity Fair would baldly and ingratiatingly dub it, the new
establishment, an increasingly parallel world, a self-invented one, at further
and further remove from the ordinary one. In some sense, Epstein is just one
version, picaresque, as well as louche, of this shared story.
He often tells, with some obvious marvel, his middle class to riches
tale. He was born in 1953 in Coney Island. His father worked for the city's
Parks Department. His mother was a housewife. He has a younger brother,
Mark.
Epstein was distinguished by little other than his math talents. The
captain of the math team at Lafayette High school in Bensonhurst, he goes
on to Cooper Union where the tuition is free. He drops out after two years
and begins taking classes at the NYU's Courant Institute of Mathematics.
Then, without a college degree, hence by a slight of hand, gets a job teaching
math and physics at Dalton in 1974. (A few years ago, during a chance
encounter with a former Dalton math department chairman, Margo Gumport,
I asked her about Epstein. She said he was the most brilliant math teacher at
Dalton in her 50-year career and that she had often wondered what had
become of him.)
It's his first exposure to the wealthy. They have, he concludes, just as
many problems as the people in Coney Island, just different ones, almost
invariably involving divorce and money. "I found it interesting as a science
experiment," he recalled not long ago as we chatted about his life. "It did not
really involve me. I could just stand back and watch."
Dalton fathers were attracted to him. Punch Sulzberger, the publisher
of the New York Times, and a Dalton father at the time, tried to recruit
Epstein to come to the Times. (Epstein recounts a story of riding with
EFTA00307974
Sulzberger in his wood paneled station wagon to the his country estate and
Sulzberger talking to the chauffer on a phone from the backseat to the front.)
In 1976, another Dalton father, asking "wouldn't you rather be rich
than be a teacher?" introduced him to Bear Stern's chief Ace Greenberg, a
conversation Epstein recounts as this:
Greenberg: "Everyone tells me you're super smart in math and you're
Jewish and you're hungry...so why don't you start working here
tomorrow?"
Epstein: "What?"
Greenberg: "If your supposed to be so fucking smart, don't you
understand English?"
Epstein: "Ok. Count me in."
Hence, Epstein, like many in the late 70s, arrived on Wall Street.
As will happen to a generation of others, by the fortuitous luck of
being on Wall Street at that point in time, Epstein is transformed by a new,
much faster, form of upward mobility. With a facility for mathematics as
well as for getting along with rich men, he transforms at an even faster rate
than others being quickly transformed.
He moves into a new building at 66th Street and Second Avenue—still
in the shadow of the Maxwell Plum era when the 60s on Second was the
glamour address—a building full of "actresses, models, and euro trash." (It
would shortly become the Studio 54 era, where Epstein, who doesn't drink
or take drugs, was a regular).
If on one side of Wall Street there were the salesmen (the Wolf of
Wall Street model), on the other side there was a new sort of finance type
able to embrace a level of acute abstraction.
"In the past," says Epstein, "investing was all about reputations and
relationships. You invested in a company on the basis of who was running it.
Did they have integrity? Were they married? Good family men? It was a
50's mentality. But in the mid 70s options started to be traded. In essence,
the first formal derivatives. The movement of this instrument is not directly
attached to the stock price. The world of investing began turning from
relationships to math. In a sense I didn't really make money as much as I did
create it. This was intellectual activity of a fairly high order."
Intellectual activity aside, he meets Helen Gurley Brown and she
makes him Cosmopolitan Magazine's Bachelor of the Month in 1980.
"What," I ask, "was your social life like?"
"Well, I was a playboy."
"That's all? Not looking to get married?"
EFTA00307975
"No. Never. I never wanted to get married. I wanted sex. I liked
women. I wanted freedom. I was attracted to the rich because of their
freedom. But I wanted also to avoid their burdens. And I didn't want to hide.
I didn't want to be a hypocrite. I wanted to be free. I was not remotely
ambivalent about what I wanted: to be free. That was the reason to make
money."
His rise at Bear Stems was a steep one. And he soon became the
protegee of Jimmy Cayne (also hired by Ace Greenberg on a whim—he met
him in a bridge game—who would go on to run Bear and to lose his fortune
in Bear's 2006 collapse). Epstein's leave taking or ouster from Bear is the
result of politics, envy, overreaching, or a securities violation, or...unclear.
But, no matter, he leaves in 1982 with billionaire clients, including Marvin
Davis, a real estate developer who owns Twentieth Century Fox, and Herb
Seigel, a major media investor in the 1980s. Epstein is dating
M=, a television star in the 1980s rich-family soap operas, Dallas and
Falcon Crest.
Now begins the Concorde phase of his life—and the Concorde phase
of the 1980s. If the 80s are happening pell mell in New York, they're
happening at double time and catch up speed in London. Epstein is 30 years
old and living, in Lifestyle of the Rich and Famous fashion, at English
shooting parties at country estates with Saturday night black tie dinners,
where he's meeting the richest families in Europe.
"I don't take it seriously," Epstein recounts. "I'm not caught up in it.
I'm not trying to make a billion dollars. There is no ultimate goal. Or its just
to meet smart people, interesting people. But no long-range plans. Often no
short-term plans either. I would head to Kennedy and, on the theory that
most important events are serendipitous, I wouldn't decided where I was
going until I got there."
At the same time, he is developing a perception, or, at least a market
differentiation: the hyper wealthy had different problems than the very
wealthy. Dealing with a billion dollars was different from dealing with $100
million:
"If you had a billion dollars I would think the last thing you should be
worried about was money, in truth money was what you most worried about.
How to make more of it, how to give away more of it, how to protect you
children from it, how to hide it from your wife or husband, how to minimize
your taxes on it. The traditional wealth service structure, an accountant, and
investment advisor, a personal lawyer, and an idiot brother-in-law, became
hopelessly outdated as amounts exponentially increased.
EFTA00307976
"You can't spend a billion dollars, you can just relocate it to a
different investment class. And you can't give away a billion dollars without
a vast staff, in effect going into the business of giving away money, yet
another business you are likely to know little about."
At just about this point in the narrative, the questions or the
incredulity begins in social circles and eventually in the media. He begins to
acquire the major symbols of riches but does this without position, public
holdings, or obvious paper trails. In essence, the formulation is, how can a
person have enough money to merit increasing attention, but no clear way of
having gotten it. Epstein gets stuck in that tautology. He may be rich, but he
is without institutional protection or bona fides. He is a questionable
substrata of wealth. He's a freelancer.
That's the rub: he doesn't work for anyone. Without institutional
credentials he's...well, nobody knows what.
For a period, one part of his activities he says is recovering monies for
countries looted by exiled dictators or military strongmen. If early in his
career he might seem like a sort of George Peppard (there's a physical
resemblance) in Breakfast at Tiffany's, a charming hustler, later he's George
Peppard in Banacek, a smart and astute operator.
Then, in his telling, he's representing a series of vastly wealthy people
and families. He's not just doing their bidding or their investing, he's
helping them to imagine the ambitions of their wealth. They've satisfied
their business dreams. Now there are the separate challenges and
possibilities of their actual wealth.
In essence, as he becomes more public the response to this, as a
function of envy and the media's need for definition, is "bullshit." True,
there is no clear alternate narrative. No one is accusing him of anything,
accept, sometimes, guilt by association. (In addition to Robert Maxwell, who
will be accused of fraud, there's Steven Hoffenberg, briefly a New York
high flyer, who went to jail for a Ponzi scheme, for whom Epstein acted as a
consultant.) But the characterization persist: if it's not clear, it must be
murky. Sure, Goldman Sachs partners and tech fortunes, but what to make of
a Coney Island, Zelig-like no-namer?
In 1994, just at the moment when Prince Charles is on television
acknowledging his love for Camilla Parker Bowles, Jeffrey Epstein is sitting
with his arm around Princess Diana at a dinner at the Serpentine Galley in
London (Diana is wearing her "revenge" dress that evening). Graydon
Carter, into his second years as editor of Vanity Fair, is also at the dinner.
Epstein's rise and Carter's rise are not, with a little critical interpretation,
that different. Both are a function of the age of new money, both are helped
EFTA00307977
by strategic relationships with the exceptionally wealthy (i.e. they are social
climbers), both men have made themselves up. To say that Epstein, in the
company of the Princess, sticks in Carter's craw would be an
understatement. Epstein becomes one of the "what do you know about him"
figures in Carter's gossip trail—a story waiting to happen. A variety of the
gossip that begins to circulate about Epstein—for instance, that he secretly
films his guests—is seeded by Carter, who once advised me not to go to
Epstein's house or accept a ride in his car least I risk being blackmail. ("For
what?" I asked Carter. "For you have no idea," said Carter.)
Epstein is playing a cat and mouse game with his own growing wealth
and influence. He is private and secretive, but grandly so. He joins the board
of Rockefeller University. He's suddenly on the Trilateral commission, that
cabal of business people who fancy themselves, and who are fancied by
conspiracy buffs, as running the world. He buys from his client Limited
Founder Les Wexner the larges private house in Manhattan. (Rumors will
continue for many years, that Wexner owns the house and Epstein is just
squatting in it—an 18-year squat.) He buys an airplane. He buys another. He
expands his holdings in New Mexico. He begins a Zanadu refurbishment of
his Caribbean Island.
He befriends Bill Clinton in his new after-office life.
And that's quite the fatal pairing.
The post-Monica Clinton, now having pardoned the on-the-lam
financier Marc Rich, is suddenly being ferried around in the jet of...who
exactly?
The New York Post is the first to take formal media note of the
Clinton-Epstein connection, hinting at a sex and money bromance. The
instinctively private Epstein is not just increasingly exposed, but clearly
curious about the nature of exposure.
I met Epstein around this time. Epstein had become a more and more
active backer of advanced scientific research—ultimately he will donate $30
million to Harvard for a theoretical physics research center—and in 2002 he
was taking a small group of scientists out to the TED conference in
Monterey. The TED organizers invited various other TED participants,
including me, to join the flight. A small group assembled at the private plane
terminal, most of us unfamiliar with our benefactor, and as we headed in the
direction of the discrete private plans we were gently pointed to our ride:
Epstein's 727.
It is some thoroughly updated drawing room set-up, all of us
nervously ensconced in this luxury plane, waiting for our unknown host to
EFTA00307978
arrive—and soon he does, tanned, relaxed, with wide open smile,
accompanied by three young women.
It would be unlikely, outside of a men's magazine fantasy of the luxe
life, that you could locate this in reality. Epstein's attentions, taking time
with each of his passengers, seemed impossible to account for. The quiet of
the plane, engineered into acoustic perfection, seemed spooky. Epstein's
three companions were witty, poised, helpful as well as powerfully
alluring—as though stewardesses of bygone times.
(One more thing about this trip: Google founders, Larry Page and
Sergey Brin, with their company still in its infancy, came out to see the
plane and, with a few other Googlers, literally ran whopping from one end of
the plan to the other. Then they described for Epstein, in what I can not now
remember as a put on or entrepreneurial brainstorm, a brand extension in
which they would market a line of Google bras with the Os as convenient
cups. In fact, the name Google, they said, was invented out of the belief that
men would focus on a word with two Os in it.)
Not long after this trip, Epstein's assistant called to invite me for tea at
his house in New York, where Epstein, with what seemed to me little
understanding of the subject, began to ask me about media—the upside,
downside, and nature of media coverage. New York magazine was then
soliciting him for a profile, as was Vanity Fair, who had assigned the British
tabloid reporter, Vicki Ward, to the job.
Both profiles, New York's by Landon Thomas, pivot on the Clinton
connection and detail the same quandary, how a man without clear
institutional bona fides nevertheless achieves wealth and influence. Ward—
who would more recently assert in the Daily Beast, that she was barred by
Vanity Fair from writing about under-age sex evidence (a fact that could be
read the other way: Vanity Fair, even looking to take down Epstein, did not
find the evidence credible)—follows a rabbit hole of questionable contacts
who might or might not have been the source or sources for Epstein's
wealth, but gets no closer to an answer, beyond confirming her own sense of
dubiousness.
Epstein, sensing that he might be exposing himself, tried to stop the
process (Ward, well known for offering an operatic view about her reporting
exploits, says he threatened her), called Carter and said he was having
second thoughts about being a public figure.
"Then you should live in a two bedroom apartment in Queens,"
responded Carter.
And then the troubles began.
EFTA00307979
Epstein, in man-who-can-have-everything fashion, has, for many
years, ordered up a daily massage following his workout sessions.
"Often these were massage massages," says Epstein matter of factly,
"but sometimes these were happy ending massages, especially in Palm
Beach, where there are many massage parlors—lack Shacks,' they're
called—that do outcalls. There was no sex. An often there was no happy
ending. Often I would be on the phone for the entire massage. There were
however a lot of massages and a lot of girls, with one girl recommending
others."
It is after Epstein's round of publicity and widely touted association
with Clinton, that the mother of one of the massage parlor girls who went to
Epstein's house (most of the girls return to Epstein's house many times)
calls the police. The police interview the girl, Saige Gonzales, who then
supplies names of other girls. Some of whom are found to be younger than
18.
In the end, the police track down 18 girls—nine who are under 18; the
others in their 20s and 30s; one woman is in her 60s—a number of whom
give statements describing scenarios not terribly different from Epstein's
description above, except each is laid out in clinical, lurid, and near-identical
detail. A cold and forceful Epstein demands that unwitting juveniles (though
they have come here for this very purpose) perform repulsive (or at least
repulsively described) acts on him. (Although the nature of the allegations
will dramatically grow, nobody at this point alleges that he did anything to
them.)
Epstein, tipped to the investigation, vastly raises the stakes, calling
Dershowitz, who flies into Palm Beach to put the local authorities in their
place—alienating Palm Beach officialdom—and, doubling down on the
profile of the case. Dershowitz brings in Roy Black the famous criminal
attorney who defended William Kennedy Smith in his rape trial in Palm
Beach.
Here's the narrative: the shadowy rich man, friend of the louche and
disgraced President, at all times surrounded by a retinue of gorgeous
retainers doing his bidding, is now found to have gathered a network of
wrong-side-of-the-tracks Palm Beach girls to provide him with weird sexual
services. (It somehow reads weirder that he doesn't have sex with them.) To
boot, his former girl friend, Ghislaine Maxwell—the daughter of the
disgraced Robert Maxwell—encouraged at least one of the girls to come to
Epstein's home (and forever more has become a fixture of further weird
possibilities in this tale).
EFTA00307980
Palm Beach Police Chief Michael Reiter is reported to say: "This is
bigger than Rush Limbaugh," who, in a storm of publicity, has just been
arrested in Palm Beach for possession of controlled drugs.
On one side are some of the nation's most powerful defense attorneys
(who, increasingly, seem more stumblebum than effective), on the other
side, a round-up of hapless girls, with sensational tales of perversion and
infamy (in the telling they are not so much sex workers, as Dickensian
victims), relatively speaking giving the Palm Beach authorities the choice
between utter capitulation to the powerful or standing on the side of the
exploited and powerless.
Still, with a critical eye, it also quite appears to be a straightforward
tale of prostitution (however more or less kinky). And even though some of
the girls are minors, age is not a distinguishing factor in a prostitution charge
in Florida, nor in most places (in New York, for instance, at this time
soliciting sex with anyone over the age of 14 is a class D misdemeanor
calling for a $100 fine).
In fact, Saige Gonzales told the police that she lied about being 18
because otherwise she knew she would not have been admitted to the house.
The local sex crimes prosecutor, Lana Belhalevic, interviews the girls
and determines that the offense is solely related to prostitution—that there
are no innocent victims.
Dershowitz rejects a series of lower-level plea deals and Palm Beach
District Attorney Barry Krischer takes the unusual step of empanelling a
grand jury, which returns with a recommendation of a single count of
soliciting a prostitute—a charge without jail time. (And Epstein can apply to
have his record expunged after a year.)
At which point, Reiter, the police chief, at odds with the District
Attorney's office, recruits the involvement of the FBI. This is of course the
Bush-era FBI and Epstein presents quite the Clinton-connected scandal.
Still, solicitation, even of a minor, is not a federal crime. The FBI hits on the
novel interpretation that if Internet solicitation can be considered interstate
commerce, so can telephone solicitation, permitting them to begin a deep
dive investigation into Epstein's friends, many of whom receive subpoenas
and are threatened with prosecution.
It's all quite in the eye of the beholder: On the one end, Epstein is
paying for sex acts (Epstein paid $200 for a massage with or without happy
ending), on the other, he is abusing teenage girls. It's a catch-22: How can a
girl not old enough to vote be a prostitute? And yet, many girls not old
enough to vote are prostitutes.
EFTA00307981
Compounding Epstein's predicament, the world outside of his
carefully constructed and controlled environment is someplace that he seems
not just ill-equipped to handle but in which he seems to be blindly grouping
about (i.e. he's totally tone deaf). I visited him once during this time and
found him weighing the conflicting advice of some of the most vaunted and
egomaniacal lawyers (along with Dershowitz and Black, celebrity criminal
attorney, Gerald Lefcourt, and Clinton prosecutor, Ken Starr) of the day—
anyone with new advice, Epstein seemed to hire—as well as a catchall of the
leading crisis managers, who he seemed to retain at will, all wrangling for
fees and primacy.
Certainly, the upshot of his dealings with the Justice Department seem
to involve a through-the-looking-glass logic. The government threatens to
prosecute him (with the possibility of a 10-year sentence) and various
friends, associates, and lovers, or offers an ass-backwards sort of deal in
which Epstein's lawyers have to go to the Palm Beach authorities and get
them to agree to charge him with an offense that will send him to jail and get
him a sex offender status. Except that a solicitation charge won't produce
that result. Therefore he has to agree also to a procurement or pimping
charge (even though he has paid money, not received it—the sine qua non of
pimping). What's more, he has to agree to pay the legal fees of any of the
girls who want to sue him—and, not to defend himself from their suits-
forcing him to settle with each of the girls for what are reportedly high 6-
figure sums or more.
He's sentence to jail in 2008 for 18 months and serves 13 (while
Epstein is now frequently accused of somehow managing to cut short his
sentence, almost all Florida prisoners serve only 70% of their officially
sentenced time).
This hardly ends the legal catch all. Epstein's butler, Alfredo
Rodriguez, steals and tries to sell an alleged journal or calendar with
Epstein's activities—but he tries to sell it to an undercover agent. Rodriguez
is sentenced to 18 months in jail on a charge of theft and of withholding
evidence (and a further two and half years on a related gun charge). Scott
Rothstein, a lawyer whose firm represented additional girls in their suits
against Epstein, also goes to jail for recruiting investors to pay for these suits
on the fraudulent basis that settlements had already been reached. It's the
largest fraud in Florida history and Rothstein receives a 50-year sentence.
Then, Brad Edwards, Rothstein's former partner, sues the federal
government in 2008 for abridging the rights of two of the original
complainants under the Crime Victim Rights Act (giving victims the right to
be consulted about the disposition of their cases) regarding the Justice
EFTA00307982
Departments agreement not to prosecute in favor of the state action. In 2014,
Edwards tries to ad another of the original complainants,
who has previously settled with Epstein, to the long-running suit. Roberts
who was paid a settlement under the original terms of Epstein's agreement—
that he would pay attorney's fees and not oppose any law suits against
him—is now trying to overturn the agreement under which she was paid,
and, with Edwards, further suing Epstein for $50,000,000.
As the most vocal of the accusers, Roberts, with the Daily Mail being
her prime outlet, emerges now with what is billed as a memoir of her "sex
slavery" with Epstein, written ten years after the fact. She names a number
of people as being at Epstein's Island home, including Clinton and Al Gore
and his wife, who Epstein's lawyers insists were never there—proof
available through secret service records.
The FBI is now arguing that Roberts should not be party to the suit
against the government because she refused to cooperate with the
government in its investigation in 2007, hence has no standing as a victim.
(At the same time, the FBI included her on the list of 40 victims with whom
it mandated Epstein reach a settlement.)
It is hard to find a more hyperbolic intersection of media and lawyers
then in Epstein's case.
Edwards, over the six years of his law suit, tries to depose Clinton,
Donald Trump, and Dershowitz—almost all of his targets coming directly
from the original Vanity Fair and New York Magazine articles about
Epstein.
In addition to Prince Andrew as a British hot button, first connected to
Epstein through Roberts' interview with the Daily Mail in 2010, Clinton
takes on a new role as Hillary spoiler through his connection, real or
imagined, to Epstein and sex slaves.
Almost everybody identified in any story about Epstein is approached
by other media seeking to write about Epstein, often with financial
incentives.
No new details emerge. Every aspect of the current story is based on
court filings describing events that may or may not have taken place prior to
2007.
A recent Reuters story identified a charity that Epstein has not given
money to in 15 years that said if he does give again, they would give it back.
The world cleanly divides, with Epstein (and friends) behind secure
walls and the Mail and social media and upholders of new norms, ever more
incredulous and apoplectic that Epstein not only walks free but prospers too.
EFTA00307983
Although he has spent more than a year in jail and paid out what may
be as much as $20 million, he yet seems somehow to have gotten away with
it—that worst sin of all. He is the unrepentant catch all of up-to-the-minute
badness: the financier whose wealth is a product of Wall Street math
Entities
0 total entities mentioned
No entities found in this document
Document Metadata
- Document ID
- 082d149a-0896-4df3-829d-8469cfb1d6e8
- Storage Key
- dataset_9/EFTA00307966.pdf
- Content Hash
- b387438ba38117f900f8e2be3f3d1096
- Created
- Feb 3, 2026