Jeffrey Epstein Arrested For Sex Trafficking of Minors

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Billionaire pedophile Jeffrey Epstein was arrested for allegedly sex trafficking dozens of minors in New York and Florida between 2002 and 2005, and will appear in court in New York on Monday, according to three law enforcement sources. The arrest, by the FBI-NYPD Crimes Against Children Task Force, comes about 12 years after the 66-year-old financier essentially got a slap on the wrist for allegedly molesting dozens of underage girls in Florida.

For more than a decade, Epstein’s alleged abuse of minors has been the subject of lawsuits brought by victims, investigations by local and federal authorities, and exposés in the press. But despite the attention cast on his alleged sex crimes, the hedge-funder has managed to avoid any meaningful jail time, let alone federal charges.

The new indictment—which, according to two sources, will be unsealed Monday in Manhattan federal court—will reportedly allege that Epstein sexually exploited dozens of underage girls in a now-familiar scheme: paying them cash for "massages" and then molesting or sexually abusing them in his Upper East Side mansion or his palatial residence in Palm Beach. Epstein will be charged with one count of sex trafficking of minors and one count of conspiracy to engage in sex trafficking of minors—which could put him away for a maximum of 45 years. The case is being handled by the Public Corruption Unit of the Southern District of New York, with assistance from the district's human-trafficking officials and the FBI.

Several of the billionaire's employees and associates allegedly recruited the girls for Epstein's abuse, and some victims eventually became recruiters themselves, according to law enforcement. The girls were as young as 14, and Epstein knew they were underage, according to details of the arrest and indictment shared by two officials.


Epstein's attorney Martin Weinberg declined to comment when reached by The Daily Beast on Saturday night. The SDNY also declined to comment.

“It’s been a long time coming—it’s been too long coming,” said attorney David Boies, who represents Epstein accusers Virginia Roberts Giuffre and Sarah Ransome. “It is an important step towards getting justice for the many victims of Mr. Epstein’s sex trafficking enterprise.

“We hope that prosecutors will not stop with Mr. Epstein because there were many other people who participated with him and made the sex trafficking possible," he told The Daily Beast.

In an era where #MeToo has toppled powerful men, Epstein’s name was largely absent from the national conversation, until the Miami Herald published a three-part series on how his wealth, power and influence shielded him from federal prosecution. For years, The Daily Beast has reported on Epstein’s alleged abuse, and his easy jail sentence and soft treatment by the U.S. Attorney’s Office, which ultimately scrapped a 53-page indictment against Epstein. An earlier version of Epstein’s plea deal included a 10-year federal sentence—before his star-studded lawyers threatened to go to trial in a case prosecutors feared was unwinnable, in part because Epstein’s team dredged up dirt on the victims, including social media posts indicating drug use.

Meanwhile, the financier flitted among his homes in Palm Beach, New York City, and the Virgin Islands, as well as his secluded Zorro Ranch in Stanley, New Mexico, transporting young women on his private jet to facilitate the sexual abuse that’s gone unchecked by authorities, his alleged victims say.

In an announcement planned for Monday the FBI is expected to provide a number for other victims to contact the SDNY.

As early as 2003, Vicky Ward’s Vanity Fair profile cracked into Epstein’s enigmatic facade and, as Ward noted, revealed “he was definitely not what he claimed to be.” Back then, allegations of sexual abuse leveled by one accuser, Maria Farmer, and her family were excised from Ward’s piece after Epstein pressured the magazine.

Epstein’s bust comes mere months after a federal judge ruled his 2007 non-prosecution agreement—secretly inked under former U.S. Attorney and current Labor Secretary Alexander Acosta—violated federal law by keeping Epstein’s victims in the dark. Under the sweetheart deal, Epstein dodged federal charges that might have sent him to prison for life. He instead pleaded guilty to minor state charges in Palm Beach, and served 13 months in a private wing of a county jail, mostly on work release.

The alleged victims, who sued the government for violating the Crime Victims’ Rights Act, asked the court to rescind Epstein’s non-prosecution agreement and called for the feds to hold him criminally liable. The NPA also granted immunity to Epstein’s co-conspirators, identified in the document as “including but not limited to Sarah Kellen, Adriana Ross, Lesley Groff, or Nadia Marcinkova.”

But in June, prosecutors for the government advised the judge to uphold the plea deal, saying that voiding it would “cause unintended harm to many of” the victims and jeopardize monetary settlements that more than a dozen of them received.

Epstein reportedly supplied valuable intel to federal investigators in exchange for his lenient plea deal; it’s been speculated this information may have been related to Bear Stearns executives’ alleged crimes in the lead-up to the 2008 financial crisis.

According to one Page Six report, Epstein lost $57 million in Bear Stearns’ collapse and was a victim identified as “Major Investor No. 1” in the indictment of hedge-fund managers Ralph Cioffi and Matthew Tanin. (A federal jury acquitted Cioffi and Tanin of securities fraud charges.) But in March 2019, FOX Business reported that Epstein “did not provide any meaningful cooperation to obtain his relatively light sentence in the hedge fund case or likely any case tied to the financial crisis.” Jack Goldberger, one of Epstein’s attorneys in the Palm Beach sex-crimes case, told FOX of the Bear Stearns’ prosecution, “Mr. Epstein was never spoken to by any of the authorities on this subject. He was a very large investor. No more, no less.”

One former federal prosecutor on the Bear Stearns case agreed. “Bottom line, I have no knowledge of Epstein cooperating in any way in the Bear Stearns case. There was no reason to use him,” the ex-prosecutor told FOX.

Epstein’s Victims
Once a math teacher at the elite Dalton School, Jeffrey Epstein left for Bear Stearns before starting his own firm, J. Epstein & Co., which supposedly only managed the fortunes of billionaires. Les Wexner, chairman of Limited Brands, is his only known client. (In April 2019, a new accuser came forward with claims that Epstein and his alleged madame, Ghislaine Maxwell, assaulted her at Wexner’s Ohio residence in the 1990s. Epstein, Maxwell and Wexner have not commented on these allegations.)

Epstein’s financial career has always been shrouded in mystery.

Over the years, Epstein billed himself as a renowned philanthropist and pledged $30 million for Harvard’s Program for Evolutionary Dynamics. He’s palled around with a host of famous faces including Donald Trump and Bill Clinton; the latter traveled with Epstein to Africa to address issues like economic development and AIDS.

In a 2002 profile in New York, one fellow Wall Streeter described Epstein as a “mysterious, Gatsbyesque figure” who “likes people to think that he is very rich” and “cultivates this air of aloofness.” Another prominent investor added: “He once told me he had 300 people working for him, and I’ve also heard that he manages Rockefeller money. But one never knows. It’s like looking at the Wizard of Oz—there may be less there than meets the eye.”

Vanity Fair’s 2003 take on Epstein compared him to the self-made Jay Gatsby, too. “The trading desks don’t seem to know him. It’s unusual for animals that big not to leave any footprints in the snow,” one insider told the magazine.

During his high-flying finance years, Epstein also allegedly harbored a dark secret: his widespread abuse of underage girls. In 2005, Palm Beach police launched an investigation into Epstein after a 14-year-old girl told police an older man named “Jeff” had molested her at his residence, a two-story pink mansion on a dead-end street.


Authorities would discover a disturbing teen sex ring, where victims were allegedly paid to recruit other young girls to provide “massages” inside Epstein’s lair. The victims would be led to Epstein’s bedroom, and Epstein would enter and order them to remove their clothing, police said. The financier would then assault them—sometimes forcing them into intercourse with him or a young woman he described as his “sex slave”—and pay them $200 to $1,000 per visit, according to court documents.

Police say Epstein’s massages were booked with the help of his personal assistants, including Sarah Kellen, who kept a rolodex of underage girls.

But as The Daily Beast previously reported, the state attorney’s office in Palm Beach declined to pursue serious charges against Epstein (filing only a single felony count of soliciting prostitution), claiming the girls weren’t credible. The local police chief, Michael Reiter, accused prosecutors of giving Epstein special treatment and in 2006 referred the case to the FBI. By May 2007, the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Miami drafted a 53-page indictment against Epstein, alongside an 82-page prosecution memorandum. That summer, however, Epstein’s lawyers worked to unravel the case, claiming Epstein wasn’t guilty of any federal crimes.

Epstein and the feds drew up a non-prosecution agreement in September 2007. Without informing any of the victims, the two sides decided that Epstein would plead guilty to a pair of state charges (solicitation of prostitution and procurement of minors for prostitution) and waive his right to contest damages, if the victims decided to sue him over the abuse. He also agreed to pay for the girls’ attorney’s fees.

Indeed, the NPA stated that “the United States, in consultation with and subject to the good faith approval of Epstein’s counsel, shall select an attorney representative for [the victims], who shall be paid for by Epstein.”

The NPA also granted immunity to any “potential co-conspirator” of Epstein’s and ensured the deal would “not be made part of any public record.”

Epstein could have faced multiple federal charges, the NPA noted, including: sex trafficking of children or by force, fraud or coercion, 18 U.S.C. 1591; the use of a facility or means of interstate commerce to entice minors into prostitution, 18 U.S.C. 2422(b); and traveling for the purpose of engaging in illicit sexual conduct with minors, 18 U.S.C. 2423(b). The document states Epstein might have committed those crimes from around 2001 to September 2007

Other women claim that Epstein’s alleged abuse spanned many years and many locations, according to civil court filings.

“Epstein could have faced multiple federal charges, the NPA noted, including sex trafficking of children or by force, fraud or coercion.”
In an April 2019 affidavit, a woman named Maria Farmer said she met Epstein and Maxwell sometime in 1995, at one of Farmer’s art shows in New York. In 1996, Epstein offered her a job to help him acquire art. But according to Farmer, she instead ended up manning the door at Epstein’s Upper East Side mansion and keeping records of his visitors.

Some of those visitors, Farmer claimed, were underage girls in school uniforms who would be led to an upstairs bedroom for what Maxwell called interviews for “modeling” positions. Farmer witnessed Epstein’s lawyer and friend, Harvard law professor Alan Dershowitz, head upstairs where the girls were present, the affidavit stated.

Dershowitz has denied Farmer’s accusations. “Maria Farmer stopped working for Epstein before I ever met Epstein,” Dershowitz told The Daily Beast. “It’s a totally perjured affidavit. It’s all totally made up. For her lawyers to submit these obviously perjured affidavits raises serious questions about their role in this case.”

In the summer of 1996, Epstein allegedly arranged for Farmer to work on a special art project at Leslie Wexner’s mansion in New Albany, Ohio. Farmer and her two younger brothers stayed at the property at the time.

Farmer claims Maxwell and Epstein sexually assaulted her at the Ohio property, and Wexner’s security team refused to let her leave. She said she tried calling the sheriff’s office but didn’t get a response. Her father had to drive from Kentucky to help her.

Once she returned to New York, Farmer visited the NYPD’s sixth precinct to report the Ohio assault, but officers there told her to contact the FBI. Farmer called the feds, but they didn’t appear to take any action, the affidavit states.



Trafficking Crimes
Kate Briquelet

Meanwhile, Farmer claims Epstein and Maxwell preyed on her 15-year-old sister, molesting her at Epstein’s ranch in New Mexico. Epstein also held her sibling’s hand at a New York movie theater, where he “was rubbing her in a sexual manner without my knowledge,” Farmer added.

“I was terrified of Maxwell and Epstein and I moved a number of times to try to hide from them,” Farmer stated of the powerful pair’s alleged threats against her and their alleged efforts to sabotage her reputation in the art world.

Another accuser, Virginia Roberts Giuffre, has long claimed that Epstein and Maxwell abused minor girls across the country and abroad, and that Epstein loaned his victims out to his famous friends, including Dershowitz and Prince Andrew.

Giuffre filed a declaration in 2015 as part of the Crime Victims’ Rights Act suit and detailed Epstein’s alleged sex ring. She said she met Epstein in 1999 after Maxwell approached her during her summer job at Mar-a-Lago. She was 15 years old.

Dershowitz and Prince Andrew vehemently denied Giuffre’s claims, and Buckingham Place quickly released a statement: “It is emphatically denied that HRH The Duke of York had any form of sexual contact or relationship with Virginia Roberts. The allegations made are false and without any foundation.”

“The story is totally made up,” Dershowitz told the BBC after Giuffre’s court filing made international headlines. He added, “My only feeling is if she’s lied about me, which I know to an absolute certainty she has, she should not be believed about anyone else.”

“It wasn’t just sexual training—they wanted me to be able to cater to all the needs of the men they were going to send me to.”


Maxwell allegedly offered Giuffre professional training in massages. But when Giuffre arrived at Epstein’s Palm Beach home, she was allegedly forced into sexual activity with the billionaire and would become trapped in his web.

She said that when she began “working” for Epstein, he flew her to New York on his private jet and molested her at his Manhattan mansion. “I was trained to be ‘everything a man wanted me to be,’” Giuffre said in the declaration. “It wasn’t just sexual training—they wanted me to be able to cater to all the needs of the men they were going to send me to.”

Maxwell and Epstein allegedly ordered Giuffre to pay attention to what the men wanted, so she could report back to them. Giuffre said she traveled with Epstein from 1999 through the summer of 2002, to his homes in New York, New Mexico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and Paris, France.

“I had sex with him often in these places and also with the various people he demanded that I have sex with,” Giuffre stated. “Epstein paid me for many of these sexual encounters. In fact, my only purpose for Epstein, Maxwell and their friends was to be used for sex.”


Giuffre added that “Epstein had sex with underage girls on a daily basis” and that his interest in minor girls was “obvious” to those in his orbit. His code word for this abuse was “massage,” and Maxwell would often have sex with the victims, too, Giuffre claimed.

Maxwell denied Giuffre’s claims as early as 2011, after Giuffre gave an interview to the Daily Mail, releasing a statement that claimed “the allegations made against me are abhorrent and entirely untrue and I ask that they stop.”

In 2015, Maxwell called Giuffre’s allegations “obvious lies,” and Giuffre filed a defamation suit against the socialite. The Miami Herald and other news outlets have asked the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit to unseal all pleadings in that case, which was settled in 2017. Paul Cassell, one of Giuffre’s lawyers, told the court that if the records are made public, they “will show that Epstein and Maxwell were trafficking girls to the benefit of his friends, including Mr. Dershowitz.”

Last week, the court ordered the release of sealed documents in the case.

Epstein allegedly forced Giuffre to have sex with Britain’s Prince Andrew at least three times, including during an orgy. (The court filing includes a photo of “Andy” putting his arm around Giuffre’s partially bare waist, while Maxwell smiles in the background.)

Giuffre said she was also forced to have sex with another Epstein confidant, Jean Luc Brunel, who runs the MC2 modeling agency.

Brunel supplied Epstein with girls as young as 12, luring aspiring models from poor countries or poor backgrounds to the United States, Giuffre alleged. “Jeffrey Epstein has told me that he has slept with over 1,000 of Brunel’s girls, and everything that I have seen confirms this claim,” Giuffre stated. (Brunel, in a previous statement, denied being involved “in the actions Mr. Jeffrey Epstein is being accused of” and said “I have exercised with the utmost ethical standard for almost 40 years.”)

Giuffre said she finally escaped Epstein’s abuse after he sent her to Thailand to learn Thai massage and to recruit another young girl for his alleged sex ring. Instead, Giuffre met her future husband and relocated to Australia.

Years later, in 2011, two FBI agents from Florida visited Giuffre to discuss Epstein. In another declaration, Giuffre said the investigators “seemed like they were being blocked from doing what they wanted to do—which I thought was to arrest Epstein and his powerful friends for all their illegal sexual crimes.”

In 2014, Giuffre tried to contact the FBI again for an update on the Epstein investigation. “I have never been able to figure out who was (and still is) stopping a prosecution,” Giuffre stated in the declaration.

“Because nothing is being done,” Giuffre added, “it makes me think that Epstein was right when he told me he had so many people in his pocket. Maybe those people are still helping him escape being prosecuted for what he did against me.
 
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Okay, I have to start making a timeline for this stuff to help me organize this, because this is so much bigger than I originally expected. There's gonna' be some speculation and there's probably gonna' be some half-crazy rambling, but if you want a wild ride, strap in. This isn't just circumstance and this isn't just another Pill Cosby/#MeToo situation, there's something seriously interesting going on under the hood in here so let me see if I can help people get up to speed:

Back at CPAC in 2015, Trump directly talked about Bill Clinton "Having a lot of problems coming up with that island." I'm sure everyone rolled their eyes at the time, but that is an eerily prescient statement, now. When Trump called out Epstein for "liking younger girls", I don't think that was an endorsement, I think that was a warning.

The very first thing that Trump did when he was sworn into office was to sign Executive Order 13773, (Presidential Executive Order on Enforcing Federal Law with Respect to Transnational Criminal Organizations and Preventing International Trafficking) and then shortly there-after he signed another law to shut down ads on places like Backpage, because they were caught peddling underaged people in sex ads. I'm sure plenty of you remember that happening; we had a thread about it.

Concerning EO 13773, we already have a case on-file that establishes a precedent: A former judge in Kentucky was railed with 20 years for participating in human trafficking, sexual acts with a minor, and his assets were siezed per the EO. It's on the books now, it's established, it's legal, and when Epstein gets hit with this, there goes his billions. How do I know this isn't just some fluke and they implicitly targeted Epstein? This may have flown under a few peoples' radars, but in February of this year the DOJ started investigating his "deal." I need to reiterate that because I genuinely think a lot of people missed that news: The DOJ went back to look at the "deal" that Epstein got following his conviction, and opened an investigation. If you know nothing about the deal that Epstein received, read this paragraph.

Anyways, not long after EO 13773 was signed--over the span of just a few weeks--Trump signed four more bills:


If you were involved in this fiasco and Epstein's island, why would you send the entire Department of Justice after something that would nail your own ass to the wall? This administration has been building its way up to Epstein this entire time. With E.O. 13773 in place and a precedent already set for the forfeiture, it means that Epstein won't be able to bribe, swindle or steal his way out of this.

Read this article, seriously. It describes how Epstein supposedly made his money and it makes absolutely no sense. He was a high-school math teacher who just "dove" headfirst into managing hedge funds for billionaires and they signed over power of attorney to him to the tune of $1,000,000,000 so he could do with it as he pleased. Supposedly he set up Epstein & Co. in 1982, but in 1982 there were only 13 billionaires in the world. All of them just handed a billion dollars to a math teacher who'd been on Wall Street for only six years? Seriously?

Was Epstein some sort of hyper-enigmatic billionaire-investor that's somehow generated wealth that leaves no traces, or was he blackmailing rich, powerful pedophiles for three decades? All of his money will be functionally useless if it was obtained through human trafficking, and considering that nobody knows where his money came from, I'm willing to stake a solid fuckin' bet that nearly every dime of his wealth wasn't obtained legally, and so every dime of that will be gone. They're already moving to seize his mansion in NYC.

I don't very often get excited but I am genuinely excited right now. Why would you go after the billionaire at the 'head of the hydra' instead of working your way up the chain unless you've already cut the chain?
Outstanding. Now all we need is a deck of cards.



I know the world is bigger than matters like this, but if all other things considered about Trump are true - that he's a puppet, an idiot, a stooge, a buffoon, a hoax...and he actually orchestrates the downfall of not just Epstein but Podesta, Clinton, and about a dozen others then the ride was worth it. Because honestly, seeing some of these people get irrevocably destroyed for being a part of this will fill me with joy.



Y'think ol' Hilldawg was in on it or you figure she was lying there coldly while Webb Hubbel put one in her oven 'cause Billy was playing hide the cigar with underage girls?
There was word on /pol/ that Bill did go to the island at least 26 times, she's been there at least 3.
 
Yeah, Clinton flew there 26 times. But the media is going to say something else, and the public will never realize that they're being lied to by the man on the television. In fact you are going to see measures taken to preemptively discredit the facts.

Be merry gentlemen, you get to watch a Government coverup in action
 
People should try to implicate Trump in this even if they like him.

Getting TDS autism focused on this would be good for stopping it from getting memory holed.
The problem I have with this is that it might get memory holed anyway in the form of it being solely focused on Trump with every other accomplice being ignored like the biggest red herring ever.
 
People should try to implicate Trump in this even if they like him.

Getting TDS autism focused on this would be good for stopping it from getting memory holed.

There's no way we have to try, the accusers are already trying to frame it about Trump, since they have TDS, just sit back and watch the show. They'll try to spin it about Vic, I mean Trump assaulting underage anime fangirls on social media. The main thing is the legal battle.

bust.jpg
 
I think this one goes deep. All the DOJ has to do is follow the money. The fact that the feds bagged him before he had a chance to hide all the evidence and start harassing witnesses must have him absolutely shitting himself, that explains him being so quick to offer a plea deal to roll over on his collaborators.
 
There's no way we have to try, the accusers are already trying to frame it about Trump, since they have TDS, just sit back and watch the show. They'll try to spin it about Vic, I mean Trump assaulting underage anime fangirls on social media. The main thing is the legal battle.

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It's bizarre how they don't even realize that Trump would never go after famous wealthy pedos if he was one of them the whole time. But then, what did I expect?
 
There's no way we have to try, the accusers are already trying to frame it about Trump, since they have TDS, just sit back and watch the show. They'll try to spin it about Vic, I mean Trump assaulting underage anime fangirls on social media. The main thing is the legal battle.

View attachment 832728
I wonder how many of these idiots realize that people have gone to jail for conspiracy for keeping silent when they knew crimes were occurring? Specifically, failure to report harm or sexual abuse of minor carries legal penalties.

She's bragging she knew, that she was flat out told, and expects everyone to applaud her for now coming forward to attempt to indulge in her TDS for ass pats?

Additionally, that line Trump said about Epstein practically drips with New York scorn. If you don't know what I mean, imagine that line you're reading being said by a Southern Matron with a smile on her face.

I'd love to see a lot of these fuckers go to jail. One of the most infuriating part of these Hollywood assholes trying to moralize at everyone is the fact you know they probably tweeted it with their dick in a kid's mouth. If they're guilty, and proven guilty in court of law, it would be nice to see these fuckers have the reminder that they aren't above the law, they aren't royalty, and this aint the Middle Ages.
 
If they even think about giving him the kind of deal that they gave him last time then I am flat-out fucking done. Do you know just how light his previous sentence was? Give that a read-over a few times and tell me that isn't the biggest sack of bullshit that you've ever read in your entire life. Not only did he only get 18 months in jail, but he was sentenced to a fucking "Club Fed" that he was allowed to leave for twelve hours a fucking day, and only served 13 months of that piss-ant sized prison sentence before being sent out on probation.

Unless he rats on every single motherfucker in his little black book, I hope never have to hear about Jeffrey Epstein getting a "deal" ever again. Everything about his previous case was bullshit from one wall to the other.
What if Epstein knows that his debauchery is a public secret and had his government connections arrest and try him so as to run interference & make sure he gets next to no punishment with a guilty verdict so they couldn't try him objectively, and he's doing it again for the same purposes and intends to do it for the rest of his life?
🤔
Jeffrey Epstein reportedly looked stunned and defeated when the courtroom was told about all the CDs they'd found along with the rape room that looked exactly as described by accusers 15 years ago.
How is a high profile billionaire pedo so dumb as to leave behind evidence like this? I know the obvious answer is that he's a boomer and, like, eighty years old but c'mon. It's like the only reason he got caught was because he let it happen.
 
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What if Epstein knows that his debauchery is a public secret and had his government connections arrest and try him so as to run interference & make sure he gets next to no punishment with a guilty verdict so they couldn't try him objectively, and he's doing it again for the same purposes and intends to do it for the rest of his life?
🤔

How is a high profile billionaire pedo so dumb as to leave behind evidence like this? I know the obvious answer is that he's a boomer and, like, eighty years old but c'mon. It's like the only reason he got caught was because he let it happen.

Arrogance. Trump was never meant to get to the White House, do you know how much time Hillary spent in campaign donor events for the wealthy?

fundraiser.jpg


The idea was, money was supposed to buy them the win, people are idiots, they will believe whatever their phones tell them to, they spent hundreds of millions of dollars. But Hillary was so unlikeable, and her interactions so much like an empress looking down from the ivory towers, that an opposition guy who had planned out how the campaign might go since 2000, who had hired independent pollsters, who had micromanaged every part of his campaign, who had run with policies that would resonate with the American people, was juuuust able to tip things in favor.

That's how much you can just buy peoples support.
 
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it's going to be great when the names start dropping especially if its trump and we are thrown into total chaos. whoever loses, the farms wins.



Debunking the biggest conspiracies around Jeffrey Epstein’s arrest
The recent sex trafficking arrest of previously convicted sex offender and billionaire Jeffrey Epstein set off a firestorm of rumors, hoaxes, conspiracy theories, and allegations.

Epstein is a renowned financier and philanthropist, known for a lavish lifestyle and celebrity friendships. He’s also a registered sex offender, having served over a year in federal prison in 2008. After serving 13 months of an 18-month sentence (that was called extraordinarily lenient by experts in the field), Epstein went back to his hedge fund and his private island in the Virgin Islands.


https://www.dailydot.com/layer8/jeffrey-epstein-conspiracies/link
But he’d been dogged by lawsuits, accusations of rape and sex with children, and even rumors of occult involvement. He was arrested again on July 6, accused of trafficking over 40 young girls to his various properties, the culmination of years of investigative research and law enforcement investigation.

Most of the rumors currently circulating about Epstein center on his high-profile relationships with both former president Bill Clinton and current president Donald Trump. Clinton is known to have flown a number of times on Epstein’s private plane, including to and from the small island Epstein owns that’s been at the center of many of the allegations.

But it’s not just a right-wing smear. It also ensnares the current commander-in-chief.

President Donald Trump is known to be a friend and business connection of Epstein, who had contact numbers in his infamous “little black book” for not only Trump, but Ivanka Trump and other Trump family members. Beyond that, the U.S. attorney who cut that deal for Epstein is now a member of Trump’s cabinet.

What happens in the future regarding Epstein is likely to drive a great deal of political discourse on both sides. Liberals will point the finger at Trump’s connections to Epstein, and conservatives will do the same for Bill Clinton. Ultimately, Epstein might take a lot of high profile people down with him, or he might just go down himself, unwilling (or unable) to give up dirt on others.

But there’s a whole other world of conspiracy theories and accusations that might never show up in official documents because they’re either made up to deflect attention from Trump’s link to Epstein, or taken completely out of context.

Here are just some of the rumors going around related to Epstein, and in particular, his link to Trump.

Donald Trump banned Jeffrey Epstein from Mar-a-Lago after Epstein was caught molesting an underage girl there

Trump had previously praised Epstein in a 2002 interview as a “great guy” he’d known for 15 years who liked women “on the younger side.”

While this quote has been thrown around quite a bit to link the two, Trump supporters have shot back with a fact of their own: that Trump barred Epstein from his Florida club (and future Winter White House) after being caught sexually assaulting the young daughter of a guest.

Notably, Trump has never made this claim, nor has Mar-a-Lago, or anyone connected to either one. There’s no indication as to when it happened, or who Epstein was with when he was “kicked out.”

No news outlet wrote about it either at the time, or afterwards. The only source of the claim is attorney Bradley Edwards, a lawyer who represented several women accusing Epstein of misconduct, who claimed that Trump banned Epstein after personally kicking him out of the club.

At best, this is hearsay that has never been confirmed. There’s also nothing about this action that would indicate Trump having something against Epstein. Even if the story of Trump banning Epstein from his property is true, it proves only that he didn’t want Epstein’s well-known behavior associated with his club and bringing it unwanted attention, not that he disapproved or wanted him arrested.

Trump was the “only one” to give testimony against Epstein related to a 2009 subpoena—showing just how much Trump was disgusted by Epstein’s conduct

This is another Bradley Edwards claim, made in an interview posted to YouTube in late 2018 where Edwards claimed Trump was “helpful” to him when gathering material for subpoenas in a civil suit Edwards was filing against Epstein. There’s no indication as to what Trump told Edwards in 2009, or that he spoke to him at all, or why Trump would be the only person who spoke to him.

This is simply an unsubstantiated claim.

Epstein got a light sentence for his 2008 guilty plea to soliciting sex from a minor because he became an FBI informant

Epstein’s lenient sentence for solicitation of a minor, just 18 months, of which Epstein served 13 in a minimum security work release, has been a millstone around the neck of former U.S. Attorney for Miami and current Labor Secretary Alex Acosta. Acosta is known to have made much of the sentencing deal private, with even Epstein’s victims not having access to it. And it was a far lighter sentence than most cases of that severity—all of which has led to accusations that it was a sweetheart deal.

Could the sentence have been so light because Epstein became an informant for the FBI?

It does have at least some evidence backing it up, as in 2018, the FBI released heavily redacted documents related to Epstein’s case, one of which featured the line: “Epstein has also provided information to the FBI as agreed upon.” What was that information? Did Epstein get a better deal because of it?

Nobody knows, though a number of outlets have speculated that it was about an unrelated investigation into executives at the crumbling financial giant Bear Stearns.

As part of his “FBI informing,” Epstein was let off the hook by then-FBI Director Robert Mueller

Robert Mueller was FBI Director at the time of Epstein’s plea, but there’s no evidence that Mueller personally had anything to do with Epstein’s case or investigation, much less his sentencing. In the end, it was Acosta, in his capacity with the U.S. Attorney’s office, who gave Epstein his light sentence, not the FBI, because the FBI doesn’t handle the prosecution of offenders. It wouldn’t be Mueller’s call to make.

Epstein’s private island of Little Saint James features a massive network of underground tunnels and torture chambers, all filled in by Epstein at a cost of $29 million, with a massive Satanic temple dotting the top of the island’s highest peak—a temple that recently burned down in a strange fire

Interesting, yes. But these are frequent claims of the QAnon conspiracy theory, and none of them have any compelling supporting evidence. None of the unsealed documents or mainstream reporting on Epstein mention any tunnels, temples, chambers, or rituals. Nor has any mainstream outlet reported on Epstein spending tens of millions of dollars to fill them in, or burn down any “occult temple” he owned.

At best, there was a golden-domed structure on the island that appears to not be there anymore, but there’s no indication as to what the building was—or that anything occult took place there.

After Epstein was arrested, Trump volunteered to give a statement to local police, who claimed that he “could not have been more forthcoming” about Epstein

This is another right-wing media claim, related to Epstein’s first arrest in 2007. But the claim has no substantiation, and no attribution has ever been tracked down for the initial quote, it’s merely attributed to “police.” It appears to be made up.

These claims have been gathered up and spread around social media as “proof” that Trump has no connection to Epstein, knew he was a scumbag, and indeed cooperated with both local police and attorneys to bring him down, only to be thwarted by Robert Mueller’s FBI. The reality is mostly unknown—but it’s clearly more complicated than this.

And Epstein’s crimes, both the ones he’s already done time for and the newest charges, are horrific enough without needing to make up rumors and stories.
 
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it's going to be great when the names start dropping especially if its trump and we are thrown into total chaos. whoever loses, the farms wins.

Oh come on, if everyone that these TDS drones loves goes to jail and Trump is completely exonerated, I think that would just drive them more insane. Who knows they might even break the conditioning and start walking into walls because they don't even trust their phones to tell them what to think anymore.
 
Weird, the more info that comes out, the quieter the people spewing the initial DNC talking points have gone.

Come on @Truthspeaker are you attending a strategy scrum to decide the new talking points in light of new information? Still working that spin? Tell the rest of the DNC gay social media team I said hi.

EDIT: Cleaned up grammar in an attempt to maintain the illusion that I'm not a complete moron.
 
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Everyone is talking about how Epstein will accidentally commit suicide, but the way the feds have him watched like a hawk, I'm not so sure. I think Bill is in the most danger.

Epstein is gonna roll on Bill. Bill is liable to spend the rest of his life behind bars. What's he got to save him? Dirt on Hillary. You think Barr and Trump's DOJ wouldn't jump at that?

If Hillary disposes of Bill, Epstein's accusations against Bill are irrelevant. Bill is not alive to defend himself and Hillary will just claim she was unaware.

In this scenario she probably gets caught for his murder because you know she can't resist taking out a little more life insurance on him first.

"This life insurance policy was signed last night. It's first thing in the morning and Bill is already dead. Don't you think that's an awfully big coincidence, Mrs Clinton?"
"No, life is just funny like that. Now where's my check? I need to mourn."
 
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