The long-standing scandal surrounding the disgraced late financier and convicted sexual criminal Jeffrey Epstein expanded on Tuesday after the New York Times published a group of invisible letters to Epstein from numerous powerful figures, as well as invisible photos from his interior in Manhattan.
It is reported that letters written to Epstein by a number of high-ranking persons are drawn up as a birthday gift for Epstein’s 63rd birthday in 2016. Their publication comes against the background of intensive speculation about Donald Trump with Epstein. Mighty.
In one letter, former Prime Minister of Israel Ehud Barak and his wife wrote “There is no limit to your curiosity.”
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“You are like a closed book for many of them, but you know everything about everyone,” they wrote, describing Epstein as a “human collector.”
They continued, “Can you enjoy a long and healthy life and let all of us, your friends, enjoy your table for many more years ahead.”
In a letter from the movie maker Woody Allen, Alan reminded of Epstein’s dinner at his city house at the top of the east country and described the gatherings as “always interesting”. He noted that parties include “politicians, scientists, teachers, magicians, comedians, intellectuals, journalists” and “even royalty.”
Alan also described the evenings as “well served”: “I say well served – it’s often from some professional homemade man and just as often from a few young women”, which he reminds him of “Dracula Castle, where Lugosi has three young female vampires that serve the place.”
It is reported that other letters writers include billionaire media tycoon Mortimer Zuckerman; Noam Chomsky and his wife; Joici Ito, the former leader of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT); Physicist Lawrence M Kraus; And Harvard biologist and mathematician Martin Novak.
Alan, Ito, Zuckerman and Novak did not respond to requests for comment from The Times. Barak was reported to declined to comment, and Chomsky’s wife replied on his behalf, also declined to comment. It is reported that Kraus told the Times that he did not remember the letter, but was present at “several lunches with many interesting discussions” with scientists, authors and others at Epstein’s house.
In addition to the letters, The Times also publishes photos from the seven Epstein Manhattan Monhattan estate.
In their office, the images show a taxiser-tiger and, according to the reports, show a green copy of the first edition of Lolita, the 1955-renowned novel about the sexual obsession of a middle-aged man and sexual abuse and rape of a 12-year-old girl-Times said it was “represented”.
Observation cameras can be seen in the bedroom of Epstein and adjacent room. In their “massage room” where many were casualties said That they were sexually attacked by Epstein, The Times reported that there were paintings of naked women, lubricant shelves and a large silver ball and chain.
Elsewhere in the house, dozens of frame photos show that Epstein is depicted along with longtime associated Ghislaine Maxwell, which is currently serving a 20-year sentence for sex trafficking. They also presented Epstein with remarkable figures such as Pope John Paul II, Mick Jagger, Elon Musk, Fidel Castro, Bill Clinton, Larry Summers, Richard Branson, Saudi Arabia Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and a former White House adviser to Trump.
A frame also showed a dollar banknote signed by Microsoft co -founder Bill Gates with the message “I was wrong!” which The Times said was “probably like paying a bet”.
The Times also reported that the entrance to the home included framed prosthetic eyeballs and that a hung sculpture of a woman dressed in a bridal gown and squeezed a rope hung in the central atrium.
According to the Times, a map of Israel attracted to a board that had the signature of former Israeli Prime Minister Barak, was also at home.
Epstein died in the federal arrest in 2019 while waiting for a lawsuit on federal allegations of sex trafficking. His death is managed suicide.
The updated control in Epstein’s case comes as Trump and members of his administration have repeatedly sworn to releasing information related to Epstein’s investigations.
But in July, the administration canceled the course and the Ministry of Justice announced that it would not publish additional documents or details about the case that encouraged bilateral outrage, including Trump supporters and conservative media.
Epstein’s case has long been the subject of countless conspiracy theories, partly because of his relationships with powerful people. His suicide for 2019 has also nourished conspiracy theories for years.
The recent message from the Ministry of Justice also reigned the attention of Trump’s long -standing friendship with Epstein.
In July, The Wall Street Journal announced that Trump claims he wrote an Epstein birthday card as part of an album on the 50th birthday organized by Maxwell in 2003.
According to the report, Trump’s letter included a sketch of a naked woman with Trump’s signature. Trump denied the magazine’s report and was suing a slander newspaper.
About a weekly layer, the magazine announced that the Ministry of Justice officials had informed Trump earlier this year that his name was appearing in the Epstein files. The document noted that the mention in the records was not a sign of misconduct. Trump’s spokesman denied the report, calling it “fake news.”
Faced with increasing pressure, the Ministry of Justice sent Todd Blanche, the Deputy General Prosecutor and one of Trump’s former lawyers to meet Maxwell at the end of July to see if she has “information for anyone who has committed crimes against victims.”
The meeting, which lasted two days, took place behind closed doors. On Friday, Maxwell was transferred from Florida prison to a lower-security facility in Texas.