NeuralPress

Published
1 view
Source 1
Source 2
Source 3
10 sources
Report
NeuralPress AI Verified Insights

Vetted by NeuralPress's Multi-Agent Verifier for strict factual validity and event relevance. Our compliance engine cross-checks and filters search results to ensure zero false correlations or misleading content.

Primary Sources

triloguenews.com
Jeffrey Epstein à Paris - triloguenews.com

L’« affaire Epstein » mérite d’être examinée d’un point de vue sociologique. Les millions de documents rendus publics par la justice ne renseignent pas seulement sur une exception criminelle : ils éclairent les fonctionnements d’une certaine fraction de l’élite, habituée des quartiers huppés. Comme le 16e arrondissement parisien. Jeffrey Epstein est né en 1953 dans une famille juive modeste de Brooklyn, un quartier populaire de New York, d’un père jardinier municipal et d’une mère assistante maternelle. Mais il devient vite extrêmement riche, en sachant tirer profit des rencontres fructueuses accumulées au fil des années (1). Sa relation avec M. Douglas Leese, un marchand d’armes britannique installé aux États-Unis, se révèle déterminante : il l’introduit au sein de l’oligarchie du Royaume-Uni, et son fils Nick le présente aux jeunes talents de Wall Street. Le milliardaire Leslie Wexner, rencontré à la même époque, lui ouvre également de nombreuses portes, notamment en lui confiant la gestion d’une partie de son patrimoine. En 1987, à seulement 34 ans, Epstein entre au conseil d’administration de la prestigieuse New York Academy of Art, ce qui lui permet d’étoffer son carnet d’adresses dans les mondes des arts et de la finance. Entouré de nombreux clients et amis richissimes, il amasse une telle fortune qu’il ne tarde pas à s’offrir un Boeing 727, puis une des îles Vierges, Little Saint James, dotée d’un statut très avantageux sur le plan fiscal. Rapidement, il vit entre plusieurs pays où il entretient de solides réseaux. La réussite d’Epstein tient largement à sa capacité à combiner les ingrédients traditionnels de la mayonnaise oligarchique. Fréquenter ainsi les puissants lui permet de s’enrichir, très vite, et lui autorise un mode de vie fondé sur l’appropriation de multiples ressources — parfois jusqu’aux formes les plus extrêmes de prédation, y compris des violences sexuelles contre de très jeunes femmes — avec un sentiment d’impunité. Les jets privés, un moyen de transport cinquante fois plus polluant que le train et cinq à quatorze fois plus qu’un vol commercial, constituent l’un des symboles les plus visibles de cet entre-soi défiant le « petit peuple » (2). En voyageant ainsi, les « premiers de cordée » ne courent aucun risque de croiser « ceux qui ne sont rien », selon les mots du président français Emmanuel Macron. Pour garantir leur tranquillité, les ultrariches disposent d’infrastructures spécifiques, comme l’aéroport du Bourget près de P...

triloguenews.com
britannica.com
Jeffrey Epstein | Death, Island, Sex Crimes, Files, & Facts - Britannica

Top Questions Who was Jeffrey Epstein? What did Jeffrey Epstein do? How did Jeffrey Epstein die? News • Jeffrey Epstein (born January 20, 1953, Brooklyn, New York, U.S.—died August 10, 2019, Manhattan) was an American financier and convicted sex offender who was accused of serial sex trafficking of women and girls. Through his successful financial career, Epstein became a multimillionaire and developed a social circle that included extremely wealthy individuals, prominent politicians, and even royalty. While jailed and awaiting a federal sex-trafficking trial, Epstein killed himself by hanging.In the wake of his 2019 death, the content of the so-called Epstein files—including who is named in them and in what context—became a topic that roiled both sides of the political aisle. During the second administration of U.S. Pres. Donald Trump, the call for the files to be made public became a national conversation, and the eventual release of thousands of documents only deepened the controversy around Epstein’s actions and his connections to powerful figures.What Are the Epstein Files: A Timeline More From Britannica Ghislaine Maxwell: Association with Jeffrey Epstein Early life Epstein was the first of two children born to Paula Epstein (née Stolofsky) and Seymour Epstein, who were themselves children of Jewish immigrants. His mother was a homemaker, and his father worked as a groundskeeper and gardener for the New York City Parks Department. The family lived in a middle-class neighborhood of Brooklyn known as Sea Gate, situated on the western shore of Coney Island. Epstein was a talented student who excelled in mathematics. He was also a skilled pianist. He attended Lafayette High School in Gravesend, Brooklyn, whose student body was mostly Italian American. It is thought that Epstein may have faced some antisemitism during his time there. He graduated in 1969, having skipped two grades. Later that year he enrolled at the Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art, where he studied until 1971, when he transferred to the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences at New York University (NYU). He studied at NYU for three years but did not graduate. Where did Jeffrey Epstein get his money? In 1974, despite not having a degree, Epstein began teaching physics and mathematics at the prestigious Dalton School in Manhattan, New York, many of whose students belonged to some of the wealthiest families in the country. Alumni include Anderson Cooper, comedian ...

britannica.com
macombdaily.com
How the Epstein files dogged Pam Bondi's time as attorney general

Pam Bondi's handling of the "Epstein files" became a stubbornly problematic storyline that ran through her time as attorney general.

macombdaily.com
justice.gov
Epstein Library - United States Department of Justice

This site houses materials responsive under the Epstein Files Transparency Act. This site will be updated if additional documents are identified for release. Some of the library's contents include descriptions of sexual assault. As such, please be advised that certain portions of this library may not be appropriate for all readers.

justice.gov