Jeffrey Epstein docs with names of associates to be made public: report

dirtyharry555

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Feb 7, 2011
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Let's see how this turns out.

The last batch of documents with the names of those associated with deceased financier Jeffrey Epstein will be unsealed in the near future, according to media reports.

The Daily Mail reported that the material is expected to be made public in the coming months, nearly four years after Epstein took his own life while incarcerated in a New York federal correctional facility. The documents are expected to contain the names of associates, victims, and employees connected to Epstein.

They refer to "alleged perpetrators" or those accused of "serious wrongdoing" as well as law enforcement officers and prosecutors.

Epstein was associated and friends with many public figures, including Bill Gates and former presidents Donald Trump and Bill Clinton. It was not clear if those names will be mentioned in the material. Prince Andrew who is accused of having sex with Epstein victim Virginia Roberts, now Virginia Giuffre, underage, and attorney Alan Dershowitz, are understood to be among the individuals mentioned in the papers, according to the Daily Mail report.

The documents have been sealed since Epstein killed himself in 2019 and were used in a defamation case brought by Roberts in 2015 against Ghislaine Maxwell, who was convicted of sex trafficking and recruiting minors for Epstein. The lawsuit was settled and the materials have been gradually released since.

Some of the people slated to be identified include John Doe 5, a victim who gave evidence at Maxwell's trial using only her first name, the report said. Another is an assistant district attorney.

Another is described as a "public figure" by Maxwell's lawyers who objected to the name becoming public. John Doe 23 is deceased but was accused of "serious wrongdoing", the documents state, according to the Daily Mail. They are not identified by name.
 

Addict2sex

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Bushdoc

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I'm normally not one to buy into any "conspiracy theories", but the official story of how a series of unfortunate mishaps led to his suicide, on suicide watch, is hard to swallow.

So now I'm expecting we'll be told the only copies of these documents spontaneously combusted.
 

downbound123

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Jul 10, 2017
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I'm normally not one to buy into any "conspiracy theories", but the official story of how a series of unfortunate mishaps led to his suicide, on suicide watch, is hard to swallow.

So now I'm expecting we'll be told the only copies of these documents spontaneously combusted.
I am sure Ghislaine Maxwell knows all the names too.
 

lomotil

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Oblivion
The powers that be who orchestrated Epstein’s murder or who facilitated his suicide have necessarily already redacted some of the names on the list.
 

mellowjello

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Jan 11, 2017
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I'll believe it when I see it.
Anybody who's somebody was wrapped up with this guy, it's inconceivable they would throw that many high powered people under the bus that way.
 
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The Oracle

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My guess is the level corruption and criminality is so deep here that it would cause major political upheaval if the contents were ever completely known.

Therefore they never will....Where's Julian Assange when we need him?
 

Knuckle Ball

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Oct 15, 2017
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Meanwhile…




Aaron Rodgers vs. Jimmy Kimmel was no accident. ESPN is playing an ugly game
An NFL great makes an outrageous, unfounded link between late-night TV host and Jeffrey Epstein. It’s another signpost of decline.


I don’t know what Jimmy Kimmel does in his private life and neither do you, most likely, but that’s not really the point. Aaron Rodgers is one of the great quarterbacks who has played America’s most popular sport, really one of the best there ever was, but that’s not really the point, either.

No, the point is that Pat McAfee may be the highest-paid employee at ESPN, which remains the biggest sports broadcaster in America, and on Tuesday Rodgers went on his show and implied that late night talk-show host Jimmy Kimmel might be one of the names on the list of disgraced financier and accused sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein’s flight logs. Kimmel, who shares an employer with McAfee, then said the allegations had put his family in danger, and sort of threatened Rodgers with legal action. Oops!

The notable part here wasn’t that Aaron Rodgers spouted bog-standard, internet-brained conspiracy theories; that appears to be a large part of what he does now, as a lifestyle. He’s like millions of other Americans in this way, and Canadians while we’re at it. He’s lost in the internet fever swamps, wrestling with illusions and fantasies that seem real to him, all the while imagining that he’s Indiana Jones.

But everybody knows that, and McAfee perhaps most of all, because his show pays Rodgers to come on once a week to trash Anthony Fauci or claim he rehabs his torn Achilles tendon by listening to dolphins copulating or whatever. This particular segment didn’t start out talking about Jimmy Kimmel, or the Epstein list. It was a freewheeling discussion about bad officiating and the idea that the NFL is scripted — rigged, in other words. This idea had recently spread, in McAfee’s words, to “the whole internet.”

I guess, sure. It’s actually an old idea if you’ve ever sat in a bar where people talk about sports. The idea that big markets are favoured arises in every sport, and it even bubbles into some front offices in over-emotional moments. Rodgers added the latent semi-conspiracy that the official Super Bowl logo has included colours from participating teams the last two years, and this year has red and purple in it and Baltimore and San Francisco are the two best teams in football, so maybe this is all rigged? People talk about this on the internet now, apparently.

Side note: Humans as a species used to be bored all the time. Remember being bored? Like, sitting in your house waiting for someone to call you on a summer day with nothing to do? We used to have to learn how to be bored. Living this way is just exhausting.

So, Rodgers was talking about some stupid crap he saw on the internet. No problem. Everything was under control. And then McAfee co-host and former NFL linebacker A.J. Hawk, who has the unnerving air of a man who could comfortably watch a plane crash without blinking, interjected.

“Does this have something to do with the Epstein list that came out?" prodded Hawk.

And Rodgers sniggered, “That's supposed to be coming out soon. There's a lot of people, including Jimmy Kimmel, who are really hoping that doesn't come out."

So, a show on ESPN, owned by Disney, featured baseless allegations that another high-profile employee of Disney is a possible pedophile, or at least a friend of pedophiles, and the show itself started it. That is how you know McAfee and company know exactly what they are doing under the guise of, as McAfee said in his day-after bit of disingenuous damage control, “s--t talking.”

Kimmel has made fun of Rodgers’s forays in pseudo-science and conspiracy; Rodgers has latched onto the right-wing shibboleth about Epstein’s list proving that elites are corrupt. The American right is increasingly of the belief that its opponents are pedophiles, and that death threats are free speech.

And Hawk knew that if he brought it up, Rodgers would say something that would get the show noticed. This wasn’t an accident, except perhaps of history.

It’s another little signpost of decline. Imagine being one of the fine journalists ESPN has fired or laid off in the past few years as its cable revenues have started to erode. Imagine being an LGBTQ ESPN employee when Rodgers slams the medical establishment as “the alphabet mafia,” which he also did Tuesday. Yes, yes, ESPN is bleeding money and chased McAfee to compete with the bro attention economy, and the Barstools and Joe Rogans of the world. Yes, TSN rebroadcasts the show in Canada. A request for comment from TSN was not returned.

But the problem with that is that bro ethic is eventually going to say something sexist, or homophobic, or in this case potentially actionable. S--t talking on American TV in 2024 means eventually your brain-poisoned celebrity quarterback will accuse another celebrity of being a pedophile, and your bro host has to say: Hey, we were just messing around. In a week, Rodgers will probably claim that the mainstream media took him out of context because they’re afraid of the truth, and McAfee and Hawk will laugh and say sometimes free speech is controversial.

And if ESPN lets it keep happening on its airwaves — if they send lawyers to calm Kimmel and warn McAfee — then we’ll just know they are sliding further away from not just the standards of broadcast journalism, but of televised sports talk. And Rodgers will keep talking, and eventually he will return to this little fantasy. And if he does, well, I don’t personally have much of an opinion on Jimmy Kimmel, except for this one: he should sue.
 
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