Highlights: Epstein Estate Documents - Batch 7 / TEXT / 002
https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fo/9bq6uj0p ... tracking=1
In June 2021, High Court of Justice in London issued a claim, according to which Hamad bin Jassim's private office was at the heart of clandestine routes by which money was transferred to an Al-Qaeda affiliate in Syria, the Al-Nusra Front.
In March 2022 Hamad bin Jassim said to a Qatari television that the Military Operations Command in Jordan and Turkey have spent $2 trillion to remove Syria's President Bashar al-Assad.
Hamad has worked actively to settle political conflicts in both Africa and the Middle East over the last 20 years.
Hamad facilitated the agreement that led to a unity constitution in Yemen in May 1990, ratified by the populace in May 1991. It affirmed Yemen's commitment to free elections, a multiparty political system, the right to own private property, equality under the law, and respect of basic human rights. Parliamentary elections were held on 27 April 1993.
In 1996, he worked to settle a brief war between Eritrea and Yemen over the Hanish Islands. As part of the agreement to cease hostilities the two nations agreed, through the negotiating effort of Hamad, to refer the issue to the Permanent Court of Arbitration at The Hague in 1998. Yemen was granted full ownership of the larger islands while Eritrea was awarded the peripheral islands to the southwest of the larger islands. Since then relations between the two governments have remained relatively normal.
Hamad was instrumental in creating the peace settlement between Sudan and Eritrea in 1998. The un-demarcated border with Sudan had posed a problem for Eritrean external relations for most of the nation's existence. He negotiated a peace settlement between Sudan and Eritrea. After the agreement was signed, relations somewhat normalized.
In 2007, Hamad helped organize the Lebanese national dialogue and the peace agreement between various Lebanese political groups to end the worst internal fighting in Lebanon since the civil war of 1975–1990. In an attempt to resolve a broader political showdown that had paralyzed the country for 18 months, Hamad summoned the Lebanese government and Hezbollah-led opposition to Qatar for talks. He declared an agreement sponsored by the Arab League to deal with the Lebanese crisis. In the agreement the parties pledged, “to refrain from returning to the use of weapons or violence to realize political gains." The Lebanese government furthermore committed itself to introduce a new electoral law designed to provide better representation in the country's sectarian system of power sharing.
He participated in mediation of ceasefire in Yemen between the Government of Yemen and the Houthi Movement in 2007. In 2010, the two parties agreed to activate the agreement after confrontations threatening the ceasefire. The mediation ended a six-year war between the two sides.
In 2009, Hamad participated in brokering a peace agreement to end the conflict in Darfur (The "Goodwill and Confidence Building Pact") between the government of Sudan and Justice and Equality Movement. The pact also opened up to the rest of factions in Darfur.
In 2009, he assisted in the settlement agreement between Sudan and Chad. The civil war in Chad began in December 2005. On February 8, 2006 the Tripoli Agreement was signed, which temporarily stopped the fighting. However, hostilities resumed after two months, leading to several new agreement attempts and a final settlement between the two parties in 2009.
In 2010, he led the mediation efforts that resulted in the signing of a peace agreement between Djibouti and Eritrea to settle their border dispute and thereby paving the way for broader peace talks to end the six-year conflict in the region. According to the negotiated peace declaration, the two parties pledged to give peaceful means a "strategic priority to settle the conflict in Darfur", and to take the required measures to create "an opportune environment to achieve a lasting settlement", including the halting of "inconvenience to the displaced and ensuring the flow of relief aid". The parties furthermore committed themselves to prisoners swap and the release of those who were detained due to the dispute.
Hamad also has been involved in ongoing efforts between Fatah and Hamas to achieve Palestinian reconciliation to activate the peace process with Israel.
He has facilitated the release of prisoners, including the five Lebanese prisoners in Eritrea. He supported the effort to release Nawaz Sharif, the former Prime Minister of Pakistan from jail, and was instrumental in freeing the Bulgarian nurses in Libya from prison. He has opened Qatar to political refugees in the Muslim and Arab worlds. During the Bosnian conflict of the 1990s, he secured large quantities of food, medicine and other items to the Bosnian population.
In November 2010 he launched the Humanitarian Appeal 2011 in Doha, together with the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) and the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). The initiative was set to help improve the living conditions for millions of people affected by humanitarian crises around the world. The initiative was attended by 85 representatives of 85 representatives from EU Member States, the European Commission, the Council of the European Union, beneficiary countries, UN and NGOs.
Legal issues
BAE Systems
Following courting by Michael Portillo, Qatar entered into an arms deal worth £500 million with BAE Systems. £7 million was transferred into two trusts in Jersey of which Hamad was named as a beneficiary. In an attempt to prevent money laundering, the funds were frozen from 16 July 2000 by the Jersey Financial Services Commission, who then began a court case and investigation. Hamad paid the Jersey authorities £6 million as a "voluntary reparation" as "the structures put in place by his advisers may have contributed to the cost and complexity of the inquiry." The case was then dropped by the Jersey authorities....
Positions and opinions
At a 2015 speech at the Chatham House, a London-based think tank, Hamad warned the Israelis, reminding them that they are surrounded by 400 million Arabs, saying "you have the upper hand now but you are surrounded. Accept the 1967 boundaries, the two state solution. Your superiority will not last forever. Solve (the Palestinian question) and terrorism is defused."
El Corte Inglés
In 2010 Hamad acquired 10% of El Corte Inglés in Spain, the country's largest department store chain. For this transaction he used a local "figurehead", David Barreiro Nogaledo, who was investigated by the Regional Court in Madrid for a potential case of Money Laundering and misappropiation. The same "figurehead" tried to make Hamad invest, in 2019, in another Spanish Company, Laboratorios Larrasa, accused afterwards of Fraud in Spain and Brazil...
Psychic theft
In 2022, Hamad was the victim of a $90 million jewellery theft. The incident, kept largely out of the media until mid-2023, came to light when a rare pink diamond was pulled from a Christie's auction in New York. The theft was carried out through a years-long manipulation of Al Thani's personal assistant, referred to as "Magdalena" in US court documents. She was deceived by a man posing as a psychic named "Giovanni", who persuaded her to send 17 uninsured pieces of Al Thani's jewellery by mail for “spiritual cleansing.” The man, later identified as John Lee, was arrested by the FBI in November 2022. Investigations revealed that Lee had profited from psychic services and later scaled the grift after learning of Magdalena's high-profile employer. The FBI recovered much of the stolen jewellery, including the altered pink diamond.
Business and wealth
Hamad bin Jassim bin Jaber Al Thani is one of the richest people in the world, having overseen Qatar's $230 billion sovereign wealth fund until 2013. He has been named "the man who bought London" by British tabloids; his holdings in London include the Shard, Harrods, and the InterContinental London Park Lane. It was reported that Hamad bin Jassim bin Jaber Al Thani bought Banque Internationale à Luxembourg and KBL European Private Bankers via Precision Capital, making one of the largest banking groups in Luxembourg.
According to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filing, he also owns 3.05% shares of the Deutsche Bank, via Paramount Services Holdings Limited; his relative, Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani (former emir of Qatar), via another company Supreme Universal Holdings, owns 3.05% of the shares. Part of Hamad bin Khalifa's stake was sold by Hamad bin Jassim bin Jaber.
In May 2015, Hamad purchased Picasso's Les Femmes d'Alger (Version O) for $179.4 million including fees, a record price for a painting at auction. He also owns a super-yacht, the Al Mirqab, worth $300 million.
In 2021, the Sunday Times Rich List estimated his net worth at £2 billion.
In 2025, Hamad was involved in a high-profile legal and public relations dispute with Irish property magnate Paddy McKillen.
Multiple news reports and arbitration-industry sources indicate that during late 2025 McKillen has been awarded between £700 million and £800 million in arbitration against Hamad and associated Qatari owners in relation to the deferred-payment dispute, with the award described as one of the largest of its kind.
RICO Claim and Hacking Allegations
In September 2025, Patrick McKillen and his firm filed a federal RICO lawsuit alleging that Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim bin Jaber Al Thani (HBJ), members of his family, and associated Qatari entities orchestrated an extensive hacking and intimidation scheme targeting McKillen’s devices, personal data, and communications to pressure him into abandoning financial claims; the complaint also asserts that this cyber-intrusion campaign formed part of a broader effort to defraud McKillen by inducing him to manage and redevelop luxury-hotel assets while secretly intending to withhold the promised compensation.
Use of Private Aircraft by US president
In May 2025, reports emerged that US president Donald Trump was considering acquiring a Boeing 747-8 aircraft owned by Hamad. The aircraft, bearing the tail number P4-HBJ, was originally delivered to Qatar Amiri Flight in 2012 but later transferred to Global Jet Isle of Man and used privately by Hamad after his retirement from political office. Although some media initially described the jet as a "gift from Qatar," subsequent reporting clarified that the aircraft was no longer owned by the Qatari state but was instead part of Hamad’s private portfolio of assets. The incident drew criticism from observers and protest groups, who highlighted Hamad's past support for Hamas and alleged misuse of wealth and political influence following his departure from government service.
-- Hamad bin Jassim bin Jaber Al Thani, by Wikipedia
[/quote]Confronted with multiple errors in his new Trump book, a testy Michael Wolff says, 'You have to trust me'
by Michael Isikoff, Chief Investigative Correspondent
yahoo.com/news
Updated Sat, June 8, 2019 at 11:12 AM PDT
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After portraying himself as a reliable chronicler of Donald Trump’s White House, author Michael Wolff is taking a page from the president when confronted with the multiple factual errors in his new book, “Siege: Trump Under Fire.”
“Even if I was wrong, I’m not going to admit it to you,” said Wolff in an interview for the Yahoo News podcast “Skullduggery.”
Wolff, in that case, was refusing to back down on one of his relatively minor mistakes: He claimed in one passage of his book that former Associate Attorney General Rachel Brand — briefly a possible candidate to oversee the Russia investigation — was nominated by President Obama. In fact, she was nominated by Trump.
But talking about his new book, Wolff stuck to the same no-apologies, no-retreat line about a host of other more consequential errors and questionable claims, including his sensational assertion that he has copies of a March 2018 draft indictment of Trump prepared by special counsel Robert Mueller’s office charging the president with three counts of obstruction of justice.
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Mueller’s office said that the documents described by Wolff “do not exist,” and Mueller himself, in his only statement to the press, emphasized that due to Justice Department legal opinions, “charging the president with a crime was therefore not an option we could consider.”
Wolff remains unrepentant and insists he’s obtained material proving a planned indictment that nobody else covering the Mueller probe has been able to get their hands on — or even confirm exists. “There’s no other reporter who’s produced documents or even claims to produce documents,” he said. “I am the only person who might begin to claim to have some insight here.”
In the “Skullduggery” interview, Wolff repeatedly brushed aside questions about the authenticity of his claimed documents, including why the title of the supposed indictment he quotes from — “United States of America Against Donald J. Trump” — is conspicuously different than the wording used in all other Justice Department indictments. (They read “United States of America v” the defendant, not “against.”)
“Maybe not draft indictments, maybe not this, I don’t know,” Wolff said when asked about the odd wording on his claimed indictment. “All I am doing is quoting from two things: a document given to me by an incredibly authoritative source ... and a document, on its face, that is incredibly convincing.”
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Michael Wolff. (Photo illustration: Yahoo News; photo: Carolyn Kaster/AP)
But it is not clear how convincing Wolff’s document is either. Wolff claims one of the supposed grounds on which Mueller’s office was planning to indict Trump was the president’s alleged attempt to interfere with testimony by FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe and efforts to retaliate against him. Yet none of the 10 episodes of potential obstruction detailed in Mueller’s final report even mention the events surrounding McCabe’s testimony or retaliation against him.
Wolff was also questioned about other apparent errors in his latest book:
Wolff wrote that in April 2018, when the FBI searched his residence and office, Michael Cohen “sat handcuffed for hours in his kitchen.” But Cohen was never arrested or charged with a crime that day, making it implausible that he would have been handcuffed. Cohen’s lawyer Lanny Davis said in a text to Yahoo News that “neither Michael Cohen nor his wife nor anyone else was handcuffed during the FBI search.”
“I have no idea on the basis on which someone is handcuffed,” said Wolff when asked about his claim that Cohen had been handcuffed. “I know that the description of the scene that was given to me, again, a very good source on this, had him sitting in the kitchen in handcuffs.”
Wolff wrote that Don McGahn, Trump’s pick for White House counsel, had never worked “anywhere in government.” In fact, McGahn had served as chair and vice chair of the Federal Election Commission, during a five-year stint with the agency.
Wolff also insisted, wrongly, that the FEC “is not a part of the government.”
Wolff wrote that former Obama White House counsel Kathy Ruemmler had been the “previous occupant” of McGahn’s office. In fact, she had left the White House in 2014, and Neal Eggleston was McGahn’s predecessor.
Wolff wrote that President Bill Clinton “could hardly stomach his Attorney General Janet Reno, having to weather the blow back from her decisions regarding Ruby Ridge.” In fact, the siege at Ruby Ridge, Idaho — a site where an armed family of right-wing zealots were surrounded by federal agents — took place in August 1992, when William Barr was attorney general, not Reno.
The exchange over Wolff’s multiple mistakes grew testy at times.
“You get all these things wrong and then you ask us to trust you,” this correspondent said to Wolff.
“No, you get these things wrong,” Wolff retorted. “This critique is bulls***!”
Wolff insisted that none of the questions about his accuracy matter or are significant, noting that he had faced many of the same criticisms about his last book, “Fire and Fury.”
“The object of this book, as with the last book — and I remember I went through the same thing with the last book … is about trying to re-create life in Trump world,” he said. “It’s trying to give readers a sense of what this experience is, of what goes on here, of the tenure, of the language, of the emotional life of Trump world.”
Wolff claimed that due to being a New York-based journalist for the last 40 years, “I know these people. I have an access here that most other people involved in this story do not have.”
Yet most of Wolff’s sources are anonymous, with the notable exception of Steve Bannon, the former White House strategist who was banished from Trump world in August 2017 and hasn’t spoken to the president ever since.
Pressed on his sourcing, and whether he would release copies of the supposed Mueller draft indictment memos he claims to have gotten, Wolff averred. He couldn’t release copies, he said, because that might expose one of his anonymous “authoritative” sources.
“You just have to trust me,” he said.
President Donald Trump on witness list in Palm Beach lawsuit involving billionaire pedophile
by Dan Christensen
FloridaBulldog.org
March 14, 2017
https://www.floridabulldog.org/2017/03/ ... pedophile/
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President Trump and Jeffrey Epstein
President Donald Trump is on a list of witnesses for trial in a Palm Beach lawsuit that pits billionaire pedophile Jeffrey Epstein against a Fort Lauderdale attorney who represents Epstein’s victims.
The case appears bound for trial this summer following a Feb. 9 ruling by the Florida Supreme Court in another case that has allowed Fort Lauderdale lawyer Bradley Edwards’ claim of malicious prosecution against Epstein to proceed.
President Trump “has been identified as an individual who may have information relating to these allegations,” said Edwards’ West Palm Beach attorney Jack Scarola, who placed Trump’s name on a witness list on Aug. 31. “But it’s unlikely that he would ever be called” to appear at trial, especially now that he’s assumed the presidency.
Scarola said Trump is one of a number of high-profile individuals whose testimony might be relevant because they “had a relationship with Epstein that would have at least exposed them potentially to what was going on inside Epstein’s Palm Beach home … during the relevant period of time” between 2001-2007.
What was going on in Epstein’s mansion, court papers say, was an ugly child molestation scheme involving sex with “substantially more” than 40 girls, some as young as 12. A “statement of undisputed facts” filed by Scarola says Epstein used his staff and his victims to recruit more victims, employing “a pyramid abuse scheme in which he paid underage victims $200-$300 cash for each other underage victim that she brought to him.”
“There is no evidence the President was involved in Epstein’s schemes,” Scarola said.
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Secretary of Labor nominee Alex Acosta
Still, the spectacle of a U.S. president being drawn into sordid litigation involving a notorious politically connected sexual criminal who got an apparent sweetheart deal from then-Miami U.S. Attorney Alex Acosta, now Trump’s nominee to become U.S. Secretary of Labor, represents a potential political nightmare for the White House.
The White House press office did not respond to requests for comment.
Epstein’s attorney, Tonja Haddad Coleman, declined to comment.
An affidavit about Trump
A little-noticed affidavit by Edwards recounting his knowledge of Trump’s involvement with Epstein is recounted further below in this story.
Investment banker Epstein, represented by a team of high-powered lawyers, pleaded guilty June 30, 2008 in Palm Beach Circuit Court to two felonies: procuring a person under 18 for prostitution and offering to commit prostitution. He served 13 months of an 18-month sentence. The Palm Beach Daily News has reported Epstein served his time in “a vacant wing at the Palm Beach County Stockade with liberal work-release privileges.”
Today, Epstein, 64, is a registered sex offender.
In exchange for his plea, U.S. Attorney Acosta agreed not prosecute Epstein or his employees on federal charges contained in a 53-page indictment. A 2007 federal non-prosecution agreement with Epstein states, among other things, that he “knowingly and willfully” conspired with others to use interstate commerce to “persuade, induce, or entice minor females to engage in prostitution.”
If convicted of that charge, and others cited in the agreement, Epstein faced possible prison for life.
Republican Acosta, dean of Florida International University’s Law School and chairman of U.S. Century Bank, is expected to be asked about his treatment of Epstein at his Senate confirmation hearing on Wednesday.
In addition to the malicious prosecution claim against Epstein, attorney Edwards is also suing the government on behalf of “Jane Doe 1 and Jane Doe 2” and others under the federal Crime Victims’ Rights Act (CVRA). The lawsuit, filed in 2008, alleges the U.S. Attorney’s Office under Acosta violated the rights of Epstein’s victims by, among other things, “conspiring” with Epstein to keep them “in the dark’’ so the plea arrangement could be done without the victims “raising any objection.”
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Wifredo Ferrer, who stepped down as Miami U.S. Attorney earlier this month
In February 2016, Edwards and co-counsel Paul Cassell filed a still-pending motion for summary judgment that says Acosta’s successor, Wifredo Ferrer, “has continued to fight” victims’ efforts “to have the court declare that their rights were violated.” The motion asks U.S. District Judge Kenneth Marra to rule that the government violated the victims’ rights and explore possible remedies. Ferrer stepped down March 3.
Addressing a “terrible injustice”
“Both Brad and Professor Cassell undertook and have continued to prosecute the CVRA claim to address what they perceive to be a terrible injustice,” said Scarola. “There is no claim for money damages and there is no prevailing party provision in the CVRA” that would allow them to collect legal fees for their work on the case.
Attorney Edwards began representing several of Epstein’s victims while maintaining a solo law practice in 2008, settling a number of claims for undisclosed amounts two years later.
For eight months in 2009, however, he worked for Rothstein, Rosenfeldt and Adler, the law firm that spectacularly imploded in scandal in November of that year when it was discovered that founder Scott Rothstein was running a giant Ponzi scheme. Rothstein, now in prison, enticed investors by falsely claiming that they could buy into lucrative pending settlements in whistleblower, sexual harassment and other cases.
Edwards’ court papers say he knew nothing of Rothstein’s schemes, and federal authorities later determined Edwards to have been one of Rothstein’s victims. In 2009, however, Epstein sued Rothstein, Edwards and one of Edwards’ clients alleging, among other things, civil racketeering. Edwards’ court response: the suit was filed “for the sole purpose of attempting to intimidate” him and his client.
Epstein later dropped all his allegations, and Edwards since has turned the case back against him with his counterclaim of malicious prosecution. The case was on hold for two years pending last month’s Florida Supreme Court ruling, which reversed a lower court decision that dismissed the accusation on technical grounds.
Edwards won’t discuss either case. But in a little-noticed 2010 affidavit, given a year after the case was filed, Edwards explained why he thought Trump and other notables involved with Epstein, including former President Bill Clinton, might have relevant information to provide.
“If you’ve read Brad’s affidavit then you know everything there is to know regarding Trump,” Scarola said.
Does Trump have knowledge of Epstein’s crimes?
In his affidavit, Edwards suggests Trump has personal knowledge of Epstein’s criminality.
“I learned through a source that Trump banned Epstein from his Maralago [Mar-A- Lago] Club in West Palm Beach because Epstein sexually assaulted an underage girl at the club,” Edwards stated.
The affidavit notes that Trump visited Epstein at Epstein’s West Palm Beach home – “the same home where Epstein abused minor girls daily.”
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Fort Lauderdale attorney Bradley Edwards
A “review of message pads confiscated from Epstein’s home” showed “that Trump called Epstein’s West Palm Beach mansion on several occasions during the time period relevant to my client’s complaints,” the affidavit says. Likewise “Epstein’s phone directory from his computer contains 14 phone numbers for Donald Trump, including emergency numbers, car numbers, and numbers to Trump’s security guard and houseman.”
The affidavit goes on to say that one of Epstein’s victims “Jane Doe #102” has alleged that she was initially approached at Trump’s Mar-A-Lago by Ghislaine Maxwell and recruited to be Maxwell and Epstein’s “underage sex slave.”
Maxwell, daughter of the late British publishing baron Robert Maxwell, is named in the affidavit as an Epstein associate of interest. She is described in court papers as Epstein’s “longtime companion” who helped run his companies and “recruit underage children” for the pleasure of both Epstein and herself. The affidavit says she attended the wedding of Chelsea Clinton, Bill and Hillary Clinton’s daughter, in July 2010.
The affidavit goes on to cite the 2009 deposition of Epstein’s brother, Mark Epstein, who “testified that Trump flew on Jeffrey Epstein’s plane with him (the same plane that Jane Doe 102 alleged was used to have sex with underage girls).”
Likewise, attorney Edwards cited in his affidavit a 2002 New York Magazine article about Epstein titled, “Jeffrey Epstein: International Moneyman of Mystery.”
“I’ve known Jeff for fifteen years. Terrific guy,” said Trump, then a prominent, wealthy New York developer. “He’s a lot of fun to be with. It is even said that he likes beautiful women as much as I do, and many of them are on the younger side. No doubt about it – Jeffrey enjoys his social life.”
The subtitle of the article about Epstein: “He’s pals with a passel of Nobel Prize-winning scientists, CEOs like Leslie Wexner of the Limited, socialite Ghislaine Maxwell, even Donald Trump. But it wasn’t until he flew Bill Clinton, Kevin Spacey, and Chris Tucker to Africa on his private Boeing 727 that the world began to wonder who he is.”
A second U.S. president
While ex-President Clinton is not on the witness list for trial, Edwards listed a number of reasons in his affidavit to believe that Clinton might have relevant information about Epstein. They include:
· Clinton’s “well known” friendship with Ghislaine Maxwell, an alleged enabler of Epstein’s sexual crimes with young girls.
· Clinton’s highly publicized travel with Epstein and Maxwell aboard Epstein’s private plane to Africa. Flight logs for “the relevant years 2002-2005 showed Clinton traveling on Epstein’s plane on more than 10 occasions and his assistant, Doug Band, traveled on many more occasions.” The logs also showed Clinton traveled with other “employees and/or co-conspirators of Epstein’s that were closely connected to Epstein’s child exploitation and sexual abuse.”
· “Jane Doe No. 102 stated generally that she was required by Epstein to be exploited not only by Epstein but also Epstein’s ‘adult male peers, including royalty, politicians, academicians, businessmen and/or other professional and personal acquaintances’ – categories Clinton and acquaintances of Clinton fall into.”
Ex-President Bill Clinton
· “Clinton frequently flew with Epstein aboard his plane, then suddenly stopped – raising the suspicion that the friendship abruptly ended, perhaps because of events related to Epstein’s sexual abuse of children.”
· Epstein’s computer contact list “contains e-mail addresses for Clinton along with 21 phone numbers for him.”
Attorney Scarola would not say why Clinton is not on the Aug. 31 witness list, stating he is “not at liberty to discuss our litigation strategy.”
Edwards initially sought to depose Trump and Clinton about Epstein, but never did. Scarola said there was no need to depose them after Epstein dropped his racketeering and other claims against Edwards.
While there are other notables on the witness list of those with knowledge of Epstein, including retired Harvard University law professor Alan Dershowitz and illusionist David Copperfield, there’s only one other politician. That’s ex-New Mexico Governor and Clinton Administration Secretary of Energy Bill Richardson.
The affidavit says Epstein’s personal pilot, Larry Morrison, testified in a 2009 deposition about “Richardson joining Epstein at Epstein’s New Mexico ranch” and that “there was information that Epstein had young girls at his ranch which, given the circumstances of the case, raised the reasonable inference he was sexually abusing these girls since he had regularly and frequently abused girls in West Palm Beach and elsewhere.
“Richardson had also returned campaign donations that were given to him by Epstein, indicating that he believed that there was something about Epstein that he did not want to be associated with,” the affidavit says.
Donald Trump 'singled out a 'young socialite' at his Mar-a-Lago club and told reporter 'there is nothing in the world like first-rate p**sy'' in interview with defunct golf magazine years before infamous Access Hollywood tape
By REGINA F. GRAHAM
DAILYMAIL.COM
PUBLISHED: 22:46 EST, 29 November 2017 | UPDATED: 07:45 EST, 30 November 2017
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/articl ... -tape.html
• Donald Trump was profiled by writer Michael Corcoran for a story in the now-defunct Maximum Golf magazine in 2000
• Corcoran said that while at Mar-a-Lago, a 'young socialite' caught Trump's eye who was at the club during dinner
• He claims Trump then said, 'there is nothing in the world like first-rate p**sy'
• But Trump's comment did not make it into published August 2000 story after editor Joe Bargmann was asked to change it allegedly by magazine's top editor
• Bargmann said he refused to change it, but his editor eventually did
• The White House nor Trump have commented about Corcoran's claim
Roughly five years before the notorious Access Hollywood tape where Donald Trump bragged about 'grabbing p**sy', the businessman boasted to a writer 'there is nothing in the world like first-rate p**sy,' according to a new report.
The real estate mogul made the comment to writer Michael Corcoran during an interview for the now-defunct Maximum Golf magazine, the Daily Beast reported.
Corcoran was following Trump around for a profile story while at his Florida golf club, Mar-a-Lago, that was published in the August 2000 issue.
The writer and another editor confirmed to the Daily Beast that the comment was made when the billionaire singled out a 'young socialite' who was at the club during dinner and caught his eye.
According to Corcoran, Trump said, 'there is nothing in the world like first-rate p**sy.'
But Trump's alleged remark did not actually make it into the published story.
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While Donald Trump was being profiled in 2000 for the now-defunct Maximum Golf magazine, the businessman reportedly boasted to writer Michael Corcoran 'there is nothing in the world like first-rate p**sy'. Above with then girlfriend Melania Knauss in 2000 at Mar-a-Lago
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Trump reportedly made the comment to the writer after a 'young socialite' caught his eye at Mar-a-Lago golf club during dinner. Above in 2000 at Mar-a-Lago with Melania Knauss
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Corcoran and his editor both said they were not allowed to publish the line in the story. The writer also said that future convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell were on Trump's jet when they flew down to his golf club in 2000 (file above in 2000)
An editor of the magazine, Joe Bargmann, was not allowed to put the statement into the profile story of Trump.
'I was asked to change the last word of the story from 'p**sy.' When I refused, my top editor changed the quote,' Bargmann told The Daily Beast.
The White House did not respond to a request for comment from the Daily Beast. In addition, the magazine's editor-in-chief, Michael Caruso, has not responded to requests for comment either.
DailyMail.com has contacted the White House for comment.
Corcoran also noted that he was not the only guest who flew on Trump's plane from New York down to Florida for that weekend.
Trump had the plane wait at the marine terminal for pedophile Jeffrey Epstein and his friend Ghislaine Maxwell - who were later convicted of paying minors for sexual massages that included rape as part of a pyramid scheme.
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Corcoran's profile on Trump also displays how the businessman asked his golf pals if they liked the looks of his then-girlfriend Melania (above together in 2000)
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While at Mar-a-Lago (above) during the trip, Trump also bragged about his numerous properties to his golf buddies
At the time that the article was being written, Corcoran said that he didn't know Epstein or Maxwell.
He said that he remembers the real estate mogul standing in the plane's doorway and yelling to the pair, 'You broke the cardinal rule, Jeffery! Never be late for someone else's plane!'
Corcoran's profile on Trump also displays how the businessman bragged about his numerous properties and asking his golf pals if they liked the looks of his then-girlfriend Melania.
This latest report comes after the president has reportedly expressed doubt over the authenticity of the infamous 2005 Access Hollywood tape in recent days.
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This latest report comes after the president has reportedly expressed doubt over the authenticity of the infamous 2005 Access Hollywood tape where he women will let you 'grab 'em by the p**sy when you're famous' while speaking to Billy Bush (left)
Trump has apparently started to claim that it was not him on the 2005 Access Hollywood recording saying women will let you 'grab 'em by the p**sy when you're famous,' according to a New York Times report.
But when the tape was released last October, Trump verified that it was real and apologized for his 'locker room talk.'
'I said it, I was wrong and I apologize,' Trump said at the time.
'Anyone who knows me knows these words don't reflect who I am. I said it, I was wrong and I apologize.'
That same tape also resulted in Billy Bush, who was interviewing Trump, being fired from NBC.[x]
Trump sent several tweets on Wednesday after NBC fired Matt Lauer over several sexual misconduct allegations made against him by staffers
Back in January, Fox News anchor Tucker Carlson wrote about Trump hitting back at him for joking about his hair.
'But I get more pussy than you do,' Carlson recalls Trump saying.
Trump has consistently denied claims that 16-plus women who have accused him of sexual misconduct are all lying.
In several tweets on Wednesday, Trump seemingly celebrated the firing of NBC host Matt Lauer for “inappropriate sexual behavior in the workplace”.[x]
Trump has praised the women who came forward to accuse Democratic Senator Al Franken of sexual misconduct. He tweeted the above statement on November 16 in regards to the reporter who first claimed sexual misconduct against Franken[x]
In a second tweet minutes later, Trump wrote, 'And to think that just last week he was lecturing anyone who would listen about sexual harassment and respect for women'
Trump has praised the women who came forward to accuse Democratic Senator Al Franken of sexual misconduct after a reporter shared her story online with a shocking photograph of the lawmaker inappropriately touching her.
He tweeted on November 16, 'The Al Frankenstein picture is really bad, speaks a thousand words. Where do his hands go in pictures 2, 3, 4, 5 & 6 while she sleeps?.....'
He added: 'And to think that just last week he was lecturing anyone who would listen about sexual harassment and respect for women.'
On the other hand, the president has defended Republican Alabama senate candidate Roy Moore who has been accused of numerous sexual misconduct with teenage girls.
Moore has strongly denied the claims.
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