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d-18453House OversightFinancial Record

Epstein's 1989 investment deal raises questions about undisclosed $300K and alleged $500K contribution from Simon & Schuster CEO Dick Snyder

The passage provides specific names, dates, and financial amounts that could be traced: Jeffrey Epstein’s 1989 deposition claiming only $300,000 of his own money, a purported $500,000 investment from Epstein testified he contributed only $300,000 of his own funds in 1989, but the source of the remai A source claims Dick Snyder wrote a check for roughly $500,000 to Hoffenberg, later buying out par

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #017783
Pages
1
Persons
3
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage provides specific names, dates, and financial amounts that could be traced: Jeffrey Epstein’s 1989 deposition claiming only $300,000 of his own money, a purported $500,000 investment from Epstein testified he contributed only $300,000 of his own funds in 1989, but the source of the remai A source claims Dick Snyder wrote a check for roughly $500,000 to Hoffenberg, later buying out par

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wealth-managementcorporate-misconductfinancial-flowcorporate-governancelegal-exposuremoderate-importancehouse-oversightinvestment-fraudpublishing-industry

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Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
Case 1:19-cv-03377 Document 1-8 Filed 04/16/19 Page 13 of 16 http://www.vanityfair.com/news/2003/03/jeffrey-epstein-200303 1989 deposition he said that he put in only $300,000 of his own money. Where did the rest come from? Hoffenberg has said it came from him, in a loan that Nederlander and Toboroff didn’t know about. Two things happened that alarmed Nederlander and Toboroff. After the group signaled a possible takeover, the Pennwalt management threatened to sue the would-be raiders. Epstein was reluctant initially to give a deposition about his share of the money, telling Toboroff there were “reasons” he didn’t want to. Then, after the opportunity for new investors was closed, co- investors recall Epstein announcing that he’d found one at last: Dick Snyder, then C.E.O. of the publisher Simon & Schuster, who wanted to put up approximately $500,000. (Neither Epstein nor Snyder can now recall the investment. Yet in the 1989 deposition Epstein said that he had recruited Snyder, whom he had met socially, into the deal.) According to a source, Toboroff and Nederlander told Epstein that Snyder was too late, but, without their realizing it, Hoffenberg has claimed, Snyder wrote a check to Hoffenberg and bought out some of his investment. But then Snyder wanted out. “Nederlander started to get these irate calls from [Snyder,] who wasn’t part of the deal, saying he was owed all this money,” says someone close to the deal. Toboroff and Nederlander were baffled. Eventually, a source close to Hoffenberg says, Hoffenberg paid Snyder off. Just as Nederlander and Toboroff were growing wary of Epstein, he became increasingly involved with Leslie Wexner, whom he had met through insurance executive Robert Meister and his late wife. Epstein has told people that he met Wexner in 1986 in Palm Beach, and that he won his confidence by persuading him not to invest in the stock market, just as the 1987 crash was approaching. His story has subsequently changed. When asked if Wexner knew about his connection to Hoffenberg, Epstein said that he began working for Wexner in 1989, and that “it was certainly not the same time.” Wherever and whenever it was that Epstein and Wexner actually met, there was an immediate and strong personal chemistry. Wexner says he thinks Epstein is “very smart with a combination of excellent judgment and unusually high standards. Also, he is always a most loyal friend.” Sources say Epstein proved that he could be useful to Wexner as well, with “fresh” ideas about investments. “Wexner had a couple of bad investments, and Jeffrey cleaned those up right away,” says a former associate of Epstein’s. Before he signed on with Wexner, Epstein had several meetings with Harold Levin, then head of Wexner Investments, in which he enunciated ideas about currencies that Levin found incomprehensible. “In fact,” says someone who used to work very closely with Wexner, “almost everyone at the Limited wondered who Epstein was; he literally came out of nowhere.” “Everyone was mystified as to what his appeal was,” says Robert Morosky, a former vice- chairman of the Limited.

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Case #1:19-CV-03377
URLhttp://www.vanityfair.com/news/2003/03/jeffrey-epstein-200303

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