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d-36845House OversightFinancial Record

Fragmentary anecdote linking Jeffrey Epstein to alleged organ‑transplant payment and a porter’s story

The passage offers only vague, second‑hand recollections about Epstein’s alleged payments for property and a rumored organ‑transplant request. It names no dates, amounts, or verifiable parties beyond Porter allegedly claimed Epstein paid for properties in exchange for an organ transplant operation. Grossberg worked in a building owned by the Epstein brothers and heard the story. James Rosen recal

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #022061
Pages
1
Persons
1
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage offers only vague, second‑hand recollections about Epstein’s alleged payments for property and a rumored organ‑transplant request. It names no dates, amounts, or verifiable parties beyond Porter allegedly claimed Epstein paid for properties in exchange for an organ transplant operation. Grossberg worked in a building owned by the Epstein brothers and heard the story. James Rosen recal

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jeffrey-epsteinfinancial-flowanecdotal-testimonyproperty-paymentspotential-illegal-medical-actihouse-oversightpersonal-testimonyorgan-transplant-rumor

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Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
James PATTERSON Manhattan, including 301 Fast 66th Street. He asked his brother—did Mark want to join him? He did.” Grossberg himself has had his ups and downs. At one point, he worked in a building owned by the Epstein brothers. There, he says, a porter told him a story about a little-known side of Jef who lived in South America, des- lant. Epstein paid for the properties in frey Epstein. The porter’s wile, perately needed an organ transp operation. “That's just typical,” Grossberg says. “That's who he always was, long as I knew him.” “Lafayette was a city school,” says another old classmate, James “It was functional. There was nothing special about it.” James Rosen is a retired postal worker. He lives in South Florida now, but, like Jeffrey Epstein, he'd grown up in Sea Gate. “There was a lot of volatility at Lafayette,” Rosen recalls. “It area that was, at one time, 90 percent Italian. and there was Rosen. was a blue-collar Then a small amount of Jews moved in, anti-Semitism. The Italians didn’t want the Jews to be there.” Black families were moving in, too, he remembers, and His- ones. But he says most of the animosity was aimed at Jews. panic s. They thought we were “There were fights in the school going to take over.” But Epstein seems to have ma buddies—who called him Eppy—could While they hung out on the beach, Epstein p homework. Worked on his prized stamp collection. Innocent times. de friends easily. Even then, his © see he was special. 7 layed the piano. Did © Jeffrey Epstein: 1¢ ‘ t's the height of tl a lege administrator q long hair collide \ go in for any of that. q math classes at Coor ‘q Village where Abraha 7 Thanks to a gene! ’ though the applicatio 4 Epstein sails thro i At Harvard or Yal i ks like the Brookly an any Ivy League : aoe from his prodig to make money E leaves Cooper Un

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