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EFTA00260609
NO. 74520
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EFTA00260610
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I
SIR. BIC
JelTral Epstein in
\cn 1,,l,
/44 Epstein\
nine-floor. 5I.IIIM-square-
roof loon house. Ile also °ails
a 7.5101-aera• ranch
in \en \lesicii, a house
in Palm Beach. and a
Caribbean
Lately, 3effrey Epstein's
high-flying style has been
drawing oohs and aahs: the
bachelor financier lives
in New Iork's largest
private reside *e, claims to
take only billionaires as
clients, and flies celebrities
including Bill Clinton and
Kevin Spacey on his Boeing
727. But pierce his air
of mystery and the picture
changes. VICKY WARD
explores Epstein's investment
career, his ties to retail
magnate Leslie Wexner, and
his complicated past
EFTA00260612
1.
n Manhattan's
Upper Eaft Side. home to some of the
most expensive real estate on earth. exists
the crown jewel of the city's residential
town houses. With its I5-lbot-high oak door.
huge arched windows, and nine floors. it
sits on—or. rather. commands—the block
of 71st Street between Fifth and Madison
Avenues. Almost ludicrously out of pro-
portion with its four- and five-story neigh-
bors. it seems more like an institution than
a house. This is perhaps not surprising—
until 1989 it was the Birch Wathen private
school. Now it is said to be Manhattan's
largest private residence.
Inside, amid the flurry of mcnscnants
attired in sober black suits and pristine
white gloves, you feel you have stumbled
into someone's private Xanadu. This is
no mere rich person's home. but a high-
walled. eclectic. imperious fantasy that
seems to have no boundaries.
The. entrance hail is decorated not with
paintings but with row upon row of indi-
vidually framed eyeballs: these. the owner
tells people with relish. were imported from
England. where they were made for in-
jured soldiers. Next comes a marble foyer.
which does have a painting, in the man-
ner of Jean Dubuffet ... but the host coyly
refuses to tell visitors who painted it. In any
case. guests are like pygmies next to the
nearby twice-life-size sculpture of a naked
African warrior.
Despite its eccentricity the house is curi-
ously impersonal. the statement of someone
who wants to be known for the scale of his
possessions. Its occupant. financier Jeffrey
Epstein. 50. admits to friends that he likes it
when people think of him this way. A good-
looking man, resembling Ralph Lauren.
with thick gray-white hair and a weathered
face, he usually dresses in jeans. knit shirts.
and loafers. He tells people he bought the
house because he knew he "could never live
anywhere bigger." He thinks 51,000 square
feet is an appropriately large space for some-
one like himself, who deals mostly in large
concepts—especially large sums of money.
Guests are invited to lunch or dinner at
the town house—Epstein usually refers to the
former as "tea," since he likes to cat bite-
size morsels and drink copious quantities of
Earl Grey. (He does not touch alcohol or to-
bacco.) Tea is served in the "leather room:
so called because of the cordovan-colored
fabric on the walls. The chairs are covered
in a leopard print. and on the wall hangs a
huge. Oriental fantasy of a woman holding
an opium pipe and caressing a snarling li-
onskin. Under her gaze. plates of finger
sandwiches arc delivered to Epstein and
guests by the menservants in white gloves.
Upstairs. to the right of a spiral stair-
case, is the "office." an enormous gallery
spanning the width of the house. Strangely.
it holds no computer. Computers belong in
the "computer room" as smaller room at
the back of the house). Epstein has been
known to say. The office features a gilded
desk (which Epstein tells people belonged
to banker J. P Morgan). 13th-century black
lacquered Portuguese cabinets. and a nine-
foot ebony Steinway "D" grand. On the
desk, a paperback copy of the Marquis de
Sades The MAthrtitnes
linue was re-
cently spotted. Covering the floor. Epstein
has explained. "is the largest Persian rug
you'll ever see in a private home —so big. it
must have come from a mosque." Amid
such splendor. much of which reflects the
work of the French decorator .Alberto Pin-
to. who has worked for Jacques Chime and
the royal families of Jordan and Saudi Ara-
bia. there is one particularly startling oddi-
ty: a stuffed black poodle. standing atop
the grand piano. 'No decorator would ever
tell you to do that:' Epstein brags to visi-
tors. "But I want people to think what it
means to stuff a dog:' People can't help
but feel it's Epstein's was of saying that he
always has the last word.
In addition to the town house. Epstein
lives in what is reputed to be the largest
private dwelling in New Mexico. on an 518
million. 7.500-acre ranch which he named
"Zorro." "It makes the town house look like
a shack." Epstein has said. He also owns
Little St. James. a 70-acre island in the
U.S. Virgin Islands. where the main house
is currently being renovated by Edward Tut-
tle. a designer of the Amanresorts. There is
also a 56.8 million house in Palm Beach,
Florida. and a fleet of aircraft: a Gulfstrcam
IV. a helicopter. and a Boeing -27. replete
with trading room. on which Epstein re-
cently flew President Clinton. actors Chris
Tucker and Kevin Spacey, supermarket
magnate Ron Burkle. Lew Wasserman's
grandson• Casey Wasserman. and a few oth-
ers. on a mission to explore the problems of
AIDS and economic development in Africa.
Epstein is charming. but he doesn't let
the charm slip into his eyes. They are steely
and calculating, giving some hint at the
steady whir of machinery running behind
them. "Let's play chess:' he said to me. af-
ter refusing to give an interview for this arti-
cle. "You be white. You get the first move."
It was an appropriate metaphor for a man
who seems to feel he can win no matter
what the advantage of the other side. His
advantage is that no one really seems to
know him or his history completely or what
his arsenal actually consists of. He has care-
fully engineered it so that he remains one
of the few truly baffling mysteries among
New York's moneyed world. People know
snippets. but few know the whole.
-He's wry enigmatiC says Rosa NIonck-
ton. the former C.E.O. of Tiffany & Co. in
the U.K. and a close friend since the early
1980s. 'You think you know him and then
you peel off another 'ring of the onion skin
and there's something else extraordinary
underneath. He never reveals his hand.. . .
He's a classic iceberg. What you see is not
what you get."
ven acquaintances sense a
curious dichotomy: les. he
lives like a "modern ma-
haraja." as Leah Kiernan.
one of his art dealers. puts
it. Yet he is fastidiously. a4
most obsessively private—he
lists himself in the phone book under a
pseudonym. He rarely attends society gath-
erings or weddings or funerals: he considers
eating in restaurants like "eating on the sub-
way"—i.e., something he'd never do. There
are many women in his life. mostly young.
but there is no one of them to whom he
has been able to commit. He describes his
most public companion of the last decade.
Ghislaine Maxwell. 41. the daughter of the
late. disgraced media baron Robert Max-
well. as simply his "best friend.- He says
she is not on his payroll, but she seems
to organize much of his life—recently she
was making telephone inquiries to find a
California-based yoga instructor for him.
(Epstein is still close to his two other long-
term girlfriends. Paula Heil Fisher. a for-
mer associate of his at the brokerage firm
Bear Stearns and now an opera producer.
and Eva Andersson Dubin. a doctor and
onetime model. He tells people that when
a relationship is over the girlfriend "moves
up. not down." to friendship status.)
Some of the businessmen who dine with
him at his home—they include newspaper
publisher Mon Zuckerman. banker Louis
Ranieri. Revlon chairman Ronald Perelman.
real-estate tycoon Leon Black. former Mi-
crosoft executive Nathan Myhnold. Tom
Pritzker (of Hyatt Hotels). and real-estate
I•• •
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2003
EFTA00260613
personality Donald Trump—sometimes
seem not all that clear as to what he ac-
tually dots to earn his millions. Certainly.
you won't find Epstein's transactions writ-
ten about on Bloomberg or talked about in
the trading moms. "The trading desks don't
seem to know him. It's unusual for animals
'hat big not to leave any footprints in the
.now." says a high-level investment manager.
Unlike such fund managers as George
Soros and Stanley Druckenmiller, whose
client lists and stock maneuverings act as
their calling cards. Epstein keeps all his
deals and clients secret. bar one client: bil-
lionaire Leslie Wexner, the respected chair-
man of Limited BraMis. Epstein insists that
ver since he left Bear Stearns in 19131 he
as managed money only for billionaires—
ho depend on him for discretion. "I
the only person crazy enough, or
arroeant cnough, or misplaced
enough. to make my limit a bil-
lion dollars or more:' he tells peo-
ple freely. According to him, the
flat fees he receives from his clients.
combined with his skill at playing
t e currency markets "with very
I ge sums of money." have afforded
.m the lifestyle he enjoys today.
Why do billionaires choose him
as their trustee? Because the prob-
lems of the mega-rich. he tells peo-
ple, are different from yours and
mine, and his unique philosophy is
central to understanding those problems:
"very few people need any more money
v ten they have a billion dollars. The key
it. not to have it do harm more than any-
thing else... . You don't want to lose your
money."
VMS
1
e has likened his job to
specifically, one who spe-
cializes
of an architect—more
in remodeling: "I
always describe [a billion-
aire) as someone who
started out in a small
home and as he became wealthier had add-
ons. He added on another addition. he built
a mom over the garage ... until you have a
house that is usually a mess.... It's a large
house that has been put together over time
*here no one could foretell the financial fu-
tu; : and their accompanying needs."
le makes it sound as though his job
co:abines the roles of real-estate agent. ac-
countant. lawyer. money manager, trustee.
and confidant. But, as with Jay Gatsby,
myths and rumor swirl around Epstein.
Here are some of the hard facts about
Epstein—ones that he doesn't mind people
knowing: He—grew-4m- middle-class in
BR oklyn. His father worked for the city's
parks department. His
parents viewed educa-
tion as "the way out"
for him and his young-
er brother. Mark, now
working in real estate.
Jeffrey started to play
the piano—for which he
maintains a passion—at
live. and he went to
Brooklyn's Lafa!ette High
School. He was good at
mathematics. and in his
early 20s he got a job teaching physics and
math at Dalton. the elite Manhattan pri-
vate school. While there he began tutoring
the son of Bear Steams chairman Ace
Greenberg and was friendly with a daugh-
ter of Greenberg's. Soon he went to Bear
Stearns. where. under the mentorship of
both Greenberg and current Bear Steams
C.E.O. James Caync. he did well enough
to become a limited partner—a rung be-
neath full partner. He abruptly departed in
1981 because, he has said. he wanted to
run his own business.
Thereafter the details recede into shad-
ow. A few of the handful of current friends
who have known him since the early 1980s
recall that he used to tell them he was a
UNREAL iSTATE
From top: the "leather
morn" in Epstein's house.
where "tea- is seSed
to euests: Epstein at his
Zorro ranch in 1991
with his -hest friend."
Ghislaine Maxwell:
Epstein in 1979.
"bounty hunter.- recov-
ering lost or stolen mon-
ey for the government or for very rich
people. He has a license to carry a firearm.
For the last IS years. he's been running his
business, J. Epstein & Co.
Since Leslie Wexner appeared in his
life —Epstein has said this was in 1986:
others say it was in 1989, at the earliest —
he has gradually. in a way that has not
generally made headlines. come to be, ac-
cepted by the Establishment. He's a mem-
ber of various commissions and councils:
he is on the Trilateral Commission, the
Council on Foreign Relations. the New
York Academy of Sciences, and the Insti-
tute of International Education.
His current fan club extends to Cayne.
Henry Rosovsky. the former dean of Har-
vard's Faculty of Arts and Sciences. and
(4
.".... 'CM 2003
EFTA00260614
From top: Epstein's '0-
acre island. Little St.
James. in the U.S. \irgin
Islands—he now calls
it Little St. Jeff: Epstein
with President Clinton in
Brunei. 2002: Leslie
Wexner with his future
wik. Abigail. at the 1990
C.F.D.A. Fashion Awards.
in New York. 1991.
Larn• Summers. Hananfs current presi-
dent. Harvard law professor Alan Dersho-
witz says. "I'm on my 20th book... . The
only person outside of my immediate family
that I send drafts to is Jeffrey." Real-estate
developer and philanthropisi Marshall Rose,
who has worked with Epstein on projects in
New Albany. Ohio. for Wexner. says. "He
digests and decodes the information very
rapidly, which is to me terrific because we
have shorter meetings."
Also on the list of admirers are former
senator George Mitchell and a gaggle of
distinguished scientists, most of whom
Epstein has helped fund in recent years.
The• include Nobel Prize winners Gerald
"Jeffrey [knows] when
he is winning.... He will
let youtchoose your
weapon; says Wexner.
Edelman and Nlurray Cell-
Mann. and mathematical
biologist Martin Nowak.
When these men describe
Epstein. they talk about
"energy" and "curiosity." as
well as a love for theoreti-
cal physics that they don't
ordinarily find in laymen.
Gell-Mann rather sweetly
mentions that "there arc al-
ways pretty ladies around"
when he goes to dinner elle:
Epstein, and he's under the impression that
Epstein's clients include the Queen of En-
gland. Both Nowak and Dershowitz were
thrilled to find themselves shaking the hand
of a man named "Andrew" in Epstein's
house. "Andrew" turned out to be Prince
Andrew. who subsequently arranged to sit
in the back of Dershowitz's law class.
Epstein gets annoyed when anyone sug-
gests that Wexner "made him." "I had real-
ly rich clients before." he has said. Yet he
does not deny that he and Wexner have a
special relationship. Epstein sees it as a
partnership of equals. "People have said it
like we have one brain between two of us:
each has a side.-
"I think we both possess the skill of
seeing patterns," says Wexner. "But Jef-
frey sees patterns in politics and finan-
cial markets, and I see patterns in lifestyle
and fashion trends. My skills arc not in in-
vestment strategy, and, as everyone who
knows Jeffrey knows, his are not in fash-
ion and design. We frequently discuss
world trends as each of us sees them."
y the time Epstein met
Wexner, the latter was a
retail legend who had
built a S3 billion em-
pire —one that now in-
cludes Victoria's Secret.
Express. and Bath &
Body Works—from $5.000 lent him by his
aunt. "Wexner saw in Jeffrey the type of
person who had the potential to real-
ize his [kffreysj dreams.- says some-
one who has worked closely with
both men. "He gave Jeffrey the ball.
and Jeffrey hit it out of the park."
Wane!: through a trust. bought
the town house in which Epstein
now lives for a reported S13.2
million in 1989. In 1993. Wex-
ner married Abigail Koppel.
a 31-year-old lawyer. and the
newlyweds relocated to Ohio:
in 1996. Epstein moved in-
to the town house. Public
documents suggest that the house
is still owned by the trust that bought it.
but Epstein has said that he now owns the
house.
Wexner trusts Epstein so completely
that he has assigned him the power of fidu-
ciary over all of his private trusts and foun-
dations. says a source close to Wexner. In
1992. Epstein even persuaded Wexner to
put him on the board of the Wexner Foun-
dation in place of Wexner's ailing mother.
Bella Wexner recovered and demanded to
be reinstated. Epstein has said they settled
by splitting the foundation in two.
Epstein does not care that he comes be-
tween family members. In fact, he sees it
as his job. He tells people. "I am there to
represent my client, and if my client needs
protecting—sometimes even from his own
family—then it's often better that people
hate me, not the client."
"You've probably heard I'm vicious in
my representation of my clients:' he tells
people proudly: Leah Kiernan describes his
haggling over art prices as something like
a scene out of the movie .11ad Mac Be-
yond Thundertiome. Even a former mentor
says he's seen "the dark side" of Epstein.
and a Bear Stearns source recalls a meet-
ing in which Epstein chewed out a team
making a presentation for Wexner as 9
t!
a
e:
h.
dr
304
VAN'13
m4tCH
2003
EFTA00260615
being so brutal as to be "irresponsible."
One reporter. in fan. received three threats
from Epstein while preparing a piece. They
were delivered in a jocular tone. but the
message was clear: There will be trouble
for your family if I don't like the article.
On the other hand. Epstein is clearly
very generous with friends. Joe Pagano. an
Aspen-based venture capitalist, who has
known Epstein since before his Bear Stearns
days. can't say enough nice things: "I have
a boy who's dyslexic. and Jeffrey's gotten
close to him over the years
Jeffrey got
him into music. He bought him his first
piano. And then as he got to school he had
difficulty ... in studying ... so Jeffrey got
him intereste4 in taking flying lessons."
Rosa Monckton recalls Epstein telling
her that her daughter. Domenica. who suf-
fen from Down syndrome. needed the sun.
and that Rosa should feel free to bring her
to his house in Palm Beach anytime.
Some friends remember that in the late
80s Epstein would offer to upgrade the air-
line tickets of good friends by affixing first-
class stickers: the only problem was that the
stickers turned out to be unofficial. Some-
times the technique worked. hut other times
it didn't. and the utmitting recipients found
themselves exiled to coach. (Epstein has
claimed that he paid for the upgrades. and
had no knowledge of the stickers.) Many of
those who benefited from Epstein's largesse
claim that his generosity comes with no
strings attached. "I never felt he wanted
anything from me in return." says one old
friend. who received a first-class upgrade.
E
he is a familiar face to many of the Victo-
ria's Secret girls. One young woman reccIls
being summoned by Ghislaine Maxwell to
a concert at Epstein's town house. where
the women seemed to outnumber the men
by far. "These were not women you'd see
at Upper East Side dinners." the woman
recalls. "Many seemed foreign and dressed
a little bizarrely: This same guest also at-
tended a cocktail party thrown by Maxwell
that Prince Andrew attended, which was
tilled. she says. with young Russian mod-
els. "Some of the guests were horrified:
the woman says.
"He's reckless:says a former business
associate. "and he's gotten more so. Mon-
ey does that to you. He's breaking the oath
he made to himself—that he would never
do anything that would expose him in the
pstein is known about town
as a man who loves worn-
en—lots of them. mostly
young. Model types have
been heard saying they are
full of gratitude to Epstein
for thing them around. and
mAICti
200?
media. Right now, in the wake of the pub-
licity following his trip with Clinton, he
must he in a very• difficult place."
ccording to S.E.C. and
other legal documents un-
earthed by Vanity Fair,
Epstein may have good
reason to keep his past
cloaked in secrecy: his real
mentor. it might seem. was
not Leslie Wexner but Steven Jude Hoffen-
berg. 57. who. for a few months before the
S.E.C. sued to freeze his assets in 1993. was
trying to buy the New York Post. He is cur-
rently incarcerated in the Federal Medical
Center in Dewns. Massachusetts. serving a
20-war sentence for bilking investors out of
more than 5450 million in one of the largest
Ponzi schemes in American history.
When Epstein met Hoffenberg in Lon-
don in the 1980s. the latter was the char-
ismatic. audacious head of the Towers
Financial Corporation. a collection agency
that was supposed to buy debts that peo-
ple owed to hospitals. banks. and phone
companies. But HolTenberg began using
company funds to pay oil' earlier investors
and service a lavish lifestyle that included a
mansion on Long Island. homes on Man-
hattan's Sutton Place and in Florida. and a
fleet of cars and planes.
Hoffenbeng and Epstein had much in
common. Both were smart and obsessed
with making money. Both were from Brook-
lyn. According to HotTenbers. the two men
were introduced by Douglas Leese. a de-
fense contractor. Epstein has said they were
introduced by John Mitchell. the late attor-
ney general.
Epstein had been running International
Assets Group Inc. (I.A.G.). a consulting
company. out of his apartment in the Solo
building on East 66th Street in New York.
Though he has claimed that he managed
money for billionaires only. in a 1989 dep-
osition he testified that he spent NO per-
cent of his time helping people recover
stolen money from fraudulent brokers and
lawyers. He was also not above entering
into risky. tax-sheltered oil and gas deals
with much smaller investors. A lawsuit that
Michael Stroll. the former head of Wil-
liams Electronics Inc., filed against Epstein
shows that in 1982 I.A.G. received an in-
vestment from Stroll of 5150.000. which
Epstein put into oil. In 1984. Stroll asked
for his money back: four years later he had
received only S10.000. Stroll lost the suit.
after Epstein claimed in court, among oth-
er things. that the check for 510.000 was for
a horse he'd bought from Stroll. "My net
worth never exceeded lour and a half mil-
lion dollars." Stroll has said.
Hoffcnbcrg. says a close friend. "really
liked Jeffrey.... Jeffrey has a way of getting
under your skin. and he was under Hof-
fenberg's." Also appealing to HotTenberg
were Epstein's social connections: they in-
cluded oil mogul Cece Wang (father of the
designer Vera) and Mohan Murjani. whose
clothing company grew into Gloria Van-
derbilt Jeans. Epstein lived large even then.
One friend recalls that when he took Cana-
dian heiress Wendy Belzberg on a date he
hired a Rolls-Royce especially for the oc-
casion. (Epstein has claimed he owned it.)
In 1987, Hoffenberg. according to sources.
set Epstein up in the offices he still occu-
pies in the Villard House. on Madison Av-
enue. across a courtyard from the restaurant
Le Cirque. Holfenberg hired his new pro-
tege as a consultant at 525.000 a month.
and the relationship flourished. "They tray.
eled everywhere together—on Hoffenberg's
plane. all around the world. they were al-
ways together..' says a source. HotTenberg
has claimed that Epstein confided in him.
saying. for example. that he had left Bear
Stearns in 1981 after he was discovered ex-
ecuting "illegal operations:
Several of Epstein, Lar Stearns contem-
poraries recall that Epstein left the compa-
ny very suddenly. Wthin the company there
were rumors also that he was involved in a
technical infringement. and it was thought
that the executive committee asked that he
resign after his two supporters. Ace Green-
berg and Jimmy Cayne. were outnumbered.
Greenberg says he can't recall this: Cayne
denies it happened. and Epstein has de-
nied it as well. "Jeffrey Epstein left Bear
Stearns of his own volition." says Cayne.
"It was never suggested that he leave be
any member of management. and manage-
ment never looked into any improprieties
by him. Jeffrey said specifically. 'I don't
want to work for anybody else. I want to
work for myself.— Yet. this is not the story
that Epstein told to the S.E.C. in 1981 and
to lawyers in a 198,4 deposition involving a
civil business case in Philadelphia.
In 1981 the S.E.C.'s Jonathan Harris and
Robert Blackburn took Epstein's testimony
and that of other Bear Stearns employees in
part of what became a protracted case
about insider trading around a tender offer
placed on March II. 1981. by the Seagram
Company L..! for St. Joe Minerals Corp.
Ultimately several Italian and Swiss in-
vestors were found guilts. including Italian
financier Giuseppe Tome. who had used
his relationship with Seagram owner Edgar
Bronfman Sr. to obtain information about
the tender oiler.
After the tender offer was announced.
the S.E.C. began investigating trades in-
volving St. Joe at CON II•uf
0 0% Pthi.
1.11
VANI'v
is
EFTA00260616
contains a parody of Affleck and Matt Da-
mon making Good Will Hunting II. Affleck
says to Damon, "What do I keep telling you?
You gotta do the safe picture, then you do
the art picture. Then sometimes you gotta
do the payback picture because your friend
says you owe him. Then sometimes you got-
ta go back to the well."
"Sometimes you do Reindeer Games."
Damon says derisively.
"That's just mean." Affleck whines.
But it's a pretty accurate description of
his career to date. "Ben takes these franchise
properties so he can go and experiment:'
says Harvey Weinstein.
"He believes in trying to stretch himself
and not/keep doing the same thing." ob-
serves Bruce Willis. who starred with Affleck
in Armageddon. "He's an awesome actor.
and I think hes going to do great things."
Several years ago. in a televised interview
on Inside the Actors Studio. Affleck said that
his goal was to make big commercial movies.
He has since revised his ambitions. "That's
an adolescent aspiration. in a way. I'd
rather be in movies like Magnolia. which I
think is a towering achievement. I'll con-
tinue to act. but I won't act in a way that
requires me to hang my name out there
and do a lot of publicity. Fit do character
roles and focus on writing and directing. It
doesn't require the same kinds of sacri-
fice, in terms of quality of life and person-
al life. and it's a more holistic approach to
the process. It's become increasingly frus-
trating for me to have my role in the story-
telling process limited to one character. You
have to be respeztful and judicious about
your input when it's somebody else's project:'
Affleck has always impressed colleagues
with his voracious appetite for information
and skills. "He has made it a point to learn
everything he can about how the business
works—not just the craft of acting. but
from the producing standpoint, from the
studio standpoint.- says Jon Gordon. exec-
utive vice president of production at Mira-
max. "He knows how deals work. It's what
sets him apart. If he wanted to run a studio
at some point, he could. He's about as
sharp as they come.-
A ffleck is already juggling his acting with
nscreenwriting and such other commit-
ments as Project Greenlight. the contest he
and Damon started to help launch the ca-
reers of young filmmakers. .Alfleck's friends
are certain he'll be directing soon. "There's
no question.' Weinstein says. "Both he and
Matt. I think they're going to rewrite the
rules. These guys can fix anything. There'll
be home runs in both instances:'
But there are other thoughts tickling the
back of Meek's mind as well. A passion-
ate liberal. he campaigned for Al Gore.
cares deeply about political issues. and is
extremely well informed. He entertains him-
self by writing imaginary political speeches
in his head. He would rather discuss mos
in Africa than his movie career.
When Lopez goes to Affleck's mother's
house for dinner. Weinstein reports. "J.Lo
told me that the conversation at the table is
always about politics—about government
initiatives. educational initiatives. what's go-
ing en in the day."
te
to is Affleck Planning to rc tome the lib-
hralatChaensvdeneterrtabinR:tnal
hedthReagi
oughlt
Someday
1
a real nobility to public service. It wont,' be
running for Congress. at least: -I think them s
admits
fun to run on a platform I really
ed
in, without any of the kind of common. a%
people make—without being beholden ,
the win-at-all-costs mentality."
And the invasion of privacy would he
nothing new. "What are you going to say
about me that hasn't already been said? I
don't cheat, I don't drink, I don't do drugs.
I live a clean life: Affleck says, his eves
twinkling.
"He's only 30 years old," says Jennifer
Todd, who co-produced Boiler Room. "Hc
still has an enormous amount of time to
do things."
Time, and drive. -I think he's incredibly
hungry." says Sean Bailey. who founded
the media and production company Live-
Planet with Affleck. Damon. and Chris
Moore. "I think the guy has very grand
aspirations. I don't think he's going to be
content with just being a movie star. He
knows he has the potential to do very big
things."
Such ambitions could 'ise derailed by any
number of miscalculations. including a pri-
vate life that generates too many sensational
headlines, but Affleck has a clear idea of
the ultimate goal. "On my deathbed. I have
to be one who looks back and feels I lived
a good and substantial and meaningful
lire: he says.
In the meantime. howc. zr. there's a wed-
ding to plan.
Jeffrey Epstein
Cil•TIVI
ED FROM
%tot
, a, Bear Stearns
and other firms. Epstein resigned from Bear
Steams on March 1_. The S.E.C. was tipped
oil that Epstein had information on insider
trading at Bear Steams. and it was therefore
obliged to question him. In his S.E.C. testi-
mony. tgven on April 1. 1981. Epstein claimed
that he had found "otTensive" the way Bear
Stearns management had handled a disci-
plinary action following its discovery that he
had committed a possible "Reg D" viola-
tion—evidently he had lent mom, to his clos-
est friend. I In the 1989 deposuton he said
that he'd lent approximately 5.20.000 to War-
ren Eisenstein. to buy stock.) Such an action
could have been considered improper. al-
though Epstein claimed he had not realized
this until afterward.
According to Epstein. Bear Stearns man-
agement had questioned him about the loan
around March 4. The questioners. Epstein
said, were Michael (Mickey) Tarnopol and
Alvin Einbender. In his 1989 deposition Ep-
stein recalled that the partner who had made
an "issue' of the matter was Marvin David-
son. On March 9. Epstein said. he had met
with Tarnopol and Einbender again. and the
two partners ;cid him that the executive com-
mittee had weighed the offense. together with
previous "carelessness" over expenses. and
he would be fined S2.500.
-There was discussion whether. in tact. I
had ever put in an airline ticket for some-
one else and not myself and I said that it
was possible. ... since my secretary han-
dles my expenses: Epstein told the S.E.C.
In his 1989 testimony he stated that the
"Reg D" incident had cost him a shot at
partnership that year.
What the S.E.C. seemed to be especially
interested in was whether there was a con-
nection between Epstein's leaving and the
alleged insider trading in St. Joe Minerals
by other people at Bear Steams:
Q: Sir, arc you aware that certain rumors may
have been circulating around your firm in con-
nection with your reasons for leaving the firm?
A: I'm aware that there were mans rumors.
Q: What were the rumors you heard?
A: Nothing to do with St. Joe.
Q: Can you relate what you heard?
A: It was having to do with an illicit affair
with a secretary.
Q: Have you heard any other rumors suggest-
ing that you had made a presentation or com-
munication to the Executive Committee con-
cerning alleged improprieties by other mem-
bers or employees of Bear Steams?
A: I. in fact, have heard that rumor. but it's been
from Mr. Harris in our conversation last week.
Q: Have you heard it from anyone else?
A: No.
A little later the interview focuses on
James Cayne:
Q: Did you ever hear while you were at Bear
Steams that Mr. Cayne may have trader or im
sider information in connection with 5< '
Minerals Corporation?
A: No.
Q: Did Mr. Clyne ever have any conversation
with you about St. Joe Minerals?
A: No.
Q: Did you happen to overhear any comma-
matC.
:003
EFTA00260617
.relliev Epstein
(ions between Mr. Cayne and anyone else re-
garding St. Joe Minerals?
A: No.
And still later in the questioning comes this
exchange:
Q: Have you had any type of business deal-
ings with Mr. Cayne?
A: There's no relationship with Bear Stearns.
Q: Pardon?
A: Other than Bear Stearns. no.
Q: Have you been a participant in any type of
business venture with Mr. Cayne?
A: No.
Q: Do you have any expectation of participat-
ing ir\ jt any business venture with Mr. Cayne?
Q: Have you had any business participations
with Mr. Theram?
A: No: nor do I anticipate any..
Q: Mr. Epstein. did anyone at Bear Stearns
tell you in words or substance that you should
not divulge anything about St. Joe Minerals to
the staff of the Securities and Exchange Com-
mission?
A: No.
Q: Has anyone indicated to you in any way.
either directly or indirectly. :n words or sub-
stance. that your compensation for this past
year or any future monies coming to you front
Bear Stearns will be contingent upon your not
divulging ithrmation to the Securities and
Exchange Commission?
A: No.
Despite the circumstances of Epstein's
leaving. Bear Steams agreed to pay him his
annual bonus--which he anticipated as !..e.
ing approximately S100.000.
The. S.E.C. never brought any charges
against anyone at Bear Stearns for insider
trading in St. Joe. but its questioning seems
to indicate that it was skeptical of Epstein's
answers. Some sources have wondered
why, if he was such a big producer at Bear
Stearns. he would have given it up over a
mere 52.500 tine.
Certainly the years after Epstein left the
firm were not obviously prosperous ones.
His luck didn't seem to change until he met
HotTenberg.
nrte of Epstein's first assignments for lief-
tenberg was to mastermind doomed bids
to take over Pan American %Sethi Airways in
1987 and Emery Air Freight Corp. in 1988.
Hoffenberg claimed in a 1993 hearing before
a grand jury in Illinois that Epstein came up
with the :dea of financing these bids through
Towers's acquisition of two ailing Illinois
insurance companies. Associated Life and
United Fire. "He was hired by us to work on
the securities side of the insurance companies
and Towers Financial, supposedly to make a
profit for us and for the companies." Hoffen-
berg reportedly told the grand jury. He also
alleged that Epstein o.as the "technician: a -
caning the schemes. although. having no
broker's license. he had to rely on others to
make the trades. Much of Hoffenberg's sub-
sequent testimony in his criminal case has
proven to be false. and Epstein has claimed
he was merely asked how the bids could be
accomplished and has said he had nothing
to do with the financing of them. Yct Rich-
ard Allen. the former treasurer of United
Fire. recalls seeing Epstein two or three
times at the company. He and another ex-
ecutive say they had direct dealing with Ep-
stein over the finances. And in his deposition
of 1989. Epstein stated that he was the one
who executed "all" Hoffenberg's instructions
to buy and sell the stock. He called it "mak-
ing the orders." He could not recall whether
he had chosen the brokers used.
To win approval from the Illinois insur-
ance regulators for Towers's acquisition of
the companies. HotTenberg promised to in-
ject S3 million of new capital into them. In
fact. in his grand-jury testimony Hoffenberg
claimed that he. his chief operating officer.
Mitchell Brater. and Epstein came up with a
scheme to steal S3 million of the insurance
companies' bonds to buy Pan Am and Em-
en stock. "Jeffrey Epstein and Mitch Bracer
arranged the various brokerage accounts for
the bonds to be placed with in New York.
and I think one in Chicago. Rodman & Ren-
shaw." Ho0enberg reportedly said. Then.
said Reifenberg. while making it appear as
though they were investing the bonds in
much safer financial instruments. they used
them as collateral to buy the stock. "Ep-
stein was the person in charge of the trans-
actions. and Mitchell Brater was assisting
hint with it in coordination on behalf of the
insurance companies money." HotTenberg
claimed at the time.
At one point. according to Hoffenberg. a
broker forged the documents necessary for a
51.8 million check to be written on insurance-
company funds. The check was used to buy
more stock in the takeover targets. Mean-
while. in order to throw the insurance regula-
tors off. the 51.8 million was rerorted as being
safely invested in a money-market account.
United Fire's former chief financial officer
Daniel Payton confirms part of Reifenberg.;
account. He says he recalls making one or
two telephone calls to Epstein (at Holten-
berg's direction) about the missing bonds.
"He said, 'Oh. yeah. they still exist.' But we
found out later that he had sold those assets
... leveraged them .. . (and! used some mar-
gin account to take some positions in ...
Emery and Pan Am.- says Payton.
Epstein's extraordinary creativity was. ac-
cording to HotTenberg. responsibk for the
purchase by the insurance companies of a
5500.000 bond, with no money down. "Ep-
stein created a great scheme to purchase a
$500900 treasury bond that would not be
shown
las] margined or collateralized.-
he reportedly told the grand jury. "It looked
like it was free and clear but it actually
wasn't.- he said.
Epstein has denied he ever had any deal-
ings with anyone from the insurance com-
panies. But Richard Allen says he recalls
talking to Epstein at Hoffenberg's direction
and telling him it was urgent they retrieve
the missing bonds for a state examination.
According to Allen. Epstein said, ?We'll get
them back." He had "kind of a flippant atti-
tude." says Allen. "They never came back."
E
pstein. according to HotTenberg. also
came up with a scheme to manipulate
the price of Emery Freight stock in an at-
tempt to minimize the losses that occurred
when HotTenberis bid went wrong and the
share price began to kill. This was alleged to
have involved multiple clients' accounts con-
trolled by Epstein.
Eventually. in 1991. insurance regulators in
Illinois sued Hotrenberg. He settled the case.
and Epstein, who was only a paid consul-
tant. was never deposed or accused of any
wrongdoing. Barry Gross. the attorney who
was handling the suit for the regulators. says
of Epstein. -He was very elusive.... It was
hard to really track him down. There were a
substantial number of checks for significant
dollars that were paid to him. I remem-
ber.... He was this character we never got a
handle on. .Again we presumed that he was
involved with the Pan Am and Emen run
that HotTenberg made. but we never got a
chance to depose him."
"Front the government's discovery in the
main sentencing against HotTenberg it wculd
seem the government was perhaps a bit lazy.-
says David Lewis. who represented Mitchell
Brater. "They went for what they knew they
could get . . and that was the fraudulent
promissory notes (i.e.. the much larger and
unrelated part of Hoffenberg's fraud. based
in New York Statej.... What they couldn't
get. they didn't bother with:'
Another lawyer involved in the criminal
prosecution of HotTenberg says. "In a crim-
inal investigation like that, when there is a
guilty plea. to be quick and dirty about it.
discovery is always incomplete.... They
don't have to line up witnesses: they don't
have to learn every fact that might come out
on cross-examination."
E
pstein was involved with HotTenberg in
other questionable transactions. Finan-
cial records show that in 1988 Epstein in-
vested $1.6 million in Riddell Sports Inc.. a
company that manufactures football helmets.
Among his co-investors were the theater
mogul Robert Nederlander and attorney
Leonard Toboroff. A source close to this
transaction claims that Epstein told Neder-
lander and ToborotT that he had raised his
share of the money from a Swiss banker.
341
&I/RCN 22)3
EFTA00260618
■
0
whose identity they could not be allowed to J
ust as Nederlander and Toboroff were
know. But Hoffenberg has claimed the mon-
growing wan' of Epstein. he became in-
ey came from him, and Towers's financial
creasiney involved with Leslie Warier. whom
statements for that year show a loan to Ep-
he had met through insurance executive
stein of $400.000. (Epstein has said he
Robert Meister and his late wife. Epstein has
can't remember the details and has dis-
told people that he met Wexner in 1986 in
pored the accuracy of the Towers financial
Palm Beach. and that he won his confidence
reports.)
by persuading him not to invest in the stock
Around the same time, Nederlander and
market. just as the 1987 crash was approach-
Toboroff let Epstein come in with them on a
ing. His story has subsequently changed.
scheme to make money out of Pennwalt. a
When asked if Wexner knew about his con-
Pennsylvania chemical company. The plan
nection to Hoffenberg. Epstein said that he
was to group together with two other parties
began working for Wexner in 1989. and that
to take a substantial declared position in the
"it was certainly not the same time.-
stock. According to a source. Epstein was
Wherever and whenever it was that Ep-
supposed tk help Nederlander and Toboroff
stein and Wexner actually met. there was
raise 515 million. lie seemed to fail to find
an immediate and strong personal chem-
other investors. say those familiar with the
istry. Wexner says he thinks Epstein is "very
deal. (Epstein has said he was merely an in-
smart with a combination of excellent judg-
vestor.) He invested SI million, which he
ment and unusually high standards. Also.
told his co-investors was his own money.
he is always a most loyal friend."
But in his 1989 deposi-
tion he said that he put
in only 5300.000 of his
own money:. Where did
the rest come from? Hof-
fenberg has said it came
from him. in a loan that
Nederlander and ToborotT
didn't know about.
Two things happened
that alarmed Nederlander
and ToborotT. Afier the
group signaled a possible
takeover. the Pennwalt
management threatened to
sue the would-be r.talers.
Epstein was reluctant ini-
tially to give a deposition
about his share of the
money. telling Toboroff
there were "reasons" he
OFFICE SPACE
didn't want to. Then. after the opportunity
The "office" in Epstein's house. It has no
for new investors was closed. co-investors
computers. but it does have a desk that
recall Epstein announcing that he'd found
Epstein tells people once belonged to banker
one at last: Dick Snyde: then C.E.O. of
J. P. Monran. and "the largest Persian rue
the publisher Simon a Scauster who want-
you'll ever see in a private home.-
ed to put up approximately 5500.000. (Nei-
ther Epstein nor Snyder can now recall
Sources say Epstein proved that he could
the investment. Yet in the 1989 deposition
be useful to Wexner as well. with "fresh"
Epstein said that he had recruited Sny-
ideas about investments. "Wexner had a cou-
der. whom he had met socially, into the
plc of bad investments, and Jeffrey cleaned
deal.)
those up right away? says a former associ-
According to a source. ToborolT and Ne-
ate of Epstein's.
derlandcr told Epstein that Snyder was too
Beihre he signed on with Wexner. Epstein
Lae. but. without their realizing it. Hoffen-
had several meetings with Harold Levin. then
het,: has claimed. Snyder wrote a check to
head of Wexner Investments. in which he
HotTenberg and bought out some of his in-
enunciated ideas about currencies that Levin
vestment. But then Snyder wanted out.
found incomprehensible. "In fact." says some-
"Nederlander started to get these irate
one who used to work very closely with %Vex-
calls from [Snyder.) who wasn't part of the
ner. "almost everyone at the Limited won-
deal, saying he was owed all (his money."
dered who Epstein was: he literally came
says someone close to the deal. Toboroff
out of nowhere."
a:
Nederlander were baffled.
"Everyone was my:stitied as to what his
::::ually. a source close to HotTenberg
appeal was
says Robert Morosky. a former
.t'enberg paid Snyder off
vice-chairman of the Limned.
Much of Epstein's work is related to clean-
ing up. tightening budgets. and effickn-
des. One person who worked for Wexner and
who saw a contract drawn up between the
two men says Epstein is involved in "every-
thing. not just a little here. a little there.
Everything!" In addition, he says. "Wexner
likes having a hatchet man. . . . Whenever
there is dirty work to be done he'd stick Jef-
frey on it.. .. He has a reputation for being
ruthless but he gets the job done."
Epstein has evidently been asked to fire
personal-staff members when needed. "He
was that mysterious person that eyrryone was
scared to death of: says a former employee.
Meanwhile. he is also less than popular
with some people outside Wexner's company
with whom he now deals. "He 'inserted'
himself into the construction process of Les-
lie Wexner's yacht. . . . That resulted in liti-
gation down the road between Mr. Wexner
and the shipyard that
eventually built the ves-
wl." says Lars Forsberg.
a law ar whose firm at
Dickerson and
F. v. ..as hired to deal
with hitt:anon stemming
from the construction
of Wexner's Limitless—
at 315 feet. one of the
largest private yachts in
the world. EY idently. Ep-
stein stalled on paying
Dickers::: and Reily for
wc-k "Ifs probably
once
r :‘%:ce in my le-
gal career that I've had
to sue a client for txtyment
of services that he'd re-
quested and wed per-
formed .. . without issue
on the performance." says Forsberg. In
the end the matter was settled. but Ep-
stein claims he now has no recollection
of it.
The incident is ore of a number of disputes
Epstein has become embroiled in. Some arc
thr sums so tiny as to be baffling: for instance.
Epstein sued investment adviser Herbert
Glass. who sad him the Palm Beach house in
1990. for S 13.444—Epstein claimed this was
owed him for furnishings removed Ili MAI:
In 1998 the C.S. Attorney's Office sued
Epstein for illegally: subletting ;he forme
home of the deputy consul general of trar,n
to attorney Ivan Fisher and others. ft,gec
paid 515.000 a month in rent to the ,,
Department. but he charged hin ,,
scr
eye
.
his colleagues $20,000. Though
ih
terms of the agreement are
•
court ruled against Epstein.
Wexner offers some
into
rot
combative
"Many
winning and losing." Wexner
has the unusual quality a"
n,
hen
EFTA00260619
Jeffrey Epstein
he is winning. Whether in conversations or
negotiations, he always stands back and lets
the other person determine the style and
manner of the conversation or negotiation.
And then he responds in their style. Jeffrey
sees it in chivalrous terms. He does not pick
a fight. but if there is a fight, he will let you
choose your weapon."
One case is rather more serious. Currently.
Citibank is suing Epstein for defaulting on
loans from its privatebanking arm for 520
million. Epstein claims that Citibank "fraud-
ulently induced" him into borrowing the
money for investments. Citibank disputes this
charge.
The legal papers for another case offer a
rare window into Epstein's finances. In 1995.
Epstein stopped paying rent to his landlord.
the nonprofit Municipal Arts Society. for his
office in the silllard House. He claimed that
they were breaking the terms of the lease by
not letting his stall in at night. The case was
eventually settled. However. one of the papers
filed in this dispute is Epstein's financial gate-
ment for 1988. in which he claimed to be
worth 520 million. He listed that he owned
$7 million in securities. SI million in cash.
zero in residential property (although he
told sources that he had already bought the
home in Palm Beach). and 511 million in
other assets. including his investment in
Riddell. A co-investor in Riddell says: "The
company had been bought with a huge
amount of deb!. and it wasn't public. so it
was meaningless :o attach a figure like that to
it ... the price it cost was about 51.2 mil-
lion." The co-investors bought out Epstein's
share in Riddell in 1995 for approximately
53 million. At that time, when Epstein was
asked. as a routine matter, to sign a paper
guaranteeing he had access to a few million
dollars in case of any subsequent disputes
over the sale price. Wexner signed for him.
Epstein has explained that this was because
the co-investors wanted an indemnity against
being sued by. Wexner. One of the investors
calls this "bullshit."
E
pstein's appointment to the board of
New York's Rockefeller University in
2000 brought him into greater social promi-
nence. Boasting such social names as Nancy
Kissaiger. Brecke Astor. and Robert Bass.
the board also includes such pre-tminent
scientists as Nobel laureate Joseph Gold-
stein. "Epstein was thrilled to be elected."
says someone who knows him.
After one term Epstein resigned. Accord-
ing to New York magazine, this was because
he didn't like to wear a suit to meetings. A
"ke:.pe tor, fc- the Rockefeller board says
• k : becaiae he had insufficient time
a
member recalls that he
was "arrogant" and "not a good fit." The
spokesperson admits that it is "infrequent"
for board members not to be renominated
after only one term.
Still, the recent spate of publicity Ep-
stein has inspired does not seem to have
fazed him. In November he was spotted in
the front row of the Victoria's Secret fashion
show at New York's Lexington Avenue Ar-
mory: around the same time the usual co-
terie of friends and beautiful women were
whisked off to Little St. James [which he
tells people has been renamed Little St. Jeff)
for a long weekend.
Thanks to Epstein's introductions. says
Martin Nowak. the biologist finds himself
moving from Princeton to Harvard. where
he is assuming the joint position of profes-
sor of mathematics and professor of biolo•
• gy. Epstein has pledged at kart 525 million
to Harvard to create the Epstein Program
for Mathematical Biology and Evolutionary
Dynamics, and Epstein will have an office
at the university. The program will be dedi-
cated to searching for nature's algorithms. a
pursuit that is a specialty of Nowak's. For
Epstein this murt be the summit of every-
thing he has worked toward: he has been
seen proudly displaying Harvard president
Larry Summers's letter of commitment as
if he can't quite believe it is real. He says he
was reluctant to have his name attached to
the program. but Summers persuaded him.
He rang his mentor Wexner about it. and
Wexner told him it was all right.
An insatiable. restless soul. always on the
move. Epstein builds a tremendous amount
of downtime into his hectic work schedule.
Yet there is something almost programmed
about his relaxation: it's as if even plea-
sure has to be measured in terms of self-
improvement. Nowak says that, when he
goes to stay with Epstein in the Caribbean.
they'll get up at six and. as the sun rises.
have three-hour conversations about theoret-
ical physics. "Then he'll go off and do some
work. re-appear. and we'll talk some more."
Another person who went to the island
with Epstein. Maxwell. and several beautiful
women remembers that the women "sat
around one night teasing him about the
kinds of grasping women who might want
to date him. He was amused by the idea. ...
He's like a king in his own world."
Many people comment there is some-
thing innocent, almost childlike about kf•
key Epstein. They see this as refreshing. given
the sophistication of his surroundings. Alan
Dershowitz says that. as he was getting to
know Epstein. his wife asked him if he would
still be close to him if Epstein suddenly filed
for bankruptcy. Dershowitz says he replied.
"Absolutely. I would be as interested in him
as a friend if we had hamburgers on the
boardwalk in Coney Island and talked about
his ideas."
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20J3
EFTA00260620
Archives: New York Post
Page 1 of 1
SOCIETY GIRL AT TWITS' END
Neal Travis. New York Post. New York, N.Y.: Dec 1, 2000. pg. 009
Abstract (Document Summary)
THINGS may be turning sour for gal-about-town Ghislaine Maxwell, daughter of the fat and fraudulent former
owner of the Daily News, the late Robert Maxwell. I hear that some of the 39-year-old Ghislaine's friends on the
Manhattan and London party circuit are cutting her because she's had so much adverse press over her
relationship with Prince Andrew, Fergie's ex, with whom she recently attended a downtown S&M-themed party.
Her relationship with "Randy Andy" is said to be platonic, but the socially prominent women in Ghislaine's "set"
have recently sworn off any kind of publicity.
Full Text (328 words)
Copyright New York Post Corporation Dec 1, 2000
THINGS may be turning sour for gal-about-town Ghislaine Maxwell, daughter of the fat and fraudulent former
owner of the Daily News, the late Robert Maxwell. I hear that some of the 39-year-old Ghislaine's friends on the
Manhattan and London party circuit are cutting her because she's had so much adverse press over her
relationship with Prince Andrew, Fergie's ex, with whom she recently attended a downtown S&M-themed party.
Her relationship with "Randy Andy" is said to be platonic, but the socially prominent women in Ghislaine's "set"
have recently sworn off any kind of publicity. A series of lacerating articles - and the publication of the vapid
"Bright Young Things," written by one of their own, Brooke de Ocampo - has portrayed this crowd as a bunch of
twits living off their trust funds.
Ghislaine's own funds are something of a mystery. Her father lavished money on her and set her up in at least
one business in New York. But Maxwell's own ill-gotten gains were seized after he took a dive off his yacht,
which was named for her. There are plenty of British pensioners who lost their only means of support in the
crash of Maxwell's house of cards and who find it obscene that Ghislaine manages to own an apartment on the
Upper East Side and a mews house in London.
She is said to be on some kind of retainer from mysterious New York financier Jeffrey Epstein, who reportedly
has holdings in several major companies. Epstein also likes the company of attractive young women, and ifs
said that Ghislaine has been very good about introducing him to some of her pals.
Ghislaine and her two elder sisters don't talk about where their money is coming from, but they are said to be
heavily involved in some kind of Internet company. It would be awful luck for Ghislaine if her social standing
were diminished at the same time as tech stocks are going down the toilet.
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without
permission.
People:
Maxwell, Ghislaine
Section:
Neal Travis' New York
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New York Post. New York, N.Y.: Oct 20, 2002. pg. 010
People:
Epstein, Jeffrey, Clinton, Bill, Trump, Donald J, Boardman, Samantha, Truman, James
Section:
Page Six
Text Word
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Count
Document URL:
Leslie Wexner, founder and chair of the Limited clothing-store chain, bought the place in 1989 for
$15,000. [Jeffrey Epstein]'s mentor and one of his clients, Wexner is rumored to have sold the palatial
digs to him for just $1. Epstein quickly spent $10 million to gut the place and completely redo the
interior.
SOCIALITE Samantha Boardman ditched her beau, Conde Nast editorial director James Truman
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New York Post. New York, N.Y.: Oct 20, 2002. pg. 010
Abstract (Document Summary)
Leslie Wexner, founder and chair of the Limited clothing-store chain, bought the place in 1989 for $15,000.
[Jeffrey Epsteinj's mentor and one of his clients, Wexner is rumored to have sold the palatial digs to him for just
$1. Epstein quickly spent $10 million to gut the place and completely redo the interior.
SOCIALITE Samantha Boardman ditched her beau, Conde Nast editorial director James Truman, last year for
man-about-town Todd Meister. According to our spies, Boardman ditched Meister after she caught him in
flagrante with a 19-year-old coed. But don't feel too bad for her. Women's Wear Daily reports Boardman has a
new man - Vanity Fairs Graydon Carter. Truman must not be too pleased. When Boardman dumped him, he
needed to recuperate at a Buddhist retreat upstate. Editorial meetings at Conde Nast must be a hoot these
days.
"DISCO Bloodbath" author James St. James is following up his notorious tell-all about killer club kid Michael Alig
with another true-crime tome. He's shopping around "Killer Grandpa," his investigation into a lynching that his
grandfather led in 1935. "My grandfather was a sheriff in Fort Lauderdale, and he lynched a black man that
allegedly raped a white woman," James told us. "About 100 people gathered to watch, and they passed a gun
around and everyone took a shot at the body. It became this big town secret, and I write about what really
happened." James, a 1980s club kid who fell in with Alig's inner circle, is played by Seth Green in "Party
Monster," the movie adaptation of "Disco Bloodbath." But James said he was "shocked" when he watched a few
scenes of Green mincing it up with Macaulay Culkin, who plays Alig. "I didn't know I was so gay! I thought I was
more like Steve McQueen, but Seth is flouncing around the whole time. Seth is much cuter than me, actually,
and looks better in drag."
Full Text (1147 words)
(Copyright 2002, The New York Post. All Rights Reserved)
PAGE SIX'S scoop last month that mysterious money manager Jeffrey Epstein had flown Bill Clinton, Chris
Tucker and Kevin Spacey to Africa on his private 727 has sent journalists all over town trying to find out just who
Epstein really is.
Vanity Fair has a reporter on his trail, but New York magazine beats them to the punch with a feature this week
on Epstein's strange history.
Epstein, 49, a former Dalton School math teacher from Coney Island, is said to manage $15 billion for super-
wealthy clients he'll only take on if they have at least $1 billion in assets.
"According to people who know him," New York reports, "if you were worth $700 million and felt the need for the
services of Epstein & Co., you would receive a not-so-polite no-thank-you."
Noted mergers/acquisitions lawyer Dennis Block of Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft recalls trying to give
Epstein a client whose funds were below the $1 billion cutoff.
"I sent him a $500 million client a few years ago and he wouldn't take him," Block reports. "Said the account was
too small. Both the client and I were amazed. But that's Jeffrey."
Most Wall Streeters, however, aren't even certain what Epstein actually does for a living. "My belief is that Jeff
maintains some sort of money-management firm, though you won't get a straight answer from him," says one
powerful investor. "He once told me that he has 300 people working for him, and I've also heard he manages
Rockefeller money. But one never knows. It's like looking at the Wizard of Oz."
Some say that Epstein once quit his seat on the board of the Rockefeller Institute because he hates wearing a
suit, supposedly telling a friend, "It feels like wearing a dress?
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One power player who doesn't find Epstein to be all that hard to figure is Donald Trump.
"I've known Jeffrey for 15 years," The Donald tells the magazine. "Terrific guy. 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."
Another thing Epstein - who's said to pocket at least $75 million a year in fees - and Trump have in common is a
taste for extravagant living. Epstein lives in a 45,000-square-foot, eight-story mansion on East 71st Street.
Leslie Wexner, founder and chair of the Limited clothing-store chain, bought the place in 1989 for $15,000.
Epstein's mentor and one of his clients, Wexner is rumored to have sold the palatial digs to him for just $1.
Epstein quickly spent $10 million to gut the place and completely redo the interior.
"I don't want to live in another person's house," Epstein told New York.
Blind dater
CHRIS Noth wasn't lonely on a recent trip to London. The "Law & Order hunk was set up on a blind date with
Rose Keegan, an actress and the daughter of historian Sir John Keegan. The two spent much of the evening at
the Century Club, and they were chaperoned by Kyle MacLachlan, who is pals with Noth from their days on the
set of "Sex and the City." MacLachlan is in London co-starring in a play with hemp-happy Woody Harrelson.
'Rockets' soars
"ROCKETS Redglare!" - a posthumous tribute to the late East Village actor and downtown icon - won the Grand
Jury Prize for Best Documentary at the New York International Independent Film and Video Festival. Directed by
Luis Fernandez De La Reguera, it features interviews with Rockets' pals Willem Dafoe, Matt Dillon, Jim
Jarmusch, Steve Buscemi and Julian Schnabel. Rockets, the beloved 350-pound former bodyguard of punk
legend Sid Vicious who appeared in several of Buscemi's and Jarmusch's movies, died last year after years of
drug abuse.
Bizarre union
BOB Crane was a sex addict, but his second wife, Pat Crane, didn't care. "He treated women like the rest of the
world treats toilet paper. Who's going to be jealous of toilet paper?" she told "20/20" contributing correspondent
Chris Connelly. Despite Crane's penchant for seducing other women and documenting his trysts on film and
videotape, Pat insists: "We had a wonderful sex life. We had a wonderful marriage." Crane was bludgeoned to
death in 1978 with a camera tripod.
Plot device
GAY writers love PAGE SIX. Everyone's favorite gossip column is prominently featured in the new novel "The
Night We Met," a romantically swishy comedy by Rob Byrnes about a guy and his mafioso boyfriend. After
making references to this page and The Post throughout the book, Byrnes even attempts to replicate one of our
items in the climax. Byrnes' fictional item may lack the flawless prose of a real PAGE SIX scoop, but he does
have us outsmarting yet another mendacious mouthpiece.
Change partners
SOCIALITE Samantha Boardman ditched her beau, Conde Nast editorial director James Truman, last year for
man-about-town Todd Meister. According to our spies, Boardman ditched Meister after she caught him in
flagrante with a 19-year-old coed. But don't feel too bad for her. Women's Wear Daily reports Boardman has a
new man - Vanity Fair's Graydon Carter. Truman must not be too pleased. When Boardman dumped him, he
needed to recuperate at a Buddhist retreat upstate. Editorial meetings at Conde Nast must be a hoot these
days.
Well protected
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SEAN "Puffy" Combs confirmed our account of how Heath Ledger scuffled with his bodyguards at the
VH1Nogue Awards after-party Combs threw at Lotus. "Heath is from Australia, and he parties hard now,"
Combs told "Access Hollywood." The two became pals on the set of "Monster's Ball." "He's coming at me, he's
like, 'Puff, people don't know that we're the best of friends,' so it's like my security held him up for a second . . .
and I was like, 'No, that's my brother.'" Sins of his grandfather
"DISCO Bloodbath" author James St. James is following up his notorious tell-all about killer club kid Michael Alig
with another true-crime tome. He's shopping around "Killer Grandpa," his investigation into a lynching that his
grandfather led in 1935. "My grandfather was a sheriff in Fort Lauderdale, and he lynched a black man that
allegedly raped a white woman," James told us. "About 100 people gathered to watch, and they passed a gun
around and everyone took a shot at the body. It became this big town secret, and I write about what really
happened." James, a 1980s club kid who fell in with Alig's inner circle, is played by Seth Green in "Party
Monster," the movie adaptation of "Disco Bloodbath." But James said he was "shocked" when he watched a few
scenes of Green mincing it up with Macaulay Culkin, who plays Alig. "I didn't know I was so gay! I thought I was
more like Steve McQueen, but Seth is flouncing around the whole time. Seth is much cuter than me, actually,
and looks better in drag."
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without
permission.
People:
Epstein, Jeffrey, Clinton, Bill, Trump, Donald J, Boardman, Samantha, Truman, James
Section:
Page Six
Text Word Count 1147
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PAUL THARP. New York Post. New York, N.Y.: Feb 4, 2003. pg. 036
Abstract (Document Summary)
[Jeffrey Epstein), a 50-year-old Ralph Lauren lookalike who claims to manage a billionaires-only fund, has made
headlines for his high- society lifestyle; among his attention-grabbing moves was flying President Clinton and
Kevin Spacey to Africa on a private jet.
The article says that when Epstein worked for [Steve Hoffenberg], he cooked up some of Hoffenberg's
questionable financing deals - a claim Epstein has denied.
Full Text (249 words)
(Copyright 2003, The New York Post. Al! Rights Reserved)
Jeffrey Epstein - a self-proclaimed billionaire who hobnobs with moguls and pledged $25 million to Harvard - is
actually a small potatoes ex-bounty hunter with a questionable financial background, says a report.
Epstein, a 50-year-old Ralph Lauren lookalike who claims to manage a billionaires-only fund, has made
headlines for his high- society lifestyle; among his attention-grabbing moves was flying President Clinton and
Kevin Spacey to Africa on a private jet.
But a report in the March issue of Vanity Fair, on newsstands this week, unmasks Epstein's mystery image.
Epstein wasn't exactly the top gun at Bear Steams, as he claims - and left the firm amid a swirl of rumors and an
SEC violation, the article said.
His mentor in high finance was Steve Hoffenberg, the bill collector turned hustler now serving 20 years in prison
for running the nation's costliest Ponzi scheme, the report says.
The article says that when Epstein worked for Hoffenberg, he cooked up some of Hoffenberg's questionable
financing deals - a claim Epstein has denied.
Epstein has also been involved in numerous lawsuits, including one in which Citibank is suing him for defaulting
on $20 million in loans from its private banking arm.
Epstein and his lawyer, Jeffrey Schantz, couldn't be reached for comment on the article.
The article said that Epstein keeps all his deals and clients secret, except for one - retail magnate Leslie
Wexner, who calls Epstein "smart . .. [with] high standards . . . and a loyal friend."
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without
permission.
People:
Epstein, Jeffrey, Hoffenberg, Steve
Section:
Business
Text Word Count 249
Document URL:
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PAUL THARP. New York Post. New York, N.Y.: Feb 4, 2003. pg. 036
People:
Epstein, Jeffrey, Hoffenberg, Steve
Section:
Business
Text Word Count
249
Document URL:
?IVO:MO(50
[Jeffrey Epstein], a 50-year-old Ralph Lauren lookalike who claims to manage a billionaires-only
fund, has made headlines for his high- society lifestyle; among his attention-grabbing moves was flying
President Clinton and Kevin Spacey to Africa on a private jet.
The article says that when Epstein worked for [Steve Hoffenberg], he cooked up some of
Hoffenberg's questionable financing deals - a claim Epstein hal denied.
•
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PROBED POL'S SON BLAMES PLOT
New York Post. New York, N.Y.: Jan 14, 2005. pg. 014
Abstract (Document Summary)
•
IS billionaire financier Jeffrey Epstein making a bid for IMG Models? As we reported last summer, Epstein tried
to buy Elite Models when the bankrupt agency was auctioned off. In 2003, we reported that Epstein, who's been
described as "a connoisseur of beautiful women," was talking to Karin Models owner Jean-Luc Brunel about
doing a deal, but it went nowhere. Epstein has also met with Elite's Gerald Marie and 1 Management's Scott
Lipps. Now we hear Epstein has been having talks with fellow billionaire Teddy Forstmann, who paid $750
million for the IMG group a few months ago, about buying the company's modeling division, which reps the likes
of Gisele Bundchen, Kate Moss and Heidi Klum. Reps for IMG and Forstmann deny any such negotiations are
taking place. Epstein's rep did not return calls. Forstmann has been talking to top Hollywood talent agencies
about a possible merger.
PAUL Allen, 51, the bachelor Microsoft co-founder worth $20 billion (according to Forbes), rang in the New Year
with British blonde Kate Reardon, 36 (above), a former fashion director for Tatter magazine who now writes
about jewelry for the Times of London. The couple ushered in 2005 in St. Barts aboard Allen's 413- foot yacht,
"Octopus," equipped with two helicopters and a 60-fobt submarine. There were scores of other guests but Allen •
seemed mesmerized by Reardon, who had a similareffect on another billionaire, Sir Jimmy Goldsmith. rZeardon
attended Goldsmith's funeral in 1997, along with his widow and his second wife. "Conveniently, Allen has a
house in London," said our source.
[TRUMAN CAPOTE], dead for over 20 years, is suddenly a hot property in Hollywood. The author of "Breakfast
at Tiffany's" and "In Cold Blood" is the subject of two new biopics - Warner Independent's "Every Word Is True,"
based on George Plimpton's 1997 oral history, and United Artists'"Capote," based on the landmark 1988 Gerald
Clarke biography. "Capote," due out this fall, stars Phillip Seymour Hoffman, who is talented but a bit burly to
play the "tiny terror." "Every Word" stars relatively unknown Toby Jones with an all-star supporting cast including
Alan Cumming, Anjelica Huston, Sandra Bullock (as "To Kill a Mockingbird" author Harper Lee), Ashley Judd,
Kevin Kline, Gwyneth Paltrow and Sigourney Weaver. Hollywood columnist Jeffrey Wells reports that "Capote"
has the advantage of Hoffman in the starring role, while "Every Word," which just started filming, is said to have
a much better screenplay.
Full Text (1520 words)
(Copyright 2005, The New York Post. All Rights Reserved)
THE loose-cannon son of a subpoenaed Bronx state senator claims Republicans are behind a federal probe of
the Bronx Democratic machine because they want to destroy Fernando Ferrer's campaign for mayor.
Efrain Gonzalez III, whose dad, State Sen. Efrain Gonzalez Jr., is one of nine Bronx politicians subpoenaed to
testify, wrote to the Riverdale Review: "The GOP controls the White House, the N.Y. State House and City Hall,
so if they want to attack the members of the Bronx Democratic Party, who is going to stop them?" Fifteen
subpoenas reportedly have been served, six of them to nonprofit organizations that employ relatives of the
elected officials. Young Gonzalez is president of the Latino Affirmation Council, which isn't listed in The Bronx or
Manhattan.
Gonzalez Ill's letter to the Riverdale paper said: "When my father and the 14 other members were issued
subpoenas, that alone was a message being sent by the GOP, that they will do anything in their power to keep
Mayor Bloomberg in power, because all those members being probed are working to support Ferrer in next
year's mayoral race."
•
The elder Gonzalez's lawyer, "Don't Worry Murray" Richman, told PAGE SIX: "This is the over-excited
imagination of a young man. We do not support these allegations which were not authorized and don't represent
the views of the senator or myself."
In a strange e-mail posted on YonkersTribune.com last fall, after The Post broke the news of the investigation,
young Gonzalez said: "They couldn't find any weapons [of mass destruction], so they said instead of killing more
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camels, they are trying to get rid of all the donkeys overbere instead . .. they forgot that a Puerto Rican donkey
knows how to climb high mountains, and are stronger than any elephant."
One federal subpoena went to the elder Gonzalez's longtime girlfriend, Lucia Sanchez. Investigators are also
looking into the $1 million in campaign funds Gonzalez has spent over the years in-uncontested elections, with
much of the money going to a mystery campaign worker identified in filings as Ricardo Santiago.
"At issue is whether or not borough politicos funneled state and city funds into pet programs to then turn those
funds into salaries for friends and relatives," the Riverdale Review reports.
One of the non-profits being probed is the West Bronx Neighborhood Association, a favorite of Gonzalez's
housed in the same building as his office on the Grand Concourse.
Talent shortfall
THUMB-size thespians looking for a little work would do well to book a trip to London, where dwarf actors are in
short supply. Producers for the BBC's "Doctor Who" are searching for undersize actors to play little blue aliens in
the remake of the classic 1970s sci-fi show. But most of Britain's tiny talents have already been snapped up for
the new "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory" movie or to play Gringotts Bank staff in the new "Harry Potter" film.
Executive producer Russell T. Davies complained to London's Daily Mirror: "It's very difficult to employ persons
of restricted growth when these other movies are filming at the same time."
We hear . . .
THAT it could get crowded for the Democrats in 2008. John Kerry has said he won't rule out running again, and
now comes word Tipper Gore is telling friends that Al is eyeing another race himself.
Words of gold
DONALD Trump will be paid a record-breaking-$1 million an hour for Learning Annex appearances in three
cities this year. That's over $16,000 a minute. Since it was founded in 1980, the Learning Annex has featured
such celebrity teachers as Sarah Jessica Parker, Tony Robbins, Deepak Chopra and Henry Kissinger. The
previous highest fee was $28,000 - paid to Ron Wood nearly 20 years ago when he was a member of the
Rolling Stones. Trump's "How toSucceed in Real Estate" hits Los Angeles on May 1, Chicago on Oct. 23 and
New York on Nov. 6. Learning Annex president/founder Bill Zanker said, "Last time he taught for us, over 20,000
students came - and this year he's even bigger."
Mogul lusts for model shop
IS billionaire financier Jeffrey Epstein making a bid for IMG Models? As we reported last summer, Epstein tried
to buy Elite Models when the bankrupt agency was auctioned off. In 2003, we reported that Epstein, who's been
described as "a connoisseur of beautiful women," was talking to Karin Models owner Jean-Luc Brunel about
doing a deal, but it went nowhere. Epstein has also met with Elite's Gerald Marie and 1 Management's Scott
Lipps. Now we hear Epstein has been having talks with fellow billionaire Teddy Forstmann, who paid $750
million for the IMG group a few months ago, about buying the company's modeling division, which reps the likes
of Gisele Bundchen, Kate Moss and Heidi Klum. Reps for IMG and Forstmann deny any such negotiations are
taking place. Epstein's rep did not return calls. Forstmann has been talking to top Hollywood talent agencies
about a possible merger.
Aspen captive
SOCIALITE Denise Rich has fired her yoga instructor after his girlfriend told police that he locked her in a room
of Rich's Aspen mansion for three days over the Thanksgiving holiday. The unidentified woman alleged that
Jules Paxton attacked her first and then locked her in a room when she threatened to call the cops. A
spokesman for Rich said the ex-wife of pardoned tax cheat Marc Rich was traveling abroad during the incident,
but confirmed that Paxton was staying at herhome. "Mrs. Rich has decided to discontinue his services as her
yoga instructor," the rep said.
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Happy holiday
PAUL Allen, 51, the bachelor Microsoft co-founder worth $20 billion (according to Forbes), rang in the New Year
with British blonde Kate Reardon, 36 (above), a former fashion director for Tatler magazine who now writes
about jewelry for the Times of London. The couple ushered in 2005 in St. Barts aboard Allen's 413- foot yacht,
"Octopus," equipped with two helicopters and a 60-foot submarine. There were scores of other guests but Allen
seemed mesmerized by Reardon, who had a similareffect on another billionaire, Sir Jimmy Goldsmith. Reardon
attended Goldsmith's funeral in 1997, along with his widow and his second wife. "Conveniently, Allen has a
house in London," said our source.
Super at 14
THE 44 contestants in the Ford Supermodel of the World contest learned evasive maneuvers at the after-party
at the Tunnel, where they met such studs as Jesse Palmer of the Giants, Trevor Ariza of the Knicks, Jamie
("Born Rich") Johnson and Kelly ("The Apprentice") Perdew. New husband Fabian Basabe showed, too, without
bride Martina Borgomanero, and worked the red carpet. The winner, who also got a $250,000 modeling contract,
was Brazilian Camila Finn (above), all of 14. She might look even better when she grows up.
TRUMAN Capote, dead for over 20 years, is suddenly a hot property in Hollywood. The author of "Breakfast at
Tiffany's" and "In Cold Blood" is the subject of two new biopics - Warner Independent's "Every Word Is True,"
based on George Plimpton's 1997 oral history, and United Artists'"Capote," based on the landmark 1988 Gerald
Clarke biography. "Capote," due out this fall, stars Phillip Seymour Hoffman, who is talented but a bit burly to
play the "tiny terror." "Every Word" stars relatively unknown Toby Jones with an all-star supporting cast including
Alan Cumming, Anjelica Huston, Sandra Bullock (as "To Kill a Mockingbird" author Harper Lee), Ashley Judd,
Kevin Kline, Gwyneth Paltrow and Sigourney Weaver. Hollywood columnist Jeffrey Wells reports that "Capote"
has the advantage of Hoffman in the starring role, while "Every Word," which just started filming, is said to have
a much better screenplay.
Own show
COURTNEY Fine, a former aide to Mayor Bloomberg who left politics to become an actress, is showcasing "Me
2," a play she wrote about a woman jailed for breaking into the bar where she left her cell- phone. Among those
invited to last night's opening at the Producers Club 2: Victoria Gotti, Amy Fine Collins and Bloomberg's sister
Marjorie Tiven. The show closes after tomorrow's performance.
Never mind
GEORGE Parnham, the lawyer for Andrea Yates, is quick to cash in after winning her a new trial for the murder
of her five kids. Parnham, who will try to get Yates off using the insanity defense, is shopping a book, "States of
Mind," which will focus on his favorite tricks for defending female killers: postpartum depression, premenstrual
syndrome and post-traumatic stress. And he'll include similar cases: Clara Harris, who allegedly ran over her
unfaithful husband with herMercedes Benz, and Lisa Montgomery, who strangled Bobbie Jo Stinnett and then
surgically removed her fetus last month.
[Illustration]
-Kate Reardon; Camila Finn -SINGER ALICIA KEYS KEEPS HER BOD BUFF BY JOGGING ON THE BEACH
IN BARBADOS YESTERDAY. [ZUMA PRESS] -ANY MAN WHO WINS THE HEART OF NICOLE KIDMAN,
CRUSH, SHE TELLS THE MAG, IS PHILIP ROTH, 71, WHO WROTE THE NOVEL "THE HUMAN STAIN," THE
BASIS FOR HER 2003 FILM. [RUVEN AFANADOR FOR IN STYLE]
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permission.
People:
Gonzalez, Efrain Ill, Epstein, Jeffrey, Rich, Denise, Alien, Paul, Reardon, Kate
Section:
Page Six
Text Word Count 1520
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PROBED POL'S SON BLAMES PLOT
New York Post. New York, N.Y.: Jan 14, 2005. pg. 014
Abstract (Document Summary)
IS billionaire financier Jeffrey Epstein making a bid for IMG Models? As we reported last summer, Epstein tried
to buy Elite Models when the bankrupt agency was auctioned off. In 2003, we reported that Epstein, who's been
described as "a connoisseur of beautiful women," was talking to Karin Models owner Jean-Luc Brunel about
doing a deal, but it went nowhere. Epstein has also met with Elite's Gerald Marie and 1 Management's Scott
Lipps. Now we hear Epstein has been having talks with fellow billionaire Teddy Forstmann, who paid $750
million for the IMG group a few months ago, about buying the company's modeling division, which reps the likes
of Gisele Bundchen, Kate Moss and Heidi Klum. Reps for IMG and Forstmann deny any such negotiations are
taking place. Epstein's rep did not return calls. Forstmann has been talking to top Hollywood talent agencies
about a possible merger.
PAUL Allen, 51, the bachelor Microsoft co-founder worth $20 billion (according to Forbes), rang in the New Year
with British blonde Kate Reardon, 36 (above), a former fashion director for Tatler magazine who now writes
about jewelry for the Times of London. The couple ushered in 2005 in St. Barts aboard Allen's 413- foot yacht,
"Octopus," equipped with two helicopters and a 60-foot submarine. There were scores of other guests but Allen
seemed mesmerized by Reardon, who had a similareffect on another billionaire, Sir Jimmy Goldsmith. Reardon
attended Goldsmith's funeral in 1997, along with his widow and his second wife. "Conveniently, Allen has a
house in London," said our source.
[TRUMAN CAPOTE], dead for over 20 years, is suddenly a hot property in Hollywood. The author of "Breakfast
at Tiffany's" and "In Cold Blood" is the subject of two new biopics - Warner Independent's "Every Word Is True,"
based on George Plimpton's 1997 oral history, and United Artists' "Capote," based on the landmark 1988 Gerald
Clarke biography. "Capote," due out this fall, stars Phillip Seymour Hoffman, who is talented but a bit burly to
play the "tiny terror." "Every Word" stars relatively unknown Toby Jones with an all-star supporting cast including
Alan Cumming, Anjelica Huston, Sandra Bullock (as "To Kill a Mockingbird" author Harper Lee), Ashley Judd,
Kevin Kline, Gwyneth Paltrow and Sigoumey Weaver. Hollywood columnist Jeffrey Wells reports that "Capote"
has the advantage of Hoffman in the starring role, while "Every Word," which just started filming, is said to have
a much better screenplay.
Full Text (1520 words)
(Copyright 2005, The New York Post. A!! Rights Reserved)
THE loose-cannon son of a subpoenaed Bronx state senator claims Republicans are behind a federal probe of
the Bronx Democratic machine because they want to destroy Fernando Ferrer's campaign for mayor.
Efrain Gonzalez III, whose dad, State Sen. Efrain Gonzalez Jr., is one of nine Bronx politicians subpoenaed to
testify, wrote to the Riverdale Review: "The GOP controls the White House, the N.Y. State House and City Hall,
so if they want to attack the members of the Bronx Democratic Party, who is going to stop them?" Fifteen
subpoenas reportedly have been served, six of them to nonprofit organizations that employ relatives of the
elected officials. Young Gonzalez is president of the Latino Affirmation Council, which isn't listed in The Bronx or
Manhattan.
Gonzalez Ill's letter to the Riverdale paper said: "When my father and the 14 other members were issued
subpoenas, that alone was a message being sent by the GOP, that they will do anything in their power to keep
Mayor Bloomberg in power, because all those members being probed are working to support Ferrer in next
year's mayoral race."
The elder Gonzalez's lawyer, "Don't Worry Murray" Richman, told PAGE SIX: "This is the over-excited
imagination of a young man. We do not support these allegations which were not authorized and don't represent
the views of the senator or myself."
In a strange e-mail posted on YonkersTribune.com last fall, after The Post broke the news of the investigation,
young Gonzalez said: "They couldn't find any weapons [of mass destruction], so they said instead of killing more
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camels, they are trying to get rid of all the donkeys over here instead . . . they forgot that a Puerto Rican donkey
knows how to climb high mountains, and are stronger than any elephant."
One federal subpoena went to the elder Gonzalez's longtime girlfriend, Lucia Sanchez. Investigators are also
looking into the $1 million in campaign funds Gonzalez has spent over the years in uncontested elections, with
much of the money going to a mystery campaign worker identified in filings as Ricardo Santiago.
"At issue is whether or not borough politicos funneled state and city funds into pet programs to then turn those
funds into salaries for friends and relatives," the Riverdale Review reports.
One of the non-profits being probed is the West Bronx Neighborhood Association, a favorite of Gonzalez's
housed in the same building as his office on the Grand Concourse.
Talent shortfall
THUMB-size thespians looking for a little work would do well to book a trip to London, where dwarf actors are in
short supply. Producers for the BBC's "Doctor Who" are searching for undersize actors to play little blue aliens in
the remake of the classic 1970s sci-fi show. But most of Britain's tiny talents have already been snapped up for
the new "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory" movie or to play Gringotts Bank staff in the new "Harry Potter" film.
Executive producer Russell T. Davies complained to London's Daily Mirror: "It's very difficult to employ persons
of restricted growth when these other movies are filming at the same time."
We hear . .
THAT it could get crowded for the Democrats in 2008. John Kerry has said he won't rule out running again, and
now comes word Tipper Gore is telling friends that Al is eyeing another race himself.
Words of gold
DONALD Trump will be paid a record-breaking $1 million an hour for Learning Annex appearances in three
cities this year. That's over $16,000 a minute. Since it was founded in 1980, the Learning Annex has featured
such celebrity teachers as Sarah Jessica Parker, Tony Robbins, Deepak Chopra and Henry Kissinger. The
previous highest fee was $28,000 - paid to Ron Wood nearly 20 years ago when he was a member of the
Rolling Stones. Trump's "How toSucceed in Real Estate" hits Los Angeles on May 1, Chicago on Oct. 23 and
New York on Nov. 6. Learning Annex president/founder Bill Zanker said, "Last time he taught for us, over 20,000
students came - and this year he's even bigger."
Mogul lusts for model shop
IS billionaire financier Jeffrey Epstein making a bid for IMG Models? As we reported last summer, Epstein tried
to buy Elite Models when the bankrupt agency was auctioned off. In 2003, we reported that Epstein, who's been
described as "a connoisseur of beautiful women," was talking to Karin Models owner Jean-Luc Brunel about
doing a deal, but it went nowhere. Epstein has also met with Elite's Gerald Marie and 1 Management's Scott
Lipps. Now we hear Epstein has been having talks with fellow billionaire Teddy Forstmann, who paid $750
million for the IMG group a few months ago, about buying the company's modeling division, which reps the likes
of Gisele Bundchen, Kate Moss and Heidi Klum. Reps for IMG and Forstmann deny any such negotiations are
taking place. Epstein's rep did not return calls. Forstmann has been talking to top Hollywood talent agencies
about a possible merger.
Aspen captive
SOCIALITE Denise Rich has fired her yoga instructor after his girlfriend told police that he locked her in a room
of Rich's Aspen mansion for three days over the Thanksgiving holiday. The unidentified woman alleged that
Jules Paxton attacked her first and then locked her in a room when she threatened to call the cops. A
spokesman for Rich said the ex-wife of pardoned tax cheat Marc Rich was traveling abroad during the incident,
but confirmed that Paxton was staying at herhome. "Mrs. Rich has decided to discontinue his services as her
yoga instructor," the rep said.
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Happy holiday
PAUL Allen, 51, the bachelor Microsoft co-founder worth $20 billion (according to Forbes), rang in the New Year
with British blonde Kate Reardon, 36 (above), a former fashion director for Taller magazine who now writes
about jewelry for the Times of London. The couple ushered in 2005 in St. Baits aboard Allen's 413- foot yacht,
"Octopus," equipped with two helicopters and a 60-foot submarine. There were scores of other guests but Allen
seemed mesmerized by Reardon, who had a similareffect on another billionaire, Sir Jimmy Goldsmith. Reardon
attended Goldsmith's funeral in 1997, along with his widow and his second wife. "Conveniently, Allen has a
house in London," said our source.
Super at 14
THE 44 contestants in the Ford Supermodel of the World contest learned evasive maneuvers at the after-party
at the Tunnel, where they met such studs as Jesse Palmer of the Giants, Trevor Ariza of the Knicks, Jamie
("Born Rich") Johnson and Kelly ("The Apprentice") Perdew. New husband Fabian Basabe showed, too, without
bride Martina Borgomanero, and worked the red carpet. The winner, who also got a $250,000 modeling contract,
was Brazilian Camila Finn (above), all of 14. She might look even better when she grows up.
TRUMAN Capote, dead for over 20 years, is suddenly a hot property in Hollywood. The author of "Breakfast at
Tiffany's" and "In Cold Blood" is the subject of two new biopics - Warner Independent's "Every Word Is True,"
based on George Plimpton's 1997 oral history, and United Artists' "Capote," based on the landmark 1988 Gerald
Clarke biography. "Capote," due out this fall, stars Phillip Seymour Hoffman, who is talented but a bit burly to
play the "tiny terror." "Every Word" stars relatively unknown Toby Jones with an all-star supporting cast including
Alan Cumming, Anjelica Huston, Sandra Bullock (as "To Kill a Mockingbird" author Harper Lee), Ashley Judd,
Kevin Kline, Gwyneth Paltrow and Sigourney Weaver. Hollywood columnist Jeffrey Wells reports that "Capote"
has the advantage of Hoffman in the starring role, while "Every Word," which just started filming, is said to have
a much better screenplay.
Own show
COURTNEY Fine, a former aide to Mayor Bloomberg who left politics to become an actress, is showcasing "Me
2," a play she wrote about a woman jailed for breaking into the bar where she left her cell- phone. Among those
invited to last night's opening at the Producers Club 2: Victoria Gotti, Amy Fine Collins and Bloomberg's sister
Marjorie Tiven. The show closes after tomorrow's performance.
Never mind
GEORGE Pamham, the lawyer for Andrea Yates, is quick to cash in after winning her a new trial for the murder
of her five kids. Parnham, who will try to get Yates off using the insanity defense, is shopping a book, "States of
Mind," which will focus on his favorite tricks for defending female killers: postpartum depression, premenstrual
syndrome and post-traumatic stress. And he'll include similar cases: Clara Harris, who allegedly ran over her
unfaithful husband with herMercedes Benz, and Lisa Montgomery, who strangled Bobbie Jo Stinnett and then
surgically removed her fetus last month.
[Illustration]
-Kate Reardon; Camila Finn -SINGER ALICIA KEYS KEEPS HER BOD BUFF BY JOGGING ON THE BEACH
IN BARBADOS YESTERDAY. [ZUMA PRESS] -ANY MAN WHO WINS THE HEART OF NICOLE KIDMAN,
CRUSH, SHE TELLS THE MAG, IS PHILIP ROTH, 71, WHO WROTE THE NOVEL "THE HUMAN STAIN," THE
BASIS FOR HER 2003 FILM. [RUVEN AFANADOR FOR IN STYLE]
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without
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permission.
People:
Gonzalez, Efrain Ill, Epstein, Jeffrey, Rich, Denise, Men, Paul, Reardon, Kate
Section:
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Companies:
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NOW that his romance with Serena Williams has gone south, randy director Brett Ratner seems to be
settling down with his former gal pal. Model Alina Pascau has been flashing a massive canary-yellow
diamond engagement ring Ratner recently gave her, we're told. Pascau, a Romanian stunner, used to
date reclusive billionaire Jeffrey Epstein. Epstein, who handles Leslie Wexner's fortune, helped land
her a gig modeling
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New York Post. New York, N.Y.: May 26, 2005. pg. 012
Abstract (Document Summary)
NOW that his romance with Serena Williams has gone south, randy director Brett Ratner seems to be settling
down with his former gal pal. Model Alina Pascau has been flashing a massive canary-yellow diamond
engagement ring Ratner recently gave her, we're told. Pascau, a Romanian stunner, used to date reclusive
billionaire Jeffrey Epstein. Epstein, who handles Leslie Wexner's fortune, helped land her a gig modeling for
Wexner's Victoria's Secret brand, wehear, and paid for her to live in high style. After they broke up she and
Ratner dated for a while before his fling with Williams. "She's beautiful, but dumb as paint," one pal of Pascau
told us. "She never washes her hair and she always has a cellphone glued to her ear. Without Jeffrey she would
never have gotten the Victoria's Secret job." Pascau, who likes high-profile men, also used to bed down with
Formula I driver Eddie Irvine. Ratner's rep did not return calls.
YOU can't watch Arthur Chi'en on WCBS/Ch. 2 any more - the reporter was fired last week for uttering the "f
word" on-air - but you can buy a plethora of products with his face on it. Cafepress.com is hawking a line of
Chi'en-branded mugs, T-shirts, buttons, tote bags, messenger bags, barbecue aprons, teddy bears and even a
"Chi'en Classic Thong." Some are emblazoned with the words, "What the [bleep] is your problem, man?" - the
question Chi'en, who thought he was off the air, yelled out to twohecklers. David Yee, who is selling the Chi'en
merchandise, said he was inspired by the popular T-shirts of revolutionary Che Guevara. "Chi'en sort of sounds
like Che," he explained. "People are buying it." Meanwhile, Chi'en's friend Ian Gerard, the founder of Gen Art,
has circulated an e-mail calling the firing "ridiculous," and urging recipients to complain to various Viacom and
Channel 2 executives. Chi'en tells us he was "devastated" by his dismissal, and says he's currently looking for a
new job. "I've got bigger things to worry about than the shirts, basically," he said.
Full Text (1671 words)
(Copyright 2005, The New York Post. Al! Rights Reserved)
YOUNG Hollywood can rest easier now that police have arrested the man suspected of committing a string of
burglaries in the Beverly Hills and Bel Air area.
Darnell Riley, 28, was officially busted two months ago in connection with a burglary/robbery at "Girls Gone
Wild" gazillionaire Joe Francis' home in January 2004 - but he's also being investigated for break-ins at the
homes of Paris Hilton, baby oil heiress Casey Johnson, club promoter Tommy Alastra and other L.A. celebs.
A source said the crime ring used a gorgeous Elite model, still at large, t