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kaggle-ho-017778House Oversight

Jeffrey Epstein’s 1980s financial deals, Bear Stearns exit, and alleged insider‑trading testimony

Jeffrey Epstein’s 1980s financial deals, Bear Stearns exit, and alleged insider‑trading testimony The passage provides specific names, dates, and dollar amounts linking Epstein to risky oil‑gas investments, a disputed $450k investment from Michael Stroll, and a 1981 SEC insider‑trading investigation that led to his abrupt resignation from Bear Stearns. These details suggest concrete avenues for follow‑up (SEC interview transcripts, court filings, Stroll lawsuit records) and involve high‑profile financial institutions and individuals, making it a strong investigative lead, though the claims are largely unverified and partially contradictory. Key insights: Michael Stroll sued Epstein over a $450,000 1982 investment that allegedly returned only $10,000 after four years.; Epstein was hired by Howard Hoffenberg at $25,000 per month in 1987 and given office space on Madison Avenue.; Epstein left Bear Stearns on March 12, 1981, one day after a Seagram tender offer that triggered an SEC insider‑trading probe.

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House Oversight
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Summary

Jeffrey Epstein’s 1980s financial deals, Bear Stearns exit, and alleged insider‑trading testimony The passage provides specific names, dates, and dollar amounts linking Epstein to risky oil‑gas investments, a disputed $450k investment from Michael Stroll, and a 1981 SEC insider‑trading investigation that led to his abrupt resignation from Bear Stearns. These details suggest concrete avenues for follow‑up (SEC interview transcripts, court filings, Stroll lawsuit records) and involve high‑profile financial institutions and individuals, making it a strong investigative lead, though the claims are largely unverified and partially contradictory. Key insights: Michael Stroll sued Epstein over a $450,000 1982 investment that allegedly returned only $10,000 after four years.; Epstein was hired by Howard Hoffenberg at $25,000 per month in 1987 and given office space on Madison Avenue.; Epstein left Bear Stearns on March 12, 1981, one day after a Seagram tender offer that triggered an SEC insider‑trading probe.

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kagglehouse-oversighthigh-importancefinancial-crimesinsider-tradingsec-investigationbear-stearnsjeffrey-epstein
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