1 duplicate copy in the archive
Hollywood Oscar‑season parties and charity events with celebrity attendees
The document is a social‑scene narrative describing parties, charity dinners, and informal conversations among entertainment figures. It contains no concrete allegations, financial transactions, or li Mentions a $320,000 fundraiser for the ACLU and International Rescue Committee at a UTA event. References President Trump's travel ban and Asghar Farhadi's protest, but only in a passing comment. Lis
Summary
The document is a social‑scene narrative describing parties, charity dinners, and informal conversations among entertainment figures. It contains no concrete allegations, financial transactions, or li Mentions a $320,000 fundraiser for the ACLU and International Rescue Committee at a UTA event. References President Trump's travel ban and Asghar Farhadi's protest, but only in a passing comment. Lis
Persons Referenced (2)
Tags
Ask AI About This Document
Extracted Text (OCR)
Related Documents (6)
Oscar 2017 ceremony anecdote with no substantive allegations
Oscar 2017 ceremony anecdote with no substantive allegations The passage is a personal, anecdotal recount of the 2017 Oscars with no concrete claims, names of wrongdoing, financial transactions, or links to powerful officials. It offers no actionable investigative leads. Key insights: Describes the surprise win of "Moonlight" at the 2017 Oscars.; Mentions a mistaken envelope handoff by an accountant.; References various industry figures (e.g., Marc Platt, Warren Beatty) in a non‑allegatory context.
Peggy Siegal’s personal recount of Oscar week 2017 – party gossip and celebrity sightings
Peggy Siegal’s personal recount of Oscar week 2017 – party gossip and celebrity sightings The passage is a first‑person memoir of social events surrounding the 2017 Oscars. It contains numerous celebrity name‑drops and anecdotal party details but offers no concrete evidence of wrongdoing, financial transactions, or illicit influence involving high‑level officials. The only potentially investigable element is a vague reference to a UTA rally raising $320,000 for the ACLU and IRC, which is publicly known charitable activity. Overall, the content is low‑value gossip with minimal actionable leads. Key insights: Describes a mistaken envelope incident at the Oscars (Warren Beatty/Faye Dunaway).; Mentions UTA’s United Voice Rally raising $320,000 for the ACLU and International Rescue Committee.; Lists many high‑profile entertainment figures attending various Oscar‑week parties.
Peggy Siegal’s personal Oscar‑week memoir mixes celebrity anecdotes with backstage gossip
The passage is a first‑person recollection of Oscar‑week parties and social interactions. It mentions many high‑profile names but provides no concrete allegations, financial details, or actionable lea Describes the infamous envelope mix‑up at the 2017 Oscars but offers no new evidence beyond the well Lists numerous celebrities, producers, and industry executives attending various Oscar‑related eve
Hollywood Oscar‑season parties and charity events with celebrity attendees
Hollywood Oscar‑season parties and charity events with celebrity attendees The document is a social‑scene narrative describing parties, charity dinners, and informal conversations among entertainment figures. It contains no concrete allegations, financial transactions, or links to political or intelligence actors that would merit investigative follow‑up. The only potentially actionable detail is a mention of a $320,000 donation to the ACLU and International Rescue Committee, but the source and recipients are already public. Overall the passage offers minimal investigative value and low controversy. Key insights: Mentions a $320,000 fundraiser for the ACLU and International Rescue Committee at a UTA event.; References President Trump's travel ban and Asghar Farhadi's protest, but only in a passing comment.; Lists numerous celebrity attendees at various Oscar‑season gatherings.
Satirical memoir alleges secret CIA ties, sexual misconduct by presidents, and covert operations from Watergate to the 1960s
Satirical memoir alleges secret CIA ties, sexual misconduct by presidents, and covert operations from Watergate to the 1960s The document mixes verified historical events with unsubstantiated, sensational claims (e.g., H.R. Haldeman performing oral sex on President Nixon, CIA‑run “Operation 40” to influence the 1960 election, secret recordings of Nixon’s private moments). While many passages appear fictional or exaggerated, the specific allegations of high‑level sexual misconduct, covert intelligence activities, and possible financial or legal cover‑ups could merit further verification, especially where names, dates, and alleged documents are mentioned. Key insights: Alleged sexual act between H.R. Haldeman and President Nixon in the Oval Office.; Claims that Nixon’s memoir was a fabricated “sneak preview” involving CIA‑linked sources.; Reference to a secret White House taping system allegedly installed by the Secret Service and controlled by Haldeman.
Alfredo Rodriguez’s stolen “golden nugget” – a bound book linking Jeffrey Epstein to dozens of world leaders and billionaires
The passage describes a former Epstein employee, Alfredo Rodriguez, who allegedly stole a bound book containing the names, addresses and phone numbers of high‑profile individuals (e.g., Henry Kissinge Rodriguez claims the book lists names, addresses and phone numbers of dozens of influential individu He tried to sell the book to an undercover FBI agent for $50,000, indicating awareness of its valu
Forum Discussions
This document was digitized, indexed, and cross-referenced with 1,500+ persons in the Epstein files. 100% free, ad-free, and independent.