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d-14574House OversightFinancial Record

Steven Hoffenberg's Wall Street activities and alleged ties to Jeffrey Epstein and a $1 billion securities fraud

The passage links former Towers Financial CEO Steven Hoffenberg – a known figure in the 1980s‑90s securities fraud world – to Jeffrey Epstein and mentions a massive "million swindle" and possible gree Hoffenberg ran Towers Financial, a debt‑buying firm that grew to 1,200 employees and OTC‑traded stoc He is described as a college dropout like Epstein and allegedly had a personal relationship with E

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #022079
Pages
1
Persons
1
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage links former Towers Financial CEO Steven Hoffenberg – a known figure in the 1980s‑90s securities fraud world – to Jeffrey Epstein and mentions a massive "million swindle" and possible gree Hoffenberg ran Towers Financial, a debt‑buying firm that grew to 1,200 employees and OTC‑traded stoc He is described as a college dropout like Epstein and allegedly had a personal relationship with E

Tags

jeffrey-epsteinhistorical-investigationfinancial-flowforeign-influencefinancial-fraudsecuritiestowers-financiallegal-exposuregreenmailhouse-oversightwall-streethistorical-fraud

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Extracted Text (OCR)

EFTA Disclosure
Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
Hoffenberg began pax month for Epstein’s exper The SEC had already tling with him out of cou a securities. But Hoffenberg In the 1980s, several n CHAPTER 57 | the greenmailing of pub i ‘d mailing means, in practic investors will start buyin, “tg yulnerable to takeover att 4 a utives at those companies ee risky, but very often tl profit. Yet another thing Hol American World Airways. its downward trajectory, t For Hoffenberg,’ the ; huge. Steven Hoffenberg: July 10, 1987 re was Steven Hoffenberg. head of Towers Financial ch as unpaid efore there was Bernie Madoff, the In 1987, Hoffenberg was the n, a company that bought debts, su medical bills, at a very steep discount while pressing the debtors to repay in full. Hed started the company fifteen years earlier with two thousand dollars and just a handful of employees. ; Thanks, in part, to a grueling work ethic, he’d turned that into a q much bigger concern, with twelve hundred employees and stock ~ that traded over the counter. But Hoffenberg still spent fifteen hours each day, six days a week, in his office. ‘ He wanted more. Hoffenberg was @ Wall Street outsider. A y. A college dropout, like Epstein. g wanted was respect. The other ¥ r with Wall Street’s inner workings: Jef ns, fit the bill Corporatio q According to Hoffenberg, " over of Pan Am—a deal tl 7 Steven Hoffenberg stil listening to him, one mus penilty to criminal conspir: million swindle, a familiz E ernie Madoff case. Brooklyn bo One thing Hoffenber | Like so many others without the necessary w ent at the office, he'd als 3 someone who was familia frey Epstein, who had traded options for Bear Stear F st 110

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