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Jeffrey Epstein Correspondence with Contractor on White House Library Restoration Project (May 2015)

The emails show Epstein directly overseeing a restoration job at the White House Library and pressuring a contractor, which could lead to inquiries about his access to the Executive Mansion, possible Epstein is identified as the client overseeing restoration work on historic wood paneling in the Whi Contractor Brandon Thompson mentions prior White House work (Blue Room) and claims President Clint

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #030218
Pages
2
Persons
2
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The emails show Epstein directly overseeing a restoration job at the White House Library and pressuring a contractor, which could lead to inquiries about his access to the Executive Mansion, possible Epstein is identified as the client overseeing restoration work on historic wood paneling in the Whi Contractor Brandon Thompson mentions prior White House work (Blue Room) and claims President Clint

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project-oversightjeffrey-epsteinhistoric-preservationpotential-financial-flow-contrcontractorwhite-houseforeign-influencelegal-exposurepotential-influencehouse-oversightaccess-to-government-property

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Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
From: Richard Kahn Sent: 5/13/2015 11:27:12 PM To: Jeffrey Epstein [[email protected]] Subject: FW: Library Attachments: IMG_1049.JPG; IMG_1058.JPG; IMG_1055.JPG; IMG_1049.JPG Importance: High From: Brandon Thompson Date: Wednesday, May 13, 2015 at 7:15 PM To: Richard Kahn ______________________________ Subject: Re: Library <1= Dear Richard, For the first time in my life, I am facing the real prospect of dismissal from the project. This is due mainly to misunderstanding. Mr. Epstein came today and told me very bluntly that he is annoyed with me not doing the job. I prepared one column for him and the several feet of decorative molding, but this was a miss. He told me it looks like it was done yesterday. This is the very first time that I work like this. I did several projects for French customers in Greenwich, Conn., but always I produced the sample and than work according to the samples. The paneling I work on were early 19 c. so even the oak looked different. Even at the White House, when I was restoring Blue Room, which you can look at it on my Website, www.brandonthompsonrestoration.com I produced design, made samples and did the project. President Clinton told me this is the most beautiful Room, he was clearly impressed. This time I know exactly what Mr. Epstein wants. However it might be too late. He will come tomorrow to check. Today I did a lot of prep work for tomorrow. I will go tonight to work on some of the columns but the night light is deceiving and I may miss the last chance he gave me. So far I was rated the best finisher, until now I guess. Warm regards Brandon On Tue, May 12, 2015 at 9:42 PM, Brandon Thompson wrote: Dear Richard, the samples are ready for approval. I finished one column about 95%, as I want to put some accents on it but after I discuss it with Mr. Epstein. I also finished upper section above the blackboard. I also finished some other columns, not completely, because I need the approval. My feeling is that someone was already working in the Library, as I can see a lot of waxing done. I finished one column so it will correspond with the rest of the decor. You can not remove the whitish color completely. There are some "bald" columns, which in my opinion do not sort of belong to the Library any more as they are completely brown. Everything has to have at least an shadow of what is around. The top carving, moldings columns and other elements in the Library, have to "bond" together. The upper small carvings, have to be finished individually, as a play between the whitish color and natural brown color of oak wood. I sort of model the shapes of the crabs, snails and other creatures and they come alive. I think I did good work but Mr. Epstein needs to approve it so I can go ahead and finish the project. Kindly, Brandon On Mon, May 11, 2015 at 6:45 PM, Brandon Thompson < wrote: Dear Richard, I prepared some samples for Mr. Epstein for today. I did not waist time as there is a lot of work in the Library. However, I need his approval to continue. Tonight I will go back and start installation of the doors and panels. On Sun, May 10, 2015 at 9:48 PM, Brandon Thompson Dear Richard, I am not sure whether the photos depict the column right. I looked at it and does not do the justice to what you have on the column. I hope you can see the details like even changing the white areas into rubbed ones and emphasising crabs. Making the rope "wet" looking, contrasting the rubbed areas with white, and looking at the entire column as a whole. All the columns are looking different, as somebody would work previously on them, and some of them are over-rubbed, some of them are not rubbed at all. The upper part also, I prepared a sample, so Mr. Epstein can see the difference. Brandon > wrote: On Sun, May 10, 2015 at 9:35 PM, Brandon Thompson > wrote: Dear Richard, It is after 9:20 pm and I tried to text Ann, but she did not answer. My suspicion is, she is already asleep. I will try to send you photos if I can. On Sun, May 10, 2015 at 7:49 PM, Richard Kahn Please send photos. Thank you Sent from my iPhone wrote: > On May 10, 2015, at 6:07 PM, Brandon Thompson < > wrote: > Dear Richard, > We were expecting Mr. Epstein to come today and I was preparing presentation for him. Ann, the manager here called me that there was change in schedule and Mr. Epstein is expected to come tomorrow early afternoon. > For this presentation, I finished one column for him. > This is not a regular work that I have done on it. Actually, I balanced the "whites" and "darker" rubbed off elements. Further, I balanced shiny areas and matt. > After doing this, I worked on differentiating darker areas, making them lighter and darker, depending on the location. I did the same with "whites". Then I emphasized certain elements even more, like rope, net, crabs. This work requires more than finisher to do it. I have high hopes, than this time Mr. Epstein will like the work. If he accepts finishing this way, I will finish it may be even this coming week, providing, I can work 10-12 hours a day. I do not want to work even longer hours, because you are not sharp and still you can spoil delicate balance required for this finish. > Do you want me to send you some photos? I will be glad to. The column still, has to be viewed from all sides. > Kindly, > > Brandon

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