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kaggle-ho-021666House Oversight

Allegations of Jeffrey Epstein’s trafficking network involving Jean‑Luc Brunel, MC2 modeling agency, and private jet transport of underage girls

Allegations of Jeffrey Epstein’s trafficking network involving Jean‑Luc Brunel, MC2 modeling agency, and private jet transport of underage girls The passage provides concrete, though unverified, leads: a $1 million payment to Jean‑Luc Brunel, claims that MC2 recruited Eastern‑European minors and moved them on Epstein’s private jets, and references to a former bookkeeper who arranged visas. These details point to possible financial flows and international trafficking that merit follow‑up with financial records, flight logs, and immigration documents. The claims involve high‑profile individuals (Epstein, Brunel) and a known modeling agency, raising significant controversy, but the information is not wholly novel and lacks corroborating evidence, placing it in the strong‑lead range rather than blockbuster. Key insights: Epstein allegedly gave $1 million to Jean‑Luc Brunel to start modeling agency MC2.; Former bookkeeper claims MC2 recruited underage girls from Eastern Europe and arranged visas.; Girls were reportedly flown to the U.S. on Epstein’s private jets.

Date
Unknown
Source
House Oversight
Reference
kaggle-ho-021666
Pages
1
Persons
14
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Summary

Allegations of Jeffrey Epstein’s trafficking network involving Jean‑Luc Brunel, MC2 modeling agency, and private jet transport of underage girls The passage provides concrete, though unverified, leads: a $1 million payment to Jean‑Luc Brunel, claims that MC2 recruited Eastern‑European minors and moved them on Epstein’s private jets, and references to a former bookkeeper who arranged visas. These details point to possible financial flows and international trafficking that merit follow‑up with financial records, flight logs, and immigration documents. The claims involve high‑profile individuals (Epstein, Brunel) and a known modeling agency, raising significant controversy, but the information is not wholly novel and lacks corroborating evidence, placing it in the strong‑lead range rather than blockbuster. Key insights: Epstein allegedly gave $1 million to Jean‑Luc Brunel to start modeling agency MC2.; Former bookkeeper claims MC2 recruited underage girls from Eastern Europe and arranged visas.; Girls were reportedly flown to the U.S. on Epstein’s private jets.

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kagglehouse-oversighthigh-importancehuman-traffickingfinancial-transactionsmodeling-industryprivate-jet-travelsex-crimes

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Jeffrey Epstein Pedophile Billionaire and His Sex Den - The Daily - Page 1 of 3 emer i BLOGS & STORIES — The Billionaire Pedophile's Sex Den by Conchita Sarnoff July 22, 2010 | 11:46pm x BEAD THIS SKIP THAT The Daily Beast reveals new details about the twisted sex life of Jeffrey Epstein and his penchant for underage girls. Conchita Sarnoff on his massages, sex toys, and questionable deals. Also: ¢ Nude images of young girls were scattered around the house and the bathroom soap was shaped like sex organs ¢ Staff trolled for fresh recruits to make sure Epstein had two or three massage appointments each day ¢ The house manager has been sentenced to a longer prison term than Newseom Epstein—for trying to sell notes regarding massage appointments ¢ Epstein gave $1 million to his friend Jean Luc Brunel when he was starting the modeling agency MC2 * According to a former bookkeeper, young girls were brought to the U.S. by MC2—often from Eastern Europe—then traveled on Epstein’s private jets Jeffrey Epstein’s loyal friends say that his prosecution was unduly harsh, rather than outrageously lenient. They insist that his sexual habits, although obsessive and unusual, were mostly legal and essentially harmless. As the police records aitest, the girls brought to El Brillo Way were routinely told they could “say no” at any time during a massage as Epstein escalated contact in a step-by-step assault that was remarkably similar in every victim’s statement: First she would be asked to remove her shirt, then her pants. He would attempt to fondle her buttocks and breasts as he masturbated, then bring out a large vibrator. There was sometimes digital penetration, and the more willing girls were lured into full-blown sexual relations with both Epstein and Nadia Marcinkova, who was referred to in press accounts and police reports as Epstein’s live-in “sex slave.” A former bookkeeper in the Miami office, who also arranged visas for girls traveling to the U.S., confirmed that MC2 girls became frequent guests on Epstein’s private jets. It’s true that some underage girls may have fied about their age, and some came to the house voluntarily several times—although, according to Florida statutes, none of that has any bearing on the criminality of the contact, particularly if the girl was 16 or younger. But what is particularly disturbing about this case—judging by arrangements at the Palm Beach house—is that Epstein, a billionaire hedge-fund manager, organized his life around this sexual compulsion in an open and methodical way that suggests he felt he was beyond the law. According to police who executed a search warrant, the house was * Conchita Sarnoff? decorated with large, framed photos of nude young girls, and similar Billionaire Pedophile Goes images were found stashed in an armoire and on the computers seized Free at the house (although police found only bare cables where other computers had been). Some bathrooms were stocked with soap in the SlE-nm- 10 L002 aI http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and-stories/2010-07-22/jeffrey-epstein-pedophile-billi.... 7/23/2010

Related Documents (6)

House OversightFinancial RecordNov 11, 2025

Jeffrey Epstein communications reveal alleged police payoffs, modeling‑agency trafficking links, and possible DA leniency

The passage compiles a range of specific allegations – cash payments to Palm Beach police, a $1 million wire to Jean‑Luc Brunel’s offshore account, recruitment of under‑age girls via the MC2 modeling Epstein allegedly gave $100,000 to the Palm Beach Police Department for equipment, then was asked to A $1 million wire transfer to Jean‑Luc Brunel’s offshore account in September 2004 is cited as a p

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Jeffrey Epstein Child Sex Trafficking Investigation – FBI Records, Deleted Pages, Non‑Prosecution Deal, High‑Profile Connections

The compiled documents reveal a dense web of FBI case files, internal forms, and communications that reference Jeffrey Epstein’s illegal sexual activities with minors, a secret non‑prosecution agreeme FBI case number 31E‑MM‑108062 repeatedly references ‘Child Locate’ entries and deleted pages (b6, b7 Multiple internal FD‑515 forms list Jeffrey Epstein as a subject (named explicitly on 09/30/2008 e

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House OversightFinancial RecordNov 11, 2025

Jeffrey Epstein communications reveal possible DA leniency, police donations, and $1M transfer to modeling mogul Jean‑Luc Brunel

The document strings together several actionable leads: Manhattan DA Cyrus Vance’s alleged failure to enforce housing restrictions on a Level‑3 sex offender; documented cash gifts to the Palm Beach Po Cyrus Vance Jr. allegedly ignored housing‑guideline violations for Epstein’s Upper East Side residen Epstein gave $100,000 to the Palm Beach Police Department and received police‑department hats for

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House OversightUnknown

Jeffrey Epstein communications reveal alleged police payoffs, modeling‑agency trafficking links, and possible DA leniency

Jeffrey Epstein communications reveal alleged police payoffs, modeling‑agency trafficking links, and possible DA leniency The passage compiles a range of specific allegations – cash payments to Palm Beach police, a $1 million wire to Jean‑Luc Brunel’s offshore account, recruitment of under‑age girls via the MC2 modeling agency, and claims that Manhattan DA Cyrus Vance Jr. ignored housing‑guideline rules for a Level‑3 sex offender. These details provide concrete leads (names, amounts, dates, agencies) that could be followed up with FOIA requests, financial record analysis, and interviews with law‑enforcement officials. While many claims repeat publicly known narratives, the inclusion of alleged police donations, the $100 k police equipment grant, and the DA’s alleged inaction add new investigative angles, raising moderate controversy and sensitivity. Key insights: Epstein allegedly gave $100,000 to the Palm Beach Police Department for equipment, then was asked to return it.; A $1 million wire transfer to Jean‑Luc Brunel’s offshore account in September 2004 is cited as a possible back‑door investment in the MC2 modeling agency.; Staff members were reportedly instructed to keep $2,000 cash on hand for recruiting girls and paying them for massages.

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House OversightFinancial RecordNov 11, 2025

Allegations of Jeffrey Epstein’s trafficking network involving Jean‑Luc Brunel, MC2 modeling agency, and private jet transport of underage girls

The passage provides concrete, though unverified, leads: a $1 million payment to Jean‑Luc Brunel, claims that MC2 recruited Eastern‑European minors and moved them on Epstein’s private jets, and refere Epstein allegedly gave $1 million to Jean‑Luc Brunel to start modeling agency MC2. Former bookkeeper claims MC2 recruited underage girls from Eastern Europe and arranged visas. Girls were reportedly

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House OversightUnknown

Jeffrey Epstein & Jean‑Luc Brunel sued for alleged $1 M payment, obstruction of justice, and defamation – links to high‑profile figures

Jeffrey Epstein & Jean‑Luc Brunel sued for alleged $1 M payment, obstruction of justice, and defamation – links to high‑profile figures The filing contains concrete allegations that Jeffrey Epstein gave Jean‑Luc Brunel a $1 million wire transfer, that Epstein directed Brunel to flee to avoid deposition, and that both men disseminated false online statements damaging Brunel’s modeling business. It also references other powerful individuals (Bill Clinton, Prince Andrew, Alan Dershowitz, Ghislaine Maxwell) and mentions a federal investigation into a non‑prosecution agreement, providing multiple actionable leads (financial flow, obstruction of justice, defamation, foreign influence). The combination of specific monetary figures, named actors, and ongoing litigation makes this a high‑impact lead. Key insights: Complaint alleges Epstein paid Brunel $1 million in 2004/2005 to help launch MC2 modeling agency.; Brunel claims Epstein instructed him to leave Palm Beach to avoid a criminal deposition, constituting obstruction of justice.; Defendants (Epstein, Tyler McDonald/Yi.Org) are accused of publishing false online links tying Brunel’s agency to escort services, causing loss of millions in revenue.

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