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effort was to identify a dozen or so promising algorithms (each quant is
effectively hawking his secret sauce algorithm) and invest up to $5 million
with each. I knew paltry little about this and so rather found myself
identifying with the young women to whom Epstein was explaining the
basic math and mechanics—out of my league, but grateful for the lesson.
The Epstein house/office is, by careful design, exclusive and club like,
part hang out, part secret society. Along with the difficulty in explaining
why, even after his jail term, the rich and powerful have yet beaten a path to
his door, it’s also notable in the fixed hierarchy of who comes to whose turf,
that everybody, when they went to see Epstein, comes to him.
A week in late September, U.N. week as it happened, began, on
Sunday, at Epstein’s house with a colloquial for billionaires—Gates, TK,
TK, TK.
Epstein, preternaturally responsive to both the price of oil and to the
politics of the middle of East, entertained that evening a delegation from
Qatar, including Sheikh Hamad, the foreign minister. Hamad, indeed, lives
across the street in a similarly furnished house—he and Epstein have the
same decorator. Epstein, in his relaxed and amused demeanor, kept
prodding: “Why are you financing the bad guys? What do you get out of
that?”
The Qatarians, in some mild diplomatic discomfort, seemed most
worried that their bid for the World Cup might be compromised by bribery
allegations.
At 9:00 next morning, Epstein is joined for breakfast in the dining
room by Reid Weingarten, who’s represented among other fat cats in
trouble, Worldcom’s Bernie Ebbers and Goldman Sach’s Lloyd Blankfein.
Weingarten, horse, with a cold, and dejected, is just back from a failed
defense of former Connecticut Governor John Rowland. (Epstein: “You
actually believe he was getting fucked?” Weingarten: “From minute one.
I’m not a virgin. But his was the worst I’ve ever seen. It was like an
assassination. )
After a short discussion of the Qartarian’s visit—Epstein is serving
the chocolate, made from pistachios grown on the Shakes farm—and
speculation about who actually controls ISIS, I am asked to leave the room.
Twenty minutes later, after what ever business has been transacted or
particular confidences, shared I am asked back in.
“Why?” I asked Weingarten, when Epstein briefly steps out of the
room, “do some many people keep coming back here, everything
considered.”
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