EFTA00094959.pdf
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From: "
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To:
(USANYS)"
Cc:
I
II
II
(USANYS)"
Subject: Re:
Date: Mon, 26 Aug 2019 13:52:36 +0000
They are on our list. We have not met with them.
On Aug 26, 2019, at 9:48 AM,
(USANYS)
wrote:
Times has a big piece on them that just posted, I've cut and pasted below. I know they are on our victim list (and I think
are represented by BSF?), but can someone remind me — have we ever met with them or attempted to do so?
As more women have come forward in recent days to describe assaults at the hands of Jeffrey
Epstein,
finds herself distraught, wondering what might have happened if someone
had taken her seriously.
Twenty-four years ago,
was an artist who had entered the
unorthodox life Mr. Epstein lived behind the doors of his luxury estates. Mr.
Epstein had offered to help her painting career, but it all came to an abrupt
end one night in the summer of 1996, when she says Mr. Epstein and his
companion, Ghislaine Maxwell, began violently groping her.
She learned later tha
had been
subjected to a troubling topless massage at Mr. Epstein's ranch in New
Mexico.
contacted the New York Police Department, and said she then went
to the Federal Bureau of Investigation, offering to share what she knew about
Mr. Epstein and the parade of young women being brought to Mr. Epstein's
houses. Though the bureau has never acknowledged such a contact,
said the F.B.I. must have had a record of it, because agents came back to her —
years later — with questions. She also went to leaders in the New York art world
that Mr. Epstein and Ms. Maxwell frequented, ant
ried to tell their
story to a national magazine.
EFTA00094959
In each case, their reports went nowhere.
Finally, facing what she said were threats as a result o
claims,
abandoned her New York art career and stopped painting altogether.
"I did not want another young lady to go through what
went through,"
said in a recent interview. "I could handle what happened to
me. I could not handle what happened to her."
Mr. Epstein would continue to lure vulnerable girls into his predatory circle
for another nine years before investigators began diving deep into his world.
After being arrested on federal charges of sex trafficking of minors in New
York and Florida, Mr. Epstein died earlier this month in what the authorities
said was an apparent suicide.
Other women have come forward in recent years with more serious claims of rape and child abuse
against Mr. Epstein, but the
' reports — made 23 years ago — are the earliest known
allegations about Mr. Epstein's troubling physical contact with girls and young women. In their
detailed accounts, told here for the first time, they offer a glimpse of how Mr. Epstein managed to
avoid significant scrutiny for years, even as concerns about his conduct began to pile up.
said that she feels guilty about having brough
into Mr.
Epstein's orbit. She mourns the victims who came after her, she said, her voice
cracking each time she mentioned the name of one of them. She has spent years
trying to live in seclusion.
The First Meeting
moved to New York in 1993, eager to pursue her passion for art, and enrolled at the New
York Academy of Art.
She already had a specialty, exploring figures of nudes and adolescents, and had a chance to train
under one of her idols, the painter and sculptor Eric Fischl. One of her paintings was done in a
voyeuristic style, showing a man in the frame of a doorway looking at a woman on a sofa — a painting
she said was inspired by Edgar Degas' famous piece, "Interior," which is sometimes known as "The
Rape."
At a gallery show for her graduation,
said, the dean of the academy, Eileen Guggenheim,
introduced her to Mr. Epstein and Ms. Maxwell, and told her to sell them the painting with the man
in the doorwa at a discount. (Ms. Guggenheim said she did not recall such an interaction.)
Afterward,
said, Mr. Epstein called her to offer her a job acquiring art on his behalf, and
later managing the entrance to a townhouse he was renovating.
There, at the age of 25, she was introduced to Mr. Epstein's odd life, with girls and young women
coming through for what she recalled Ms. Maxwell describing as modeling auditions for the lingerie
retailer Victoria's Secret. The house at times bustled in anticipation of potential visits from Bill
Clinton, although she never actually saw him there.
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She said she met Donald Trump one day in Mr. Epstein's office, recalling Mr.
Trump eyeing her before Mr. Epstein informed him that "she's not for you."
mother,
, recalled her daughter detailing the interaction
with Mr. Trump around the time it occurred.
Both Mr. Clinton and Mr. Trump have acknowledged knowing Mr. Epstein, with Mr. Clinton denying
knowledge of anything improper and Mr. Trump saying he was "not a fan" of Mr. Epstein.
Ms. Maxwell was charming and friendly,
said, and as Mr.
Epstein's companion, she offered young women a level of assurance that they
were safe in his presence. But she also seemed to play an important role in
bringing young women in,
said, recalling that Ms. Maxwell would
leave the house saying, "I've got to go get girls for Jeffrey."
Ms. Maxwell would refer to the girls she was looking for as "nubiles,"
said. "They had a driver, and he would be driving along, and
Ghislaine would say, `Get that girl,'" she said. "And they'd stop, and she'd run
out and get the girl and talk to her."
Lawyers for Ms. Maxwell and Mr. Epstein did not respond to requests for
comment for this article.
One of the girls in whom the couple took an interest was
had mentioned to them that her sister was looking to go to
college. Mr. Epstein offered to help, and brought
, then 16 years old and
living in Arizona, to visit New York.
said she recalled Mr. Epstein as kind and casual, wearing
sweatpants, pouring champagne and talking about her college plans. During
the trip, they all went to see a movie. As the film progressed, Mr. Epstein
began rubbing
hand, and then her lower leg, she said.
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"It was one of those things that just gave me a weird feeling but wasn't that weird
+ probably normal,"
wrote in a diary entry dated Jan. 25, 1996. "The
one thing that kind of weirded me out about it was he let go of my hand when he
was talking to
Mr. Epstein offered to send
on a trip to Thailand, and invited her to his New Mexico
ranch for a weekend. Under the im ression that thegathering would include a number of students
chaperoned by Ms. Maxwell,
mother,
said she allowed
to go. But when she
arrived in New Mexico,
said, it was just her and Mr. Epstein and Ms. Maxwell.
There were more uncomfortable interactions that weekend, she said. She
recalled Ms. Maxwell persuading her to give Mr. Epstein a foot massage and
then giving pointers as she performed it. They went to another movie, where
Mr. Epstein continued another round of his petting touches, she said.
Then, when she woke up in the house one morning, she recalled him coming
into the room, saying he wanted to cuddle, and getting into bed next to her.
also recalled Ms. Maxwell repeatedly asking whether she wanted
a massage. Eventually relenting,
followed directions by taking off
her clothes and bra and getting under a sheet on a massage table. Ms.
Maxwell performed the massage, at one point having
lie on her
back as Ms. Maxwell pulled down the sheet to massage her chest.
"I don't think there was any reason for her to be touching me that way,"
said.
Mr. Epstein didn't participate, but
said she could sense that he was
in the area and possibly watching.
The First Reports
At the time,
was unaware of the interaction
had in New Mexico. She went to Ohio around that time, utilizing Mr. Epstein's
large estate there to focus on her paintings.
Later in the summer, Mr. Epstein and Ms. Maxwell paid a visit. One night, she recalled getting an
unusual request: Mr. Epstein needed his feet massaged.
EFTA00094962
The foot massage was brief and awkward,
recalled, as Mr.
Epstein groaned with what seemed like exaggerated pleasure, followed by a
yelp of pain. Then he invited her to sit on the bed, where he was watching a
PBS program about math.
Ms. Maxwell joined them on the bed,
said, and the night took a
sudden turn: Both Mr. Epstein and Ms. Maxwell began groping
over her clothes, rubbing her body, commenting on her features, and twisting
her nipples to the point of bruising. She said they did so in unison, mirroring
each other's movements. Fearing that she was about to be raped,
eventually fled the room and barricaded herself in another part of the house.
She soon discovered that three nude photographs she had kept in a storage
box were missing. The photos were of
and a third
, who
was 12, modeling for
figurative paintings.
said she began phoning people in a panic, looking for help. One
of the people she reached was her art mentor, Mr. Fischl. In an interview, he
recalled
describing a physical encounter in the bedroom, fear for
an
d outrage about the missing photographs.
"I just kept telling =,
`You've got to get out of there. You've got to get out
of there,'" Mr. Fischl said.
father,
also recalled getting a call. He did not know the
specifics of what transpired, but said his daughter was upset enough that he
drove to the estate in Ohio from Kentucky to get her.
After speakin with
and learning that =
had had her own troubles with Mr. Epstein and
Ms. Maxwell,
said, she returned to New York. She recalled getting a phone call from
Ms. Maxwell, sa 'n she planned to burn all of
art and that her career was over.
Frightened,
said she went to a local police precinct to report what had happened to her in
Ohio, and about the art.
Officers at the New York Police Department precinct took a report on the
purported threat and on the art theft allegation, a copy of which was obtained
by The New York Times. But they referred her to other agencies, including
EFTA00094963
the F.B.I., concerning the assault allegation, because Ohio was outside their
jurisdiction,
said.
said she telephoned the F.B.I. and spoke for about half an hour
with the agent who answered the phone. The agent did not say what would
happen with her report, she said. She asked if she should phone other law
enforcement officials in individual states, like Ohio and New Mexico, and was
told that was "up to you," she said. She recalled contacting at least one other
jurisdiction — she did not remember which — and making no progress.
An F.B.I. spokeswoman declined to comment on whether the agency had a
report of such a call from
in its files.
In recent days, the art collector Stuart Pivar said he recalled running into M
at a flea market around that time, and hearing her discuss serious
concerns about Mr. Epstein that she said she had reported to law
enforcement.
said she also raised her concerns about Mr. Epstein with leaders in
the art community, including Ms. Guggenheim, the dean at the art school who
had first put her in touch with Mr. Epstein. But she said Ms. Guggenheim did not
seem to take the issue seriously. Ms. Guggenheim said in an interview that the
details she was aware of at the time did not rise to a level that would require
intervention.
The two
made another run at telling their story in 2003 to Vicky Ward, a reporter for
Vanity Fair, which had commissioned a story about Mr. Epstein's complicated finances that would
also mention his proclivity for young girls. The article was published with no mention of the
,
and they felt they were left badly exposed.
Ms. Ward wrote on her personal blog in 2011 that the article went in a different direction because of
"not knowing quite whom to believe." The editor, Graydon Carter, said in an email that Ms. Ward's
sourcing on the l
l' account did not meet the magazine's legal standards. But Ms. Ward
indicated on Twitter recently that she believed Mr. Carter had succumbed to pressure from Mr.
Epstein. John Connolly, a former contributing editor at Vanity Fair, said he recalled Mr. Carter
talking about the efforts Mr. Epstein had made to influence the article.
When word got out that the sisters had given a detailed interview to the
magazine, the angry phone calls to her resumed,
said.
EFTA00094964
"Better be careful and watch your back," she said Ms. Maxwell told her. "She
said, `I know you go to the West Side Highway all the time. While you're out
there, just be really careful because there are a lot of ways to die there."'
The Aftermath
said the threats led her to abandon her life in the New York art
scene, where Mr. Epstein and Ms. Maxwell still held considerable sway. While
has moved forward with life, obtaining a Ph.D. and working as a
psychotherapist,
struggled to move past the year she spent with
Mr. Epstein. She felt sickened by her own paintings, which she realized Mr.
Epstein had apparently appreciated not for their artistic value, but for their
depiction of nude forms of girls.
Unable to forget the comments Mr. Epstein and Ms. Maxwell had made about
her breasts,
said she underwent breast reduction surgery.
It wasn't until 2006, when F.B.I. agents knocked on her door in North Carolina,
that
found renewed hope that Mr. Epstein would be held
accountable. New allegations about Mr. Epstein had surfaced the previous year,
when a report by a teenager in Florida spurred an extensive investigation that
uncovered a wide range of young girls who had been recruited to visit Mr.
Epstein's lavish home in Palm Beach.
Heavily redacted records released b the F.B.I. a ear to show handwritten notes from November
2006 interviews with
and
, outlining key details of their stories,
including
visit to the New York police and her referral to the F.B.I.
But though the investigation progressed, a widely criticized plea deal
eventually quashed any federal prosecution. To the sisters, the 2008 plea
agreement, which allowed Mr. Epstein to plead guilty merely to much less
serious state charges, was deeply demoralizing.
was starting to put some of it behind her when the latest news
about Mr. Epstein began to emerge, and more victims began coming forward.
She found herself crying when she saw those accounts, wondering what it
EFTA00094965
would have taken to stop him when she first tried. Though the time for a
lawsuit has long passed, she has been working with a lawyer, David Boies, to
support other victims of Mr. Epstein.
"Every time I hear one of the girls tell their story, it devastates me," M
said.
who recently received a diagnosis of a brain tumor, said she still
has some fear about coming forward to tell her own story, even after Mr.
Epstein's death. She recently moved to a new home in the South to improve
her privacy.
In her new residence, she has laid out an art studio in front of windows that
offer a peek-a-boo view of a nearby lake. She has started painting again, for
the first time in years, and new pieces are stacked up against the walls.
One day, she said, she will try to bring artistic shape to her experience with
Mr. Epstein. But for now, she has been focused on a series of paintings of
families and children.
They are not like her earlier paintings, the ones Mr. Epstein liked. All the girls
are clothed.
EFTA00094966
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| Filename | EFTA00094959.pdf |
| File Size | 647.2 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 15,368 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-11T10:33:51.776730 |