Trump, Jeffrey Epstein and WSJ
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Donald Trump, Jeffrey Epstein and grand jury
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Rep. Randy Fine is proposing legislation to end House subscriptions to The Wall Street Journal, following a report that President Trump signed a “bawdy” birthday note to convicted sex
In 2004, future President Donald Trump outbid Jeffrey Epstein in a bankruptcy auction for an oceanfront estate in Palm Beach.
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Mediaite on MSN‘Terrific Guy’: What We Know So Far About Trump’s History With Epstein, From Atlantic City to Mar-a-LagoTrump and Epstein first became acquainted with one another in the 1980s – the same decade Trump purchased his Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach, Florida. The post ‘Terrific Guy’: What We Know So Far About Trump’s History With Epstein,
The two socialized together frequently in New York City and Palm Beach from the late 1980s to the early 2000s. In 2002, Trump praised Epstein to a reporter as a “terrific guy” — and curiously added that he “likes beautiful women” on “the younger side.”
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The 2019 suicide of disgraced financier and sex offender Jeffrey Epstein in a New York jail cell generated conspiracy theories, fueled by U.S. President Donald Trump's conservative MAGA movement, that he was killed by one of his famous connections.
How did the case start in Palm Beach County? Did Trump know him then? Why is it an endless source of fascination?
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Agence France-Presse on MSNJeffrey Epstein's legal saga and political falloutJeffrey Epstein, the man at the center of a conspiracy theory creating political headwinds for President Donald Trump, was facing federal charges of sex trafficking underage girls when he was found dead in his New York prison cell.
Trump said Obama and Biden ‘made up’ Epstein files, but neither were in office when FBI investigated
In 2007, while Bush was president, federal investigators at the FBI and U.S. attorney's office prepared to indict Epstein, but negotiations between Epstein’s lawyers and the U.S. attorney's office in Florida’s Southern District led by Alexander Acosta resulted in a secret deal that let Epstein avoid federal charges.
One of the few people who could confirm if there is or ever was a list of Jeffrey Epstein's clients is imprisoned in Florida's capital city.
Senator Ron Wyden has found that four banks waited until Mr. Epstein’s arrest on federal charges to flag $1.5 billion in suspicious transactions. Mr. Wyden wants the documents made public.