📄 Extracted Text (1,669 words)
[00:00:00] Hello, I'm Whitney Webb. I've been a
[00:00:02] professional writer, researcher, and
[00:00:03] journalist since 2016.
[00:00:06] If you want to explore these
[00:00:08] investigations with me, make sure to
[00:00:10] like this video and subscribe to the
[00:00:11] channel.
[00:00:12] >> Uh, another one of my main points is
[00:00:14] that I think uh Epstein's financial
[00:00:16] crimes are just as important as his sex
[00:00:19] crimes. And there's been a huge cover
[00:00:20] up, not just of the sex crimes, which is
[00:00:23] what people are focusing on, but even
[00:00:25] bigger is the cover up of his financial
[00:00:27] crimes. But what I was trying to get to
[00:00:29] is the fact that we're not never going
[00:00:30] to get a an open blanket admission from
[00:00:34] these intelligence agencies of their
[00:00:35] involvement with Epstein because of the
[00:00:37] reputational damage that would cause and
[00:00:39] perhaps, you know, congressional
[00:00:41] scrutiny into their effect.
[00:00:42] >> In this eye-opening segment, Whitney
[00:00:44] Webb unpacks the real story behind
[00:00:46] Jeffrey Epstein's rise to power. She
[00:00:48] explains why Epstein's intelligence ties
[00:00:51] are almost impossible to prove directly,
[00:00:53] but the circumstantial evidence is
[00:00:54] overwhelming. Web details Epstein's
[00:00:57] early connections to elite networks, his
[00:00:59] mysterious hiring at Dalton, and the
[00:01:01] broader context of sex blackmail as a
[00:01:03] tool of control. This is essential
[00:01:05] viewing for anyone seeking to understand
[00:01:07] the true depth of the Epstein scandal,
[00:01:09] >> how Trump ties into this broader network
[00:01:11] that I talk about in my book that
[00:01:13] involves the, you know, Epste and
[00:01:15] Maxwell and all of that. I wasn't trying
[00:01:16] to lay out necessarily Epstein's ties,
[00:01:19] >> but what I would say is that when we're
[00:01:21] talking about intelligence agencies,
[00:01:23] there's a few things to point out. So,
[00:01:25] um, one is, you know, in the case of
[00:01:27] Epstein, you're never going to get an
[00:01:29] affidavit signed by the by the CIA or
[00:01:31] Israeli intelligence that they had an,
[00:01:33] you know, ties with Epstein, at least
[00:01:35] not now. I mean, maybe 70 or 80 plus
[00:01:38] years from now when everyone involved is
[00:01:40] dead. Uh, we may, you know, get some
[00:01:43] sort of document release or something
[00:01:45] like that, but it's unlikely that
[00:01:47] they're going to just admit to it. Yeah,
[00:01:48] I think he was uh I think well, it's
[00:01:52] hard to know again because it's not like
[00:01:53] they're going to come clean about it,
[00:01:54] but yeah, I think a an asset is
[00:01:57] definitely fair to say at the very
[00:01:59] least. Um, so I would say in the case of
[00:02:02] asset, it's someone that intelligence
[00:02:04] agencies can use, but you're not an
[00:02:06] agent. You're not necessarily sent on
[00:02:07] missions from a career operative
[00:02:09] perspective. uh but you're uh have let
[00:02:12] your willingness to be used by a
[00:02:14] particular agency uh known and that they
[00:02:18] utilize you when you receive some sort
[00:02:19] of either payment or something else in
[00:02:22] exchange for your services perhaps
[00:02:24] impunity from prosecution right could be
[00:02:27] something else so another one of my main
[00:02:30] points is that I think uh Epstein's
[00:02:32] financial crimes are just as important
[00:02:34] as his sex crimes and there's been a
[00:02:36] huge cover up not just of the sex crimes
[00:02:39] which is what people are focusing ing
[00:02:40] on. But even bigger is the cover up of
[00:02:42] his financial crimes. But what I was
[00:02:44] trying to get to is the fact that we're
[00:02:46] not never going to get a an open blanket
[00:02:49] admission from these intelligence
[00:02:51] agencies of their involvement with
[00:02:52] Epstein because of the reputational
[00:02:54] damage that would cause and perhaps, you
[00:02:57] know, congressional scrutiny into their
[00:02:59] affairs.
[00:03:00] >> Webb reveals how Epstein's financial
[00:03:02] crimes have been overshadowed by his sex
[00:03:04] crimes and why both are crucial to
[00:03:06] understanding the coverup. She connects
[00:03:08] Epstein's story to a long history of
[00:03:10] elite sex blackmail operations, showing
[00:03:12] how these networks have shaped politics
[00:03:14] and business for decades.
[00:03:15] >> The Church Committee in the 1970s,
[00:03:17] right? So instead, it's my job uh to
[00:03:21] compile all of these details and when
[00:03:23] you look at how many of them there are
[00:03:25] alto together, it's very hard to write
[00:03:27] them off as coincidental. And what I
[00:03:29] just laid out on here, you know, with
[00:03:31] Trump, which is just, you know, a small
[00:03:33] segment of time we're talking about in
[00:03:35] his career, there's a lot of
[00:03:37] affiliations to uh mob figures and to uh
[00:03:43] figures like Maxwell or the Rothschilds
[00:03:46] that have some sort of state connection
[00:03:48] to Israel. um that are significant and
[00:03:52] should be considered especially if Trump
[00:03:54] was bailed out by a particular banking
[00:03:56] interest and owes his career that
[00:03:58] followed to them. Right. Um and it's
[00:04:02] worth pointing out too that in that same
[00:04:04] period of time Maxwell was working on
[00:04:05] behalf of Rothschild interests in Wall
[00:04:08] Street. He was essentially sent from
[00:04:10] Britain to New York City and Galain
[00:04:12] Maxwell followed him to establish a
[00:04:14] foothold there and he was doing uh
[00:04:17] because that particular Rothschild bank
[00:04:19] had uh had interest in doing mergers and
[00:04:22] acquisitions in Wall Street and this is
[00:04:24] all in a New York Times article from the
[00:04:25] time and that they had chosen Maxwell
[00:04:28] and a figure named Jimmy Goldmith who's
[00:04:30] a distant or I don't know how distant
[00:04:31] but a cousin of Rothschild's um who was
[00:04:34] also a known corporate raider of the 80s
[00:04:37] uh to establish uh a foothold for them
[00:04:40] in in New York by doing M&As. So, it's
[00:04:43] also worth pointing out Goldmith is
[00:04:45] probably the earliest figure in this
[00:04:47] network that has ties to Epstein since
[00:04:49] Epstein was hanging out at his mansion
[00:04:51] in the early '7s when he was like not
[00:04:54] even employed at the Dalton School yet
[00:04:55] and was just like a college dropout that
[00:04:58] went backpacking to Britain uh and then
[00:05:01] came back and then he's at Jimmy
[00:05:02] Goldmith's house in New York. It doesn't
[00:05:05] really make a lot of sense.
[00:05:07] How did that happen? He was a high
[00:05:09] school uh he was, you know, he graduated
[00:05:12] from high school. He was talented in
[00:05:14] apparently math and music. Uh he got a
[00:05:16] scholarship to go to that Interlockan
[00:05:18] school where later he returns to abuse.
[00:05:20] >> I went there, recruit Well, he he went
[00:05:23] back there later and had his own cabin
[00:05:26] um at Interlockan where he allegedly was
[00:05:28] trying to recruit victims um and and
[00:05:31] entice them with with various things. Um
[00:05:35] so you know people have posited that
[00:05:37] maybe he returned there because as a
[00:05:39] teen when he himself attended maybe he
[00:05:41] was abused there. Um which is you know
[00:05:44] it's it's within the realm of
[00:05:46] possibility given how people with this
[00:05:47] type of uh that that engage in this type
[00:05:50] of behavior usually they're abused
[00:05:52] themselves when they're young and then
[00:05:53] they offend as they're adults. Um and uh
[00:05:57] you know he ends up not finishing
[00:06:00] college and but when he's not finishing
[00:06:03] college he back he uh goes backpacking
[00:06:06] through Europe and in that trip he uh
[00:06:08] somehow establishes a connection uh with
[00:06:11] uh the violinist of the royal family. Um
[00:06:15] and there's a lot of murkiness there.
[00:06:17] Her name was Jacqueline Dri. Uh and she
[00:06:19] later married um an Israeli uh figure. I
[00:06:23] forget his name. I think he was a
[00:06:24] musician or something. Um uh but somehow
[00:06:27] they had some sort of connection there
[00:06:28] and there's all this, you know, these
[00:06:30] stories about him being a talented
[00:06:32] pianist during that period and and what
[00:06:34] have you. But he later is hired at the
[00:06:36] Dalton School to teach math. Um
[00:06:39] >> and he's hired by uh William Bar's
[00:06:41] father, Donald Bar.
[00:06:43] >> He's not so it a lot of people have
[00:06:46] pointed out it doesn't make sense
[00:06:47] because I believe in New York public
[00:06:49] schools you have to have a college
[00:06:50] degree in order to teach. So, it was,
[00:06:52] you know, uh, didn't really make a lot
[00:06:54] of sense. But Donald Bar, uh, his son at
[00:06:57] the time, William Bar, is already
[00:06:59] working for the CIA when Epstein is
[00:07:01] hired. Um, he's specifically involved in
[00:07:04] stonewalling the church committee on
[00:07:06] behalf of the CIA. Um, during that time
[00:07:09] in the late '7s. So, it's possible that
[00:07:11] Epste had some sort of connection then
[00:07:13] cuz like I said, he's involved with this
[00:07:14] Jimmy Goldsmith guy by the time he comes
[00:07:16] back to New York. He's a pretty
[00:07:18] notorious corporate raider. piece of
[00:07:20] figure featured in the Adam Curtis
[00:07:22] documentary, The Mayfair Set, which
[00:07:24] includes a lot of figures that were tied
[00:07:26] up with Robert Maxwell. Um, and they
[00:07:29] basically all tie back to this uh
[00:07:31] gambling den that was kind of ritzy uh
[00:07:34] called the Claremont Club, which was in
[00:07:37] London's uh Mayfair area. And uh a lot
[00:07:40] of those figures had ties to organized
[00:07:42] crime and also sex blackmail operations.
[00:07:45] uh some of which included the Profimo
[00:07:48] affair uh which got the uh basically
[00:07:51] brought down uh the British government
[00:07:53] at the time
[00:07:55] um and allegedly had ties to um uh John
[00:07:58] F. Kennedy as well that one of the women
[00:08:00] allegedly that was used to blackmail
[00:08:02] people by this group uh allegedly slept
[00:08:05] with Kennedy. Um and uh the FBI lost her
[00:08:09] client list and uh a British Navy ship
[00:08:13] came to pick her up from the US and take
[00:08:15] her back to the UK and that was that.
[00:08:18] So, um, yeah, I know a lot of, uh, the I
[00:08:22] originally set out to write a book about
[00:08:24] Epstein and then realized how, uh, this
[00:08:27] story about Epstein, as scandalous as it
[00:08:29] may seem to us now, has repeated itself
[00:08:32] many times throughout, um, history.
[00:08:34] >> Uh, and, uh, Roy Con, who I mentioned
[00:08:37] earlier, um, he was, um, involved in
[00:08:40] some sort of sec sex blackmail ring, uh,
[00:08:43] that involved this liquor baron named
[00:08:44] Lewis Rosensteel.
[00:08:46] and uh it allegedly entrapped Jay Edgar
[00:08:49] Hoover. And so some authors have posited
[00:08:52] that the reason Hoover never went after
[00:08:54] organized crime in the US uh was because
[00:08:57] he was basically blackmailed by the mob
[00:08:59] uh through this uh network that Roy Con
[00:09:02] and Rosensteel were involved in which
[00:09:03] operated out of the Plaza Hotel which
[00:09:05] after Roy Con died Donald Trump bought
[00:09:07] that to watch.
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