📄 Extracted Text (1,671 words)
[00:00:00] Epstein was involved in shadow banking,
[00:00:02] suspect currency trading, and was
[00:00:04] arguably really a financial terrorist.
[00:00:06] Sex trafficking and sex blackmail was
[00:00:08] really like a siding for Epste. The
[00:00:09] police investigation document says that
[00:00:12] it was organized crime in Leslie Wetzner
[00:00:14] that did it and that Leslie Wetner is
[00:00:16] linked to organized crime. That report
[00:00:18] was destroyed. The murder is listed as
[00:00:20] unsolved and the murder happened the day
[00:00:22] before the lawyer was going to testify
[00:00:24] to the IRS about unspecified tax havens.
[00:00:27] And then Epstein sweeps in and starts
[00:00:29] untangling Wexner's complicated
[00:00:32] finances. I would argue there has been
[00:00:34] an effort from the day he was arrested
[00:00:37] in 2019 to frame the Spectrum of Epstein
[00:00:40] discussion specifically about the sex
[00:00:43] trafficking and the abuse. And Epste's
[00:00:45] career was much larger than that. I have
[00:00:47] argued consistently that more than
[00:00:49] anything else, Epstein was involved in
[00:00:50] shadow banking, suspect currency
[00:00:52] trading, and was arguably really a
[00:00:54] financial terrorist. Okay.
[00:00:56] >> Just as much as he was a sex trafficker.
[00:00:58] So I would argue that a lot of the
[00:00:59] connections mainly in like like for
[00:01:01] example in his black book of contact
[00:01:04] contacts that we is publicly available
[00:01:06] for example um a lot of those I would
[00:01:08] argue are based around a lot of these
[00:01:09] financial connections. Some of them are
[00:01:11] not. So if you look at the black book uh
[00:01:13] the Epstein's butler went around and
[00:01:15] circled names of people who were
[00:01:16] involved explicitly according to him in
[00:01:18] the sex trafficking stuff and a lot of
[00:01:20] those most of the names are not circled.
[00:01:22] Right? So when I say Epstein connected,
[00:01:24] you know, I hope that people understand
[00:01:26] or have taken the time to either read my
[00:01:28] work or watch my interviews on Epstein
[00:01:30] because I've explicitly said that um you
[00:01:33] know, not everyone associated with
[00:01:34] Epstein is a pedophile and people have
[00:01:36] tried to do that and make Epstein
[00:01:38] pedophile only, right? And obviously he
[00:01:40] was that but he was a lot more than
[00:01:41] that. And he was and I think you know
[00:01:43] the fact that there's been so little
[00:01:45] interest for example in his documented
[00:01:47] role in the collapse of Bear Sterns in
[00:01:49] 2008. His role in money laundering and
[00:01:51] connection with banks like BCCI which
[00:01:53] were also sex trafficking prepubescent
[00:01:55] kids for elites of the the the Emirates
[00:01:57] in the 1980s and stuff. There's been no
[00:02:00] interest in looking into that kind of
[00:02:01] stuff. No interest in looking at his
[00:02:03] ties with big tech for example his
[00:02:05] efforts to rebrand as a big tech and
[00:02:07] also fintech investor. And in the case
[00:02:09] of Brock Pierce and Epstein, this
[00:02:10] happened after his first arrest uh the
[00:02:13] meeting and uh Pierce has said that all
[00:02:15] of his conversations with Epstein were
[00:02:17] related directly to cryptocurrency. So
[00:02:19] EP someone like Epstein and with the
[00:02:21] financial history of Epstein, his
[00:02:23] interest arguably in cryptocurrency is
[00:02:25] to continue to engage in the same
[00:02:27] criminal and bad financial behavior that
[00:02:29] he had done for the decades prior. So
[00:02:31] whatever he was talking to Pierce about
[00:02:33] from Epstein, Epstein's motives would
[00:02:35] have been to find ways to use
[00:02:37] cryptocurrency or help develop and guide
[00:02:39] the cryptocurrency industry in ways that
[00:02:41] would help enable the activity that he
[00:02:43] had consistently engaged for decades and
[00:02:45] decades and decades. Was Pierce
[00:02:47] willingly enabling that? I don't know.
[00:02:49] But I think, you know, it's it's worth
[00:02:51] asking those questions because in the
[00:02:53] past, like in the case of Den, he's kept
[00:02:55] questionable company. Was he an abuse
[00:02:57] victim? And and in that gray area, it's
[00:02:59] quite possible. Well, you know, I've
[00:03:01] argued in the case of Galileain Maxwell
[00:03:02] that she sort of could potentially have
[00:03:04] fallen in that category as well because
[00:03:06] I think there is some evidence that she
[00:03:08] was um abused by her father, Robert
[00:03:10] Maxwell, in that way and then sort of he
[00:03:12] died and she sort of instead of him
[00:03:14] being her handler, I guess you could say
[00:03:16] she's sent to Epstein who, you know, is
[00:03:19] alleged to have worked with Robert
[00:03:21] Maxwell and intelligence related
[00:03:22] financial stuff in the 1980s. And then
[00:03:24] she, you know, basically becomes the
[00:03:26] person helping him arrange his stuff and
[00:03:28] basically serving a lot of the same
[00:03:30] purposes that she helped her father do,
[00:03:32] you know, but instead it's with Epstein.
[00:03:33] >> I can't put numbers or percentages on
[00:03:35] it, but I don't know if it's a majority
[00:03:36] or a large part, but I think now the
[00:03:38] strong narrative around Epstein is not
[00:03:40] financial terrorist. It it is pedophile.
[00:03:42] >> That was explicitly done on purpose.
[00:03:44] >> Yeah. And and fine. But but what I mean
[00:03:46] is it's like it's it's good to clear get
[00:03:48] that narrative clear because if people
[00:03:50] are I think if they hear Epstein
[00:03:52] connected they think oh have you been
[00:03:53] are you in the flight logs? Did you
[00:03:55] travel to the island? Did you have
[00:03:56] business dealings with him both first in
[00:03:59] 2019?
[00:04:00] >> But not everyone on the plane is
[00:04:01] necessarily a pedo either you know uh
[00:04:04] but I think you know going on a plane
[00:04:06] with him and being around him and being
[00:04:08] affiliated with him suggests that you're
[00:04:11] involved in some of the stuff he was
[00:04:12] doing and it was not exclusively sex
[00:04:14] trafficking. If anything, I would argue
[00:04:16] that sex trafficking and sex blackmail
[00:04:18] was really like a side thing for Epstein
[00:04:20] and that his real job is was currency
[00:04:22] manipulation. And that's why you have
[00:04:24] like letters to heads of state being
[00:04:26] like, I want to talk to you about
[00:04:27] Jeffrey Epstein and currency
[00:04:29] stabilization. When that exact
[00:04:31] administration was developing a plan to
[00:04:33] stabilize Mexico's currency and someone
[00:04:35] tied up in the cabal of currency traders
[00:04:38] that Epstein was in, according to like
[00:04:39] the New York Times and stuff, was the
[00:04:41] person who shorted the peso and made
[00:04:42] millions of dollars. And you know,
[00:04:44] someone like Steve Bannon too was also
[00:04:45] involved around the same time that that
[00:04:47] Pierce was associating with Epstein.
[00:04:49] Very involved in trying to rehabilitate
[00:04:51] Epstein's image as he was moving to
[00:04:53] reinvent himself as like a science and
[00:04:55] tech investor. So like why were these
[00:04:56] why why are these people making these
[00:04:58] decisions? I mean they obviously didn't
[00:04:59] care because even at that point in time
[00:05:01] after his first arrest, Epste described
[00:05:03] himself as being socially radioactive.
[00:05:06] So these are people that are just like
[00:05:07] no that's fine and like we we see
[00:05:09] something useful in you and we want to
[00:05:11] help you make that rebrand. Why? I would
[00:05:13] argue it has to do with the role that
[00:05:15] Epstein played in finances. And that is
[00:05:17] also the reason, you know, why Leslie
[00:05:19] Wexner chose him to basically run and
[00:05:22] manage all of his money. Because right
[00:05:24] before Epstein came into the Wexner
[00:05:25] circle, Wexner's tax lawyer was shot in
[00:05:28] the face in broad daylight. The police
[00:05:30] investigation document says that it was
[00:05:33] organized crime in Leslie Wexner that
[00:05:35] did it and that Leslie Wexner is linked
[00:05:37] to organized crime. That report was
[00:05:39] destroyed. The murder is listed as
[00:05:41] unsolved. and right at and uh it was the
[00:05:43] murder happened the day before the
[00:05:45] lawyer was going to testify to the IRS
[00:05:47] about unspecified tax havens and then
[00:05:50] Epstein sweeps in and starts untangling
[00:05:52] Wexner's complicated finances at the
[00:05:55] Limited. And then you have the limited
[00:05:57] at that time having a figure on the
[00:05:59] board named Alan Tesler who was involved
[00:06:01] with aspects of the promise software
[00:06:03] scandal which is where uh Israeli
[00:06:06] intelligence and the CIA essentially put
[00:06:07] a back door into like every security
[00:06:09] agency and Robert Maxwell was intimately
[00:06:12] involved with that. But Alan Tesler the
[00:06:14] architect of that one of them was a man
[00:06:15] named Earl Bryan and Alan Tesler was a
[00:06:18] lawyer for Earl Bryan and also on the
[00:06:19] board of the limited and involved with
[00:06:21] all you know really this whole network
[00:06:22] at the same time. I mean, a lot of very
[00:06:24] weird stuff is happening in this crowd,
[00:06:25] but if you look at what they were doing,
[00:06:27] which, you know, I I do in detail in my
[00:06:29] book, it's a mix of financial crime and
[00:06:32] trying to dominate tech. And that's why
[00:06:33] you have like the Maxwell sisters after
[00:06:35] Robert Maxwell died, the twins uh create
[00:06:37] the first search engine and things like
[00:06:38] that. And Isabelle Maxwell goes on to be
[00:06:40] a major player in in Israel's uh
[00:06:43] high-tech system. Christine Maxwell
[00:06:45] teams up with a a CIA top guy for um I
[00:06:49] forget like the CIO of the CIA to
[00:06:51] develop a company called Kilad that was
[00:06:54] basically being used after 9/11 to uh
[00:06:56] analyze all of this anti- like war on
[00:06:59] terror data and all of this stuff. I
[00:07:01] mean it's it's just very well it's
[00:07:04] important to understand that there was a
[00:07:06] explicit effort to limit the discussion
[00:07:08] about Epstein to make it just about the
[00:07:11] sex crime so you don't look at anything
[00:07:12] else. Well, it was suspected because
[00:07:14] Bear Sterns uh had the Bronman's as a
[00:07:16] tax client and Epstein left Bear Sterns
[00:07:19] because of uh allegedly because he was
[00:07:22] um going to be he the SEC was
[00:07:24] investigating an insider trading scandal
[00:07:26] involving the Bronman's owned company
[00:07:27] serums. The SEC was tipped off that
[00:07:29] Epstein had information about that and
[00:07:31] they went to question him at Beer Sterns
[00:07:33] and then he was let go and there's a lot
[00:07:34] of you know he gave different reasons as
[00:07:36] to why he was let go and so did uh the
[00:07:38] bank but there's um you know a
[00:07:40] significant body of reporting supporting
[00:07:42] that it was related to that insider
[00:07:43] trading scandal which also involved
[00:07:45] people from Drexel Burnham Lambert and
[00:07:46] the junk bonds and you see a lot of
[00:07:48] Drexel people swimming around Epstein
[00:07:50] afterwards like Leon Black for example
[00:07:52] who led their mergers and acquisition
[00:07:54] acquisitions department and were
[00:07:55] involved in you know all sorts of
[00:07:57] financial criminality. Leon Black's the
[00:07:58] name that I it seems to be one of the
[00:08:00] most
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