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WASHINGTON, July 25 (Reuters) - The U.S. Senate's Finance Committee on Tuesday revealed an ongoing probe into private equity billionaire Leon Black's financial ties with disgraced late financier Jeffrey Epstein, and said the investigation "uncovered serious tax issues." The Senate panel said that a reported $158 million of payments in several installments from 2012 to 2017 by Black to Epstein for financial advice seemed "inexplicably large," given that Epstein was "neither a licensed tax attorney nor a certified public accountant." A spokesperson for Black said the billionaire had "cooperated extensively" with the panel's probe and provided detailed information. Black had previously acknowledged he paid Epstein for "legitimate financial advisory services." Last week, the New York Times reported that Black paid $62.5 million to the U.S. Virgin Islands to avoid any legal claims tied to an Epstein sex-trafficking investigation.
Persons: Leon, Jeffrey Epstein, Black, Epstein, Donald Trump, Bill Clinton, Kanishka Singh, Jonathan Oatis Organizations: Senate's Finance, New York Times, U.S . Virgin, Forbes, Apollo Global Management, Thomson Locations: U.S, Washington
JPMorgan's human trafficking experts urged the bank to cut ties with Jeffrey Epstein: court docs. JPMorgan Chase's in-house human trafficking experts urged the company to sever ties with "that scum Epstein" — but bank executives rejected their request, according to a new court filing. They cited news stories that connected Jeffrey Epstein to human trafficking, according to the court document, which was filed in Manhattan court on Monday. The head of JPMorgan's human trafficking initiative also believed the company "should exit Jeffrey Epstein as a client," according to the filing. "We would never have continued to do business with him if we believed he was engaged in an ongoing sex trafficking operation."
Persons: Jeffrey Epstein, sleaze, Epstein, Organizations: JPMorgan Chase's, US, , JPMorgan Chase Locations: Manhattan
At the time, there were reports that he paid cash to girls for "massages" — a code word for sex. When asked about the large withdrawals, Epstein said he needed to pay for jet fuel. JPMorgan's private bank has a policy to "discourage" large cash deposits and spending. Bankers, according to an excerpt of the guidelines filed in court Tuesday morning, are responsible for getting clients to explain their large cash withdrawals. "Issue is he really never stopped the large cash withdrawals," a compliance officer wrote then.
Persons: Jeffrey Epstein, Epstein, Morgan, Jeffrey Epstein's, James, Emily Michot, Ghislaine Maxwell, sexualized massages, Glenn Dubin, Sergey Brin, Bill Gates, Leon Black, Larry Summers, Prince Andrew, Ehud Barak, Thomas Pritzker, Benjamin Netanyahu, JPMorgan, Alexander Acosta, Mr, John Duffy, Mary Erdoes, Erdoes, Duffy Organizations: JPMorgan, Morning, JPMorgan Chase, Private Bank, Banker, Islands, US Virgin Islands, U.S ., Miami Herald, Tribune, Service, Getty, Virgin Islands, police, US, Office, Southern, of Locations: Little St, U.S, U.S . Virgin Islands, Palm Beach, Sultan, Dubai, Prince, Florida, of New York
Leon Black, Chairman, CEO and Director, Apollo Global Management, LLC, speaks at the Milken Institute's 21st Global Conference in Beverly Hills, California, May 1, 2018. A federal lawsuit filed Tuesday accused Leon Black, the billionaire co-founder of Apollo Global Management, of raping a then-16-year-old girl with autism in 2002 at the Manhattan townhouse of disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein. "Wigdor's prior case against Mr. Black was recently thrown out by the Court and this one will be too. "This sham proceeding will be promptly dismissed and will provide further ammunition for Mr. Black's pending sanctions motion against the Wigdor firm," the lawyer said. The bid for sanctions also references Guzel Ganieva, who was represented by Wigdor in a 2021 lawsuit accusing Black of sexual assault and defamation was dismissed in May.
Persons: Leon Black, Jeffrey Epstein, Epstein, Ghislaine Maxwell, Wigdor, Black, Jane Doe, Jeanne Christensen, Jane Doe's, " Christensen, Susan Estrich, Estrich, Black's, Cheri Pierson, Pierson, Guzel Ganieva, Ganieva Organizations: Apollo Global Management, Milken, Global Conference, Black, New York Times, U.S . Virgin, Senate Finance, New York Supreme, Wigdor Locations: Beverly Hills , California, Manhattan, U.S, New York, Epstein's Manhattan
A JPMorgan Chase executive once joked about the "nymphettes" Jeffrey Epstein kept in his house. Epstein was charged in 2019 fo trafficking underage girls for sex, but died in prison soon after. A JPMorgan Chase executive once joked about the "nymphettes" that Jeffrey Epstein kept in his house, according to a new filing in an ongoing lawsuit against the bank. "Reminded me of JE's house, except it was more tasteful, and fewer nymphettes," the executive wrote, according to the new filing. He was awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges.
Persons: Jeffrey Epstein, Epstein, Jeffrey Epstein's, Frick, Miley Cyrus, JPMorgan Chase Organizations: JPMorgan Chase, US, US Virgin Islands, Morning, JPMorgan, Metropolitan Correctional Center Locations: US Virgin, Manhattan
A Senate committee is investigating whether $158 million that the billionaire investor Leon Black paid the disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein for tax and estate planning services should have been classified as a gift, as part of a broader inquiry into tax-avoidance schemes by ultrawealthy individuals, according to a letter reviewed by The New York Times. In addition to the fees that Mr. Black said he had paid Mr. Epstein, the Senate Finance Committee is looking into several trusts that Mr. Black used to save on taxes and advice that Mr. Epstein gave on art purchases, according to the letter, which the committee’s chairman, Senator Ron Wyden, sent to the private equity mogul on Monday. Mr. Wyden, Democrat of Oregon, wrote that the committee was dissatisfied with the information that Mr. Black, a co-founder of Apollo Global Management, had provided it to date and requested his cooperation. “A significant number of open questions remain regarding the tax-avoidance scheme you implemented with Epstein’s assistance, including whether the exorbitant amounts paid to Epstein should have been classified as a gift for federal tax purposes,” the senator wrote. Gifts exceeding an annual threshold in value are subject to federal taxes ranging from 18 to 40 percent.
Persons: Leon Black, Jeffrey Epstein, Black, Epstein, Ron Wyden, Wyden Organizations: The New York Times, Senate Finance, Mr, Democrat, Apollo Global Management Locations: Oregon
A Senate panel on Tuesday revealed a yearlong investigation into Apollo Global Management co-founder Leon Black's ties to the late disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein, with a focus on $158 million Black allegedly paid Epstein for tax and estate planning services. The probe into Black's tax schemes is one of a series of investigations by the committee into how ultra-wealthy people skirt their tax bills, Wyden's letter said. The committee's latest round of questions are "inappropriately invasive" and potentially overstep the panel's oversight role, Black's memo contended. Overnight, the U.S. Virgin Islands lobbed new accusations against JPMorgan Chase in a lawsuit accusing the bank of enabling Epstein's criminal activity. Both the Virgin Islands and JPMorgan filed motions overnight for partial summary judgment in the lawsuit.
Persons: Leon Black, Leon Black's, Jeffrey Epstein, Epstein, Ron Wyden, Black, Wyden, Wealth Management David Brigstocke Organizations: Apollo Global Management, Milken Institute Global Conference, U.S . Virgin, JPMorgan Chase, JPMorgan, Asset, Wealth Management, Virgin Islands Locations: Beverly Hills , California, U.S, Slovakian
New York CNN —The Senate Finance Committee is looking into whether billionaire investor Leon Black’s $158 million payment to disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein was part of a greater strategy to avoid paying over $1 billion in federal gift and estate taxes. “The payments were inexplicably large; well in excess of what Black paid any other financial advisors and far higher than the median compensation of Fortune 500 CEOs at the time,” Wyden said in a statement released Tuesday. “At every stage of the committee’s investigation, Black has refused to answer questions or provide any documents that could demonstrate how Epstein’s compensation for tax and estate planning services was determined or justified,” Wyden said in the statement. Black has cooperated extensively with the Committee, providing detailed information about the matters under review,” Whit Clay, a spokesman for Black, said in a statement to CNN. An internal Apollo investigation that documented his $158 million payment to Epstein following the New York Times’ reporting, however, found no wrongdoing.
Persons: Leon Black’s, Jeffrey Epstein, Epstein, Ron Wyden, Wyden, Dechert, ” Wyden, , Black, Mr, Whit Clay, ” Epstein, Dechert didn’t, Joanna Rose, Organizations: New, New York CNN, Finance, Apollo Global Management, Oregon Democrat, Dechert LLP, Apollo, Fortune, CNN, New York Times Locations: New York
July 21 (Reuters) - Apollo Global Management Inc (APO.N) co-founder Leon Black paid $62.5 million to the U.S. Virgin Islands to avoid any legal claims tied to a Jeffrey Epstein sex-trafficking investigation, the New York Times reported on Friday. The Times obtained a copy of the settlement agreement from the Virgin Islands government through a public records request. A spokesperson for Black confirmed in an emailed statement to Reuters that Black had settled with the Virgin Islands, noting that there was no suggestion in the settlement "that Mr. Black was aware of or participated in any misconduct." The spokesperson went on to say that, as previously known, Black had paid Epstein for "legitimate financial advisory services" and that Black had "resolved the (Virgin Island's) potential claims arising out of the unintended consequences of those payments." A New York state judge in May dismissed a lawsuit accusing Black, 71, of defaming a woman by falsely claiming she tried to extort him after accusing him of rape, which he denied.
Persons: Leon Black, Jeffrey Epstein, Black, Epstein, Epstein's, Cheri Pierson, Brad Brooks, Rosalba O'Brien Organizations: Apollo Global Management Inc, U.S . Virgin, New York Times, Times, Virgin, JPMorgan Chase, Forbes, Thomson Locations: U.S, Virgin, Islands, York, defaming, Epstein's, Manhattan, Lubbock , Texas
The Mirror, now the Daily Mirror, was owned by Ghislaine’s father Robert Maxwell from 1984 until his death in 1991. A great fun day in which Ghislaine Maxwell presented a cheque for £2000 for the save the children fund. Media reports on Ghislaine Maxwell’s past, including a Reuters article about her (here), make no reference to her working for Disney (here) (here). A spokesperson for Disney said Ghislaine Maxwell never worked for the company. Photos featured in this clip show Ghislaine Maxwell at a charity event organized by The Mirror in 1985.
Persons: Ghislaine Maxwell, Jeffrey Epstein, Ghislaine’s, Robert Maxwell, Maxwell, Epstein, , , Donald Duck, George Phillips, Lady Bath’s, Henry Thynne, Lord Bath, Ghislaine, Read Organizations: British, Walt Disney Company, Daily, ” Reuters, Disney, Facebook, Media, The, Reuters Locations: Manhattan, Wiltshire, Virginia
The previously undisclosed settlement came after the Virgin Islands reached a $105 million deal in November with Mr. Epstein’s estate. The Virgin Islands government produced its settlement agreement with Mr. Black in response to a public records request by The New York Times. The $62.5 million settlement followed that session. Mr. Black agreed to pay in cash, according the settlement document. Those dealings, including the revelation that he paid $158 million to Mr. Epstein for tax and estate planning services, had become a source of embarrassment for Mr. Black in the years after Mr. Epstein’s death.
Persons: Leon Black, Jeffrey Epstein, Epstein, Black Organizations: U.S . Virgin, Virgin, Mr, JPMorgan Chase, Virgin Islands, The New York Times, The Times Locations: U.S, U.S . Virgin Islands, Manhattan
Deutsche has a troubled history with regulators and prosecutors. The bank also paid a $150 million fine to a New York bank regulator in 2020, partly over its banking relationship with the disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein. The Fed orders from 2015 and 2017 stemmed from Deutsche’s relationship with the Estonian branch of Danske Bank, which has also run afoul of the authorities. Bank regulators had found that in its dealings with Danske Bank, Deutsche did not properly monitor transactions involving high-risk customers. Last year, Danske, the largest bank in Denmark, pleaded guilty to charges arising from a long-running money-laundering investigation.
Persons: Jeffrey Epstein, Deutsche Organizations: Danske Bank, Bank, Deutsche, Estonian, Danske Locations: New York, Estonian, Denmark
Christie, who is running for president again versus Trump this cycle, also received $6,600 from Jones in the second quarter, according to his campaign finance disclosure. Longtime venture capitalist Joe Lonsdale donated at least $3,300 to DeSantis in the second quarter, according to the filings. DeSantis' campaign finished the second quarter with $20 million raised. Bill Ackman, the CEO of hedge fund Pershing Square Capital, contributed $3,300 during the early stages of the quarter, according to the filings. Ramaswamy's campaign finished the second quarter having raised over $7 million, most of which was self-funded.
Persons: Ron DeSantis, Donald J, Trump, Paul Tudor Jones, DeSantis, Jones, Mitt Romney's, Barack Obama, Jeb Bush's, Chris Christie's, Christie, Forbes, Joe Lonsdale, Lonsdale, Justin Siegel, Goldman Sachs, Goldman, Vivek Ramaswamy, Ramaswamy, Bill Ackman, Ramaswamy —, Robert F, Kennedy Jr, Ackman, Ed Hyman, Glenn Dubin, Eva, Jeffrey Epstein, Dubin, Nikki Haley Organizations: Florida Gov, Governors, Washington Post, Getty, New, New Jersey Gov, Trump, Wall Street, Capital, Pershing, Twitter, Democratic, Evercore ISI, Dubin, Co Locations: Florida, Washington ,, New Jersey
The US Virgin Islands is suing JPMorgan Chase in connection with the Jeffrey Epstein case. Court filings show it wants the bank to hire a compliance consultant to combat human trafficking. The US Virgin Islands is seeking at least $190 million from JPMorgan Chase for its alleged involvement with Jeffrey Epstein, as well as implement measures to prevent human trafficking. Since the US Virgin Islands filed its lawsuit in December 2022, both parties have blamed the other for their roles in Epstein's sex trafficking operation. In a another lawsuit, JPMorgan alleged that Epstein paid the college tuition for the children of the former first lady of the US Virgin Islands.
Persons: Jeffrey Epstein, Epstein, JPMorgan Chase Organizations: JPMorgan Chase, JPMorgan, Morning, US, Islands ' Department of Justice, Islands, CNN, Virgin Islands, Street Journal, Columbia University, Manhattan's Metropolitan Correctional Center Locations: Virgin Islands, Manhattan's
The government of the U.S. Virgin Islands said in a court filing on Friday that it is seeking at least $190 million in penalties from JPMorgan Chase for the bank’s failure to detect and report the sex trafficking operation run by the disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein in the U.S. territory. Lawyers for the Virgin Islands disclosed the sum in a legal filing in response to a request from the federal judge in Manhattan overseeing the lawsuit it filed against JPMorgan last year, which claimed that the bank turned a blind eye to Mr. Epstein’s activities. In the filing, the Virgin Islands’ attorney general’s office said it also wants the nation’s largest bank to put in new policies to prevent it from providing financial services to human traffickers. “We are pursuing this enforcement action because JPMorgan Chase’s institutional failure enabled Jeffrey Epstein’s sex trafficking,” said U.S. Virgin Islands Attorney General Ariel Smith in a statement.
Persons: Jeffrey Epstein, Jeffrey Epstein’s, , Ariel Smith Organizations: U.S . Virgin Islands, JPMorgan Chase, Lawyers, Virgin Islands, JPMorgan Locations: U.S, Manhattan
It also wants JPMorgan to pay damages to compensate Epstein's victims, pay punitive damages, separate its business and compliance functions, and hire a compliance consultant. The bank also called the U.S. Virgin Islands' arguments for damages "misdirected" and "not well founded." Friday's filing marks the first time the U.S. Virgin Islands has put a dollar figure on its lawsuit. In the U.S. Virgin Islands case, JPMorgan has sought to shift blame. The case is U.S. Virgin Islands v. JPMorgan Chase Bank NA, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York, No.
Persons: JPMorgan Chase, Jeffrey Epstein's, Epstein, Ariel Smith, Prince Andrew, Ehud Barak, Ghislaine Maxwell, Cecile de Jongh, Jes Staley, Staley, Jonathan Stempel, Nupur Anand, Luc Cohen, Jonathan Oatis, Deepa Babington Organizations: YORK, U.S . Virgin, JPMorgan, Virgin Islands, U.S . Virgin Islands, Deutsche Bank, U.S ., Barclays, Virgin, JPMorgan Chase Bank NA, U.S, Court, Southern District of, Thomson Locations: U.S, Manhattan, U.S . Virgin Islands, British, Southern District, Southern District of New York, New York
The government of the U.S. Virgin Islands in a court filing Friday estimated that it will seek damages of at least $190 million from JPMorgan Chase in a lawsuit accusing the big bank of facilitating sex trafficking by its former long-time customer Jeffrey Epstein. The Virgin Islands also said it wants an order requiring JPMorgan to take a series of steps to protect young women and girls from other predators in the future. The filing says the Virgin Islands wants at least $150 million in civil penalties alone. JPMorgan in its own court filings has accused the Virgin Islands itself of being "complicit in the crimes of Jeffrey Epstein." Last month in the same court where the Virgin Islands is suing the bank JPMorgan agreed, without admitting wrongdoing, to pay $290 million to victims of Epstein to settle a suit by one of his accusers.
Persons: Jeffrey Epstein, Epstein, Jed Rakoff, Jeffrey Epstein's, JPMorgan Chase, Ariel Smith, Smith, Patricia Wexler, JPM, Virgin, Sergey Brin, Bill Gates, Lex Wexner, Glenn Dubin, Donald Trump, Bill Clinton, Prince Andrew of Great Organizations: New York State Division, Criminal, Services, Reuters, U.S . Virgin, JPMorgan Chase, Virgin, JPMorgan, Virgin Islands, Google, Microsoft, Limited Brands, Deutsche Bank, New York state's Department of Financial Services Locations: U.S, Manhattan, United States, Virgin, Eastern, Prince Andrew of Great Britain, Florida, New York
The government for the Virgin Islands said in a court filing it also wants JPMorgan Chase to implement an independent compliance consultant to prevent human trafficking and to separate its business and compliance functions. “This document does not reflect the nature of settlement conversations,” a spokesperson for JPMorgan Chase said. The Virgin Islands’ DOJ filed a brief in the United States District Court in the Southern District of New York on Friday. The Virgin Islands government filed its own lawsuit against JPMorgan Chase in December 2022. JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon denied knowing about internal reviews of Epstein’s criminal conduct and his account with the bank when they were happening in depositions for the lawsuit.
Persons: Jeffrey Epstein’s, JPMorgan Chase, Epstein, Jeffrey Epstein, , JPM, Virgin, Denise George, Jamie Dimon, Organizations: New, New York CNN, JPMorgan Chase, Virgin, JPMorgan, Virgin Islands Department of Justice, Islands ’ DOJ, United States, Court, of, Virgin Islands, US Virgin Islands, , Firm, CNN Locations: New York, Florida, Southern, of New York, Manhattan, Beach
In a scathing 2021 report, the inspector general for the Justice Department found that the F.B.I. initially botched the investigation, allowing Mr. Nassar to assault more young women. Mr. Nassar was convicted on federal charges in 2017. A federal judge ordered that sentence to run concurrently and remanded him to federal custody. Last year, 13 female athletes who were sexually assaulted by Mr. Nassar each sought $10 million from the F.B.I., claiming agents mishandled the investigation, allowing him to continue abusing more victims.
Persons: Nassar, Theodore J . Kaczynski, James Bulger, Whitey, Jeffrey Epstein Organizations: Justice Department, Federal, of Prisons Locations: Michigan, North Carolina, Boston, West Virginia, Manhattan
Lawyers for Dimon, the bank's chief executive, and Staley, a former private banking and investment banking chief, urged a dismissal in filings late Thursday in Manhattan federal court. Lawyers for Dimon and the directors said there was no showing that either knowingly ignored red flags about Epstein, or that Dimon was involved in keeping Epstein as a client. The so-called derivative lawsuit seeks to have the defendants or their insurers pay damages to JPMorgan, benefiting shareholders. It is also defending against a lawsuit by the U.S. Virgin Islands, where Epstein owned two neighboring private islands. Staley has expressed regret for his friendship with Epstein and denied knowing about his sex trafficking.
Persons: Jamie Dimon, Jes Staley, Jeffrey Epstein, Staley, Epstein, Dimon, Jonathan Stempel, David Holmes Organizations: YORK, JPMorgan Chase's, Dimon, JPMorgan, Lawyers, U.S ., Barclays, Miami General Employees & Sanitation Employees, Court, Southern District of, Thomson Locations: Manhattan, Miami, Pittsburgh, U.S . Virgin Islands, New York, U.S, Southern District, Southern District of New York
Russia has "lost nearly half" its combat power since invading Ukraine, a top UK defense official said. Admiral Sir Tony Radakin claimed Russia is now "so weak" it cannot wage a counter-offensive. "Russia has lost nearly half the combat effectiveness of its army," Radakin said, according to the Financial Times. Radakin's claims about Russia's combat losses in Ukraine are roughly in line with previous reporting. In February, Oryx, an open-source intelligence group, said that at least 1,000 Russian tanks had been destroyed in Ukraine — and another 500 captured.
Persons: Sir Tony Radakin, , Sir Tony Radakin —, Rishi Sunak —, Radakin, Ukraine's, They've, Jeffrey Edmonds, Insider's Jake Epstein Organizations: Service, British, United, Financial Times, Ukraine —, PBS, Center for Naval, CIA Locations: Russia, Ukraine, Russian
Multiple presidents, from George Washington to Donald Trump, have endorsed conspiracy theories. George Washington and Abraham Lincoln both openly espoused conspiracy theories of various kinds. It was important for me early on to make a distinction between actual conspiracies and conspiracy theories. And those tend to be a specific cover-up around specific things, there's an identifiable group of actors and once you start doing basic journalism, these things tend to unravel pretty quickly. So I think that's, unfortunately, where we're heading.
Persons: Colin Dickey's, George Washington, Donald Trump, , Colin Dickey, Dickey, Trump, Abraham Lincoln, Hillary Clinton, Jeffrey Epstein Organizations: Freemasons, Service, American, United, Civil Rights Movement, People Locations: United States, , America, Iran, Salem
The face of late, disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein was digitally added to a photograph of billionaire Elon Musk, actor Ashton Kutcher and filmmaker Spike Lee, who are in the original image and pictured with talent manager, Guy Oseary. Examples of the altered photo circulating online can be seen (bit.ly/3re6zVP) and (here). The original image was captured on March 10, 2018 by photographer Joe Scarnici, and can be viewed via Getty Images (here). The original photograph shows the group pictured with Guy Oseary, not Jeffrey Epstein. This article was produced by the Reuters Fact Check team.
Persons: Jeffrey Epstein, Elon Musk, Ashton Kutcher, Spike Lee, Guy Oseary, Joe Scarnici, Scarnici, Epstein, , Guy Oseary’s, Read Organizations: Getty, Reuters, Business
NEW YORK, June 30 (Reuters) - The U.S. government has urged an appeals court to uphold Ghislaine Maxwell's conviction and 20-year prison sentence for helping the disgraced late financier Jeffrey Epstein sexually abuse teenage girls. Circuit Court of Appeals in Manhattan, federal prosecutors said none of Maxwell's legal arguments about the fairness of her trial held merit. Epstein committed suicide at age 66 in August 2019 in a Manhattan jail cell, where he was awaiting trial for sex trafficking. Maxwell's accusers have said she and Epstein at first made them feel welcome in their orbit, before Epstein began demanding sexualized massages. Reporting by Jonathan Stempel and Jack Queen in New York; edting Robert BirselOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Ghislaine, Jeffrey Epstein, Maxwell, Arthur Aidala, Epstein, Robert Maxwell, massages, Britain's Prince Andrew, JPMorgan Chase, Jes Staley, Jonathan Stempel, Jack Queen, edting Robert Birsel Organizations: YORK, U.S, Circuit, JPMorgan, Barclays, Deutsche Bank, US, Islands, Thomson Locations: Manhattan, Tallahassee , Florida, Beach , Florida, New York
Some women who applied to jobs at Gates Ventures were asked sexual questions, The Wall Street Journal reported. A Gates Ventures spokesperson denied knowledge of the contractor's alleged questions. Bill Gates' private office had a screening process in which the firm asked some female candidates sexually explicit questions, The Wall Street Journal reported on Thursday. A Gates spokesperson denied it had any knowledge of any sexually explicit questioning in a statement to the Journal. At the time, a Gates spokesperson said the relationship was unrelated to Gates' decision to step down and the affair "ended amicably."
Persons: Bill Gates, they'd, Gates, Jeffrey Epstein, Epstein, Microsoft's, she'd Organizations: Gates Ventures, Street Journal, Street, Gates, Gates Venture, CIA, Microsoft Locations: Russian
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