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Document doj-ogr-00032090

AI Analysis

Summary: The article profiles Jeffrey Epstein, describing his background, relationships with influential people like Bill Clinton, and his career as a financier and philanthropist. It highlights Epstein's enigmatic nature and his association with Ghislaine Maxwell. The piece also touches on Epstein's teaching career and his entry into finance.
Significance: This article provides insight into Jeffrey Epstein's life, relationships, and career, potentially relevant to understanding his influence and connections.
Key Topics: Jeffrey Epstein's background Epstein's relationship with Bill Clinton and Ghislaine Maxwell Epstein's career and financial expertise
Key People:
  • Jeffrey Epstein - Subject of the article, financier and philanthropist
  • Bill Clinton - Former US President, friend of Epstein
  • Ghislaine Maxwell - Friend and associate of Epstein
  • David Patrick Columbia - Society journalist, commenting on Epstein and Maxwell's relationship

Full Text

Jeffrey Epstein: International Moneyman of Mystery Page 3 of 4 species represents the highest evolutionary form of the political animal. To be up close to him, as he was during the African journey, is akin to seeing the rarest of beasts on a safari. As he put it to a friend upon his return from Africa, "If you were a boxer at the downtown gymnasium at 14th Street and Mike Tyson walked in, your face would have the same look as these foreign leaders had when Clinton entered the room. He is the world's greatest politician." "Jeffrey is both a highly successful financier and a committed philanthropist with a keen sense of global markets and an in-depth knowledge of twenty-first-century science," Clinton says through a spokesman. "I especially appreciated his insights and generosity during the recent trip to Africa to work on democratization, empowering the poor, citizen service, and combating HIV/AIDS." Before Clinton, Epstein's rare appearances in the gossip columns tended to be speculation as to the true nature of his relationship with Ghislaine Maxwell. While they are still friends, the English tabloids have postulated that Maxwell has longed for a more permanent pairing and that for undetermined reasons Epstein has not reciprocated in kind. "It's a mysterious relationship that they have," says society journalist David Patrick Columbia. "In one way, they are soul mates, yet they are hardly companions anymore. It's a nice conventional relationship, where they serve each other's purposes." Friends of the two say that Maxwell, whose social life has always been higher-octane than Epstein's, lent a little pizzazz to the lower-profile Epstein. Indeed, at a party at Maxwell's house, her friends say, one is just as apt to see Russian ladies of the night as one is to see Prince Andrew. The Oxford-educated Maxwell, described by many as a man-eater (she flies her own helicopter and was recently seen dining with Clinton at Nello's on Madison Avenue), lives in her own townhouse a few blocks away. Epstein is frequently seen around town with a bevy of comely young women but there has been no boldfaced name to replace Maxwell. "You may read about Jeffrey in the social columns, but there is much more to him than that," says Jeffrey T. Leeds of the private equity firm Leeds Weld & Co. "He's a talented money manager and an extremely hardworking person with broad interests. Most unusual, though, is that in this media-obsessed age he is not in any sense a self-promoter." Born in 1953 and raised in Coney Island, Epstein went to Lafayette High School. According to his bio, he took some classes in physics at Cooper Union from 1969 to 1971. He left Cooper Union in 1971 and attended NYU's Courant Institute, where he took courses in mathematical physiology of the heart, leaving that school, too, without a degree. Between 1973 and 1975, Epstein taught calculus and physics at the Dalton School. By most accounts, he was something of a Robin Williams-in-Dead Poets Society type of figure, wowing his high-school classes with passionate mathematical riffs. So impressed was one Wall Street father of a student that he said to Epstein point-blank: "What are you doing teaching math at Dalton? You should be working on Wall Street -- why don't you give my friend Ace Greenberg a call." Next >>> (1|2|3|4) Related Links: Author E-mail: landon_thomas@newyorkmag.com Previous Stories: Features Archive Also In This Issue: New York Magazine - October 28, 2002 http://newyorkmetro.com/nymetro/news/people/articles/7912/ Public Records Request No.: 12/7/2005 DOJ-OGR-00032090