Dozens more Jeffrey Epstein documents are now public. Here’s what we know so far

The release of dozens of previously sealed court documents from a lawsuit involving Jeffrey Epstein might disappoint online sleuths who anticipated explosive new information.

The nearly 200 documents released as on January 5 largely mention figures whose names were already known, including Epstein’s high-profile friends and victims who have spoken publicly. In fact, the judge who made the call to release the information last month said she was doing so largely because much of it is already public.

The plan to release the documents had prompted rumours that they contained a list of “clients” or “co-conspirators,” and misinformation about their contents is continuing to run rampant on social media.

Still, the records do include fresh details about the financier’s sexual abuse of teenage girls, and offer a reminder of how he leveraged his powerful connections to recruit his victims and help cover up his crimes.

The documents unsealed this week are the latest of thousands previously made public in lawsuits involving Epstein. Here’s what we know about the documents released so far:

The case against Epstein

A millionaire known for associating with celebrities, politicians, billionaires, and academic stars, Jeffrey Epstein became the subject of a police investigation in Palm Beach, Florida, in 2005 after he was accused of paying a 14-year-old girl for sex. He was arrested in 2006.

Dozens of other underage girls described similar sexual abuse, but prosecutors ultimately allowed the financier to plead guilty in 2008 to a charge involving a single victim. He served 13 months in a jail work-release programme.

Some famous acquaintances abandoned Epstein after his conviction, including former Presidents Bill Clinton and Donald Trump, but many did not. Epstein continued to mingle with the rich and famous for another decade, often through philanthropic work.

The lawsuit

Reporting by the Miami Herald renewed interest in the scandal, and federal prosecutors in New York charged Epstein in 2019 with sex trafficking. He killed himself in jail while awaiting trial.

The U.S. attorney in Manhattan then prosecuted Epstein’s former girlfriend Ghislaine Maxwell for helping recruit his underage victims. She was convicted in 2021 and is serving a 20-year prison term.

The documents being unsealed are part of a 2015 lawsuit filed against Maxwell by one of Epstein’s victims, Virginia Giuffre. She is one of the dozens of women who sued Epstein saying he had abused them at his homes in Florida, New York, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and New Mexico.

Ms. Giuffre said the summer she turned 17, she was lured away from a job as a spa attendant at Mr. Trump’s Mar-a-Lago club to become a “masseuse” for Epstein — a job that involved performing sexual acts. She also claimed she was pressured into having sex with men in Epstein’s social orbit, including Britain’s Prince Andrew, former New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson, former U.S. Senator George Mitchell, and the billionaire Glenn Dubin, among others. All of those men said her accounts were fabricated.

Ms. Giuffre settled a lawsuit against Prince Andrew in 2022. That same year, she withdrew an accusation she had made against Alan Dershowitz, law professor and Epstein’s former attorney, saying she “may have made a mistake ” in identifying him as an abuser.

Ms. Giuffre’s lawsuit against Maxwell was settled in 2017, but Miami Herald went to court to access court papers initially filed under seal, including transcripts of interviews the lawyers did with potential witnesses.

Unsealed documents

About 2,000 pages were unsealed by a court in 2019. Additional documents were released in 2020, 2021 and 2022.

The batch currently being released contains around 250 records with sections that were blacked out or were sealed entirely because of concerns about the privacy rights of Epstein’s victims and other people whose names had come up during the legal battle but weren’t complicit in his crimes.

Nearly 200 have been released as of Friday. The judge hasn’t set a target for when all the documents should be made public, but more are expected to come.

U.S. District Judge Loretta A. Preska, who evaluated the documents to decide what should be unsealed, said in her December order that she was ordering the records released because much of the information within them is already public.

Some records have been released, either in part or in full, in other court cases.

The people named in the records include many of Epstein’s accusers, members of his staff who told their stories to tabloid newspapers, people who served as witnesses at Maxwell’s trial, people who were mentioned in passing during depositions but aren’t accused of anything salacious, and people who investigated Epstein, including prosecutors, a journalist and a police detective.

There are also boldface names of public figures known to have associated with Epstein over the years, but whose relationships with him have already been well documented elsewhere, the judge said.

One of them is Jean-Luc Brunel, a French modeling agent close to Epstein who was awaiting trial on charges that he raped underage girls when he killed himself in a Paris jail in 2022. Ms. Giuffre was among the women who had accused Brunel of sexual abuse. His name was peppered throughout the documents released Wednesday.

Mr. Clinton and Mr. Trump both factor in the court file, partly because Ms. Giuffre was questioned by Maxwell’s lawyers about inaccuracies in newspaper stories about her time with Epstein. One story quoted her as saying she had ridden in a helicopter with Mr. Clinton and flirted with Mr. Trump. She said neither of those things happened. She hasn’t accused either former president of wrongdoing.

The judge said a handful of names should remain blacked out in the documents because they would identify people who were sexually abused. The Associated Press does not typically identify people who say they are victims of sexual assault unless they decide to tell their stories publicly, as Ms. Giuffre has done.

Menace of misinformation

In addition to false claims that the documents represent some kind of list identifying Epstein’s “clients,” the internet is rife with misinformation about exactly who is named in the records and what that means.

After the documents began emerging, social media users seized on names that appeared in passing, falsely suggesting it was proof of wrongdoing.

For instance, some suggested that the documents included allegations about Stephen Hawking, who died in 2018. In reality, the theoretical physicist’s name appears, misspelled, in a 2015 email Epstein sent proposing a reward be paid to anyone who could debunk a baseless claim about Hawking.

Other social media users are spreading fabricated images made to look like documents that they claim show people making allegations against Hawking and Jimmy Kimmel, a late-night host. The quotes in the images don’t appear anywhere in the records.

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Here’s What Bill Gates Recommends You Read, Watch And Listen To During The Holidays.

Bill Gates is getting in the holiday spirit, releasing his list of suggested winter reads – and listens – today. It’s a more decade-long Christmas tradition running for the billionaire philanthropist and Microsoft cofounder, who shares his choices for the best books to read by the fireside, hot chocolate in hand, each November.

This year’s list, which Gates is posting on his GatesNotes blog, features some new twists on his holiday tradition. Instead of the usual five-book list, he has substituted two of his book selections with his personal Spotify holiday music playlist and an online economics lecture series. This year also signals the return of Gates’ choice books from just the past 12 months, after he took a departure with last year’s holiday list by cataloging five of the all-time favorite books he’s ever read.

Across the books Gates recommends to readers this winter, there is a clear theme of existentialism. Climate change, the state of technological innovation and our own biological evolution are among the topics he resonates with in his selections and reviews.

When sitting down to assemble his list, Gates writes that these texts “came to mind right away, each of them deeply informative and well written.”

It’s a heavy list, partially offset by Gates’ inclusion of a cheery holiday playlist featuring artists like Donny Hathaway, Nat King Cole and Dolly Parton. One thing readers won’t find on his list is a novel: It’s all nonfiction works for the seventh richest man in the world.

Here are his recommendations:

The Song of the Cell by Siddhartha Mukherjee

A self-proclaimed non-fan of biology as a child, Gates reckons he would have developed a much stronger affinity for the subject had he read The Song of the Cell as a student. This nonfiction text tells the story of human evolution through the lens of the cell. Author and practicing physician Siddhartha Mukherjee (whose other works include the 2011 Pulitzer Prize-winning Emperor of All Maladies: A Biography Of Cancer) takes the reader from the genesis of life on earth, single-celled organisms, and explains how they became human beings, with the help of a few billion years of evolution. Gates admires how the author explains “in clear, accessible language not only how cells work but why they are the foundation of all life.” Mukherjee goes on to tackle how the science of cells influences, or rather dictates, modern biology and the study of illness. In Gates’ words, “all of us will have loved ones who get sick. To understand what’s happening in those moments — and to feel optimistic that things will get better — you need a foundational knowledge about the building blocks of life.”

Not the End of the World: How We Can Be The First Generation To Build A Sustainable Planet by Hannah Ritchie

In a somewhat contrarian take on climate change, Gates praises author Hannah Ritchie’s optimistic and solutions-oriented approach to sustainability. In Not the End of the World, Ritchie takes aim at a principle long accepted as true, that the world was once sustainable but is getting less so. The climate scholar makes the point that the world has, in fact, never been completely sustainable. Rather, different aspects of human life have wavered between sustainable and not sustainable throughout history, and the present is no different. In a genre saturated with pessimistic, doomsday-esque themes, Gates admires Ritchie’s matter-of-fact depiction of climate change. “The world is bad, but much better: Those two things can be true at once. So can a third: ‘The world can be much better,’” Gates writes. Ritchie also raises action points that companies, governments and citizens can use to mitigate each climate issue raised in the book, resulting in a list of solutions with which Gates says he “couldn’t agree more.”

Invention and Innovation: A Brief History of Hype and Failure by Vaclav Smil

No author has been featured in Gates’ reviews more than Vaclav Smil. Gates has read all 44 of his books, many of which are about technology and innovation. Gates feels Smil’s perspectives are often “too pessimistic” about the upside of new technology, though he admits the writer is almost always right when it comes to the issues around their application in the real world. In his latest work, Smil makes the contrarian argument that the current era of technological innovation is lackluster and stagnant. Gates rejects the general sentiment, though the Microsoft cofounder agrees that “the exponential growth in computing power over the past several decades has given people a false idea about growth and innovation in other areas.” Gates advises readers to take Smil’s writing with a grain of salt in order to get the most out of it, saying, “Even when I disagree with him, I learn a lot from him. Smil is not the sunniest person I know, but he always strengthens my thinking.”

Unexpected Economics, an online course taught by Stanford University Professor Timothy Taylor

While not a book, Gates sees Professor Timothy Taylor’s recorded economics lectures as one of the best guides to understanding the discipline. It was what Gates first thought of when one of his children recently asked him to recommend a book on economics. Gates highlights Unexpected Economics and two other courses, all available on the streaming platform Wondrium, that break down the fundamentals of economics in a digestible way. It’s the type of class you will get something out of “whether you’ve never taken an economics class before, or you majored in the subject and graduated with honors,” Gates writes. He adds that Taylor’s strength is his ability to communicate seemingly impossibly complex topics as coherent and straightforward, making for a viewing experience both “enlightening and accessible.” For those feeling especially festive, Gates recommends Taylor’s Altruism, Charity, and Gifts lecture in the Unexpected Economics course, which tackles the economics of gift-giving.

“Holiday Playlist 2023”

“When I think of the holidays, two things always come to mind: matching pajama sets a tradition in my family and, of course, holiday music,” Gates writes, adding that Christmas tunes can be heard in the Gates household as soon as Thanksgiving is in sight. The tunes in Gates’ Spotify playlist are an eclectic blend of old and new, domestic and international. American classics like The Christmas Song (Merry Christmas To You) sung by Nat King Cole and Joy to the World, performed by Dolly Parton make his list, alongside European chart toppers like Paul McCartney’s Wonderful Christmastime, and Happy Xmas (War Is Over) by John Lennon. A Capella group Pentatonix even sneak their way on with That’s Christmas to Me.

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Blinken Set To Travel To Beijing Amid Continuing U.S.-China Strains

U.S. Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken, a long-time confidant of President Joe Biden, will travel to Beijing amid continuing strains in relations between the world’s two largest economies as part of a trip that begins on June 16, the State Department said in a statement today.

“While in Beijing, Secretary Blinken will meet with senior PRC (People’s Republic of China) officials where he will discuss the importance of maintaining open lines of communication to responsibly manage the U.S.-PRC relationship,” the statement said. “He will also raise bilateral issues of concern, global and regional matters, and potential cooperation on shared transnational challenges.”

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Neither side has said whether Blinken, a journalist and lawyer earlier in his career, would meet Chinese President Xi Jinping. One likely topic would be a possible Xi visit to the U.S. for a meeting of APEC leaders in San Francisco in November. Blinken last week just concluded a trip to Saudi Arabia, where members of the Gulf Cooperation Council later gathered to express warm support of Arab-China business amid a big push by Beijing to expand its ties to that region.

Blinken’s visit follows the postponement of a planned trip earlier this year after an alleged spy balloon from China floated over the U.S. heartland in February, creating a political uproar in Congress. China later targeted U.S. companies in the mainland on security grounds, including due diligence and research firms Bain and Mintz Group, and announced an anti-espionage law to take effect on July 1 that American businesses fear could cover many routine business activities.

Biden last month called the balloon “silly” and has faced criticism for not making public an investigation into the matter. However, adding to pressure on already strained ties, the U.S. this week acknowledged that China has set up a spy base in Cuba, and added 31 Chinese companies to a list of businesses engaged in activity that hurt American security.

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U.S. business leaders looking to the China market as an offset to slow economic growth at home will privately support any lowering of tension between the two countries, though try to avoid any public comments owing to fears of being questioned by the Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party, a knowledgeable former diplomat said. That Congressional group is “committed to working on a bipartisan basis to build consensus on the threat posed by the Chinese Communist Party and develop a plan of action to defend the American people, our economy, and our values,” according to its website.

The overall atmospherics of the U.S.-China economic relationship have improved somewhat following a series of high-level government meetings between the two countries. Daniel Kritenbrink, U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs, and China’s Vice Foreign Minister Ma Zhaoxu held meetings on June 5 that both said were productive. China’s Commerce Minister Wang Wentao met U.S. Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo in Washington last month followed by a meeting with U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai in Detroit on the margins of an APEC trade gathering. Those meetings followed talks in May between U.S. National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan with Chinese Communist Party Politburo Member and Director of the Office of the Foreign Affairs Commission Wang Yi in Vienna.

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Tesla CEO Elon Musk and JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon — both with business interests in China — have also visited the country in recent weeks. (See related post here.) Bill Gates reportedly arrived in Beijing today.

Tension soared after a Taiwan visit by then U.S. House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi last August prompted Beijing to cut back official contacts with the United States and to launch military drills around the island. The mainland claims sovereignty over self-ruled Taiwan, a democratically run economy of 24 million people that is one of the world’s most important semiconductor manufacturing centers.

In November, a meeting between Biden and Xi in Bali led to expectations the relationship between the two countries was going to stabilize. Relations plunged again, however, following the spy balloon incident.

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During the first term of the Obama Administration, Blinken was national security advisor to then-Vice President Joe Biden, according to Blinken’s State Department biography. “This was the continuation of a long professional relationship that stretched back to 2002,” it notes, when Blinken began his six-year stint as Democratic staff director for the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Then-Senator Biden was the chair of that committee from 2001 to 2003 and 2007 to 2009.

Earlier in his career, the department said, Blinken, a graduate of Harvard College and Columbia Law School, was a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies from 2001 and 2002. Before joining government, he also practiced law in New York and Paris. Blinken earlier was a reporter for The New Republic magazine.

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China’s “Fits And Starts” Economy Needs Private Sector Boost — Matthews Asia’s Andy Rothman

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Exclusive: Bill Gates On Advising OpenAI, Microsoft And Why AI Is ‘The Hottest Topic Of 2023’

The Microsoft cofounder talked to Forbes about his work with AI unicorn OpenAI and back on Microsoft’s campus, AI’s potential impact on jobs and in medicine, and much more.


In 2020, Bill Gates left the board of directors of Microsoft, the tech giant he cofounded in 1975. But he still spends about 10% of his time at its Redmond, Washington headquarters, meeting with product teams, he says. A big topic of discussion for those sessions: artificial intelligence, and the ways AI can change how we work — and how we use Microsoft software products to do it.

In the summer of 2022, Gates met with OpenAI cofounder and president Greg Brockman to review some of the generative AI products coming out of the startup unicorn, which recently announced a “multiyear, multibillion” dollar deepened partnership with Microsoft.

You can read more about OpenAI and the race to bring AI to work — including comments from Brockman, CEO Sam Altman and many other players — in our print feature here. Gates’ thoughts on AI, shared exclusively with Forbes, are below.

This interview has been edited for clarity and consistency


Alex Konrad: It looks like 2018 was the earliest I saw you talking with excitement about what OpenAI was doing. Is that right, or where does your interest in the company begin?

Bill Gates: [My] interest in AI goes back to my very earliest days of learning about software. The idea of computers seeing, hearing and writing is the longterm quest of the entire industry. It’s always been super interesting to me. And so as these machine learning techniques started to work extremely well, particularly things for speech and image recognition I’ve been fascinated by how many more inventions we would need before [AI] is really intelligent, in the sense of passing tests and being able to write fluently.

I know Sam Altman well. And I got to know Greg [Brockman] through OpenAI and some of the other people there, like Ilya [Sutskever, Brockman’s cofounder and chief scientist]. And I was saying to them, “Hey, you know, I think it doesn’t reach an upper bound unless we more explicitly have a knowledge representation, and explicit forms of symbolic logic.” There have been a lot of people raising those questions, not just me. But they were able to convince me that there was significant emergent behavior as you scaled up these large language models, and they did some really innovative stuff with reinforcement learning on top of it. I’ve stayed in touch with them, and they’ve been great about demoing their stuff. And now over time, they’re doing some collaboration, particularly with the huge back-ends that these skills require, that’s really come through their partnership with Microsoft.

That must be gratifying for you personally, that your legacy is helping their legacy.

Yeah, it’s great for me because I love these types of things. Also, wearing my foundation hat [The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, which Gates talked more about in September], the idea that a math tutor that’s available to inner city students, or medical advice that’s available to people in Africa who during their life, generally wouldn’t ever get to see a doctor, that’s pretty fantastic. You know, we don’t have white collar worker capacity available for lots of worthy causes. I have to say, really in the last year, the progress [in AI] has gotten me quite excited.

Few people have seen as many technological changes, or major shifts, as close-up as you have. How would you compare AI to some of these historic moments in technology history?

I’d say, this is right up there. We’ve got the PC without a graphics interface. Then you have the PC with a graphics interface, which are things like Windows and Mac, and which for me really began as I spent time with Charles Simonyi at Xerox PARC. That demo was greatly impactful to me and kind of set an agenda for a lot of what was done in both Microsoft and in the industry thereafter. [Editor’s note: a Silicon Valley research group famous for work on tech from the desktop to GPUs and the Ethernet.]

Then of course, the internet takes that to a whole new level. When I was CEO of Microsoft, I wrote the internet “tidal wave” memo, It’s pretty stunning that what I’m seeing in AI just in the last 12 months is every bit as important as the PC, the PC with GUI [graphical user interface], or the internet. As the four most important milestones in digital technology, this ranks up there.

And I know OpenAI’s work better than others. I’m not saying they’re the only ones. In fact, you know, part of what’s amazing is that there’ll be a lot of entrants into this space. But what OpenAI has done is very, very impressive, and they certainly lead in many aspects of [AI], which people are seeing through the broad availability of ChatGPT.

How do you see this changing how people work or how they do business? Should they be excited about productivity? Should they be at all concerned about job loss? What should people know about what this will mean for how they work?

Most futurists who’ve looked at the coming of AI have said that repetitive blue collar and physical jobs would be the first jobs to be affected by AI. And that’s definitely happening, and people shouldn’t lower their guard to that, but it’s a little more slow than I would have expected. You know, Rodney Brooks [a professor emeritus at MIT and robotics entrepreneur] put out what I would call some overly conservative views of how quickly some of those things would happen. Autonomous driving has particular challenges, but factory robotization will still happen in the next five to 10 years. But what’s surprising is that tasks that involve reading and writing fluency — like summarizing a complex set of documents or writing something in the style of a pre-existing author — the fact that you can do that with these large language models, and reinforce them, that fluency is really quite amazing.

One of the things I challenged Greg [Brockman] with early in the summer: “Hey, can OpenAI’s model]] pass the AP Biology tests?” And I said, “If you show me that, then I will say that it has the ability to represent things in a deeply abstract form, that’s more than just statistical things.” When I was first programming, we did these random sentence generators where we’d have the syntax of typical English sentences, you know, noun, verb, object. Then we’d have a set of nouns, a set of verbs and a set of objects and we would just randomly pick them, and every once in a while, it would spit out something that was funny or semi-cogent. You’d go, “Oh my god.” That’s the ‘monkeys typing on keyboards’ type of thing.

Well, this is a relative of that. Take [the AI’s] ability to take something like an AP test question. When a human reads a biology textbook, what’s left over in your mind? We can’t really describe that at a neurological level. But in the summer, [OpenAI] showed me progress that I really was surprised to see. I thought we’d have to invent more explicit knowledge representation.

We had to train it to do Sudoku, and it would get it wrong and say, “Oh, I mistyped.” Well, of course you mistyped, what does that mean? You don’t have a keyboard, you don’t have fingers! But you’re “mistyping?” Wow.

Satya [Nadella, Microsoft’s CEO] is super nice about getting input from me on technological things. And I spend maybe 10% of my time meeting with Microsoft product groups about their product roadmaps. I enjoy that time, and it also helps me be super up-to-date for the work of the Foundation, which is in health, education and agriculture. And so it was a huge win to give feedback to OpenAI over the summer, too. (Now people are seeing most of what I saw; I’ve seen some things that are somewhat more up-to-date.) If you take this progression, the ability to help you write and to help you read is happening now, and it will just get better. And they’re not hitting a boundary, nor are their competitors.

So, okay, what does that mean in the legal world, or in the processing invoices world, or in the medical world? There’s been an immense amount of playing around with [ChatGPT] to try to drive those applications. Even things as fundamental as search.

[ChatGPT] is truly imperfect. Nobody suggests it doesn’t make mistakes, and it’s not very intuitive. And then, with something like math, it’ll just be completely wrong. Before it was trained, its self-confidence in a wrong answer was also mind blowing. We had to train it to do Sudoku, and it would get it wrong and say, “Oh, I mistyped.” Well, of course you mistyped, what does that mean? You don’t have a keyboard, you don’t have fingers! But you’re “mistyping?” Wow. But that’s what the corpus [of training text] had taught it.

Having spent time with Greg [Brockman] and Sam [Altman], what makes you confident that they are building this AI responsibly, and that people should trust them to be good stewards of this technology? Especially as we move closer to an AGI.

Well, OpenAI was founded with that in mind. They certainly aren’t a purely profit-driven organization, though they do want to have the resources to build big, big, big machines to take this stuff forward. And that will cost tens of billions of dollars, eventually, in hardware and training costs. But the near-term issue with AI is a productivity issue. It will make things more productive and that affects the job market. The long term-issue, which is not yet upon us, is what people worry about: the control issue. What if the humans who are controlling it take it in the wrong direction? If humans lose control, what does that mean? I believe those are valid debates.

These guys care about AI safety. They’d be the first to say that they haven’t solved it. Microsoft also brings a lot of sensibilities about these things as a partner as well. And look, AI is going to be debated. It’ll be the hottest topic of 2023, and that’s appropriate. It will change the job market somewhat. And it’ll make us really wonder, what are the boundaries? [For example] it’s not anywhere close to doing scientific invention. But given what we’re seeing, that’s within the realm of possibility five years from now or 10 years from now.

What is your favorite or most fun thing you’ve seen these tools create so far?

It’s so much fun to play around with these things. When you’re with a group of friends, and you want to write a poem about how much fun something has been. The fact that you can say okay, “write it like Shakespeare” and it does — that creativity has been fun to have. I’m always surprised that even though the reason I have access is for serious purposes, I often turn to [ChatGPT] just for fun things. And after I recite a poem it wrote, I have to admit that I could not have written that.

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