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Interviewer: Its the Icarus storysomeone who flies too close to the sun.
Late one afternoon, while taking a leisurely stroll on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, Tim Malloy, a friend of mine and a collaborator on this book, nearly ran into a trim, silver-haired neighbor of ours from Palm Beach.
The man was walking down Madison Avenue, and several things about him were striking. For one thing, he was wearing slippers. Expensive, embroidered, monogrammed slippers. But slippers all the same.
For another, he was accompanied by two attractive women. Even in Manhattan, an island that attracts beautiful women from all over the world, these women stood out.
As the man half shuffled, half walked down the avenue, the women walked slightly behind him, as if they were attendants or staff.
Tim followed, keeping a respectable distance, as the threesome made a right onto 71st Street and headed toward an enormous town housea house that was almost a fortressright in the middle of the block. The imposing residence had a stone facade and a fifteen-foot-high front door that wouldnt have looked out of place protecting a castle. And, like our neighbors slippers, the house had a monogram: raised brass letters that spelled out JE .
The house and, quite possibly, the two women belonged to Jeffrey Epstein, a rich and powerful man who was also a registered sex offender with a strong taste for underage women.
Not just sixteen- and seventeen-year-olds. But younger girls as well.
Epstein was alleged to have abused dozens of young women, or, more accurately, girls. Hed settled potential lawsuits with some of them. Hed done a bit of prison time for his crimes. A bit of time. And now here he was, out in the world again.
Accompanied by two beautiful young women.
I had been hearing hair-raising stories about Jeffrey Epstein for a couple of years. Our interests could not have been more different, but Palm Beach, where we both live, is small and tightly knit, and we knew some of the same people.
Epsteins arrest had made headlines in papers all over the world. But in Palm Beach, it caused a scandal that continues to set off aftershocks and leave a bad smell.
So I had followed Epsteins case in the media and talked about it over dinners with friends. I wondered why it had taken so long for the Palm Beach police to catch up with Epstein. And, once they did, why he had served so little jail time.
Those were the obvious questions, but there were others: How had Epstein made his money, possibly billions? No one seemed to know. And while the news media had some details about the underage girls, reporters seemed only to know what had happened at the moment of his arrest .
Epstein definitely liked his massages. He got them from two, even three, young women a day, right in his mansion on the island. Hed been operating on an almost industrial scale. But who were these girls? Where had they come from? How did they find their way to his home on a secluded street in Palm Beach?
Epstein had powerful friends. Hed flown Bill Clinton around in his private jet and rubbed shoulders with heads of state, Nobel Prize winners, any number of billionaires. Prince Andrew, the man sixth in line to the British throne, had been a close friend.
Were any of these connections the reason that Epstein was now a free man?
I wanted to know. After all, our homes were a half mile apart, and Epsteins actions had had an undeniable impact on the town where I lived. Stirred by that sighting of Epstein up in New York, Tim Malloy and I began to investigate.
We partnered with John Connolly, a tough, no-nonsense journalist who had once been a cop with the NYPD and had been following the Epstein story for close to ten years.
Working together, we interviewed Epsteins friends, going all the way back to his childhood; we met with Epsteins acquain tances, employees, neighbors, and business associates, and finally with the families of his victims. We interviewed law enforcement officers whod worked on the investigation in Palm Beach and lawyers on all sides of the resulting court cases, some of which are still working their way through the court system.
Combining our interview material with evidence obtained from court filings and other investigations, such as the one conducted by Connollys Vanity Fair colleague Vicky Ward, we began to put the pieces together.
In a few instances, we have re-created brief scenes and snatches of dialogue. These are based on interviews, police investigation documents, and court filings. We changed the names and identities of the girls, hoping to protect them from more embarrassment and harm.
There never was any doubt that Jeffrey Epstein was guilty. He admitted as much in the non-prosecution agreement he agreed to sign in 2007. The question is, what exactly was he guilty of?
This book attempts to answer that question and many others about this strange and mysterious man. These days people all around the world are angry about and suspicious of the super rich and powerful. The story of Jeffrey Epstein is an object lesson about why we ought to be. To put it simply, some people think they can operate outside the law. And thats what they do.
James Patterson, Palm Beach, February 20, 2016