Epstein
Tapes? Sordid Case Takes A Bizarre Turn After
Mystery 'Hacker' Emerges
By Tyler
Durden
December 01, 2019 "Information
Clearing House"
-Shortly after Jeffrey Epstein's
August death in a Manhattan detention facility,
a shadowy figure claiming to have set up
encrypted servers for the convicted sex offender
told several attorneys and the New York
Times he had a vast archive of
incriminating evidence against powerful men
stored on overseas servers, including
several years worth of the financier's
communications and financial records which
allegedly showed he had vast amounts of Bitcoin
and cash in the Middle East and Bangkok, and
hundreds of millions of dollars' worth of gold,
silver and diamonds.
Going by the pseudonym Patrick Kessler,
self-described 'hacker' said he had "thousands
of hours of footage from hidden cameras"
from Epstein's multiple properties, which
included former Israeli Prime Minister
Ehud Barak, lawyer Alan Dershowitz, and Prince
Andrew, along with three billionaires
and a prominent CEO, according to the
Times.
Armed
with nothing more than blurry photos
of what he claimed were high-profile individuals
in compromising situations, Kessler approached
lawyers representing several Epstein accusers,
John Pottinger and David Boies - the former of
whom suggested that billionaire Sheldon Adelson
- an ally of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu - might pay for the alleged footage of
Barak.
According to
excerpts viewed by The Times, Mr.
Pottinger and Kessler discussed a plan to
disseminate some of the informant’s
materials — starting with the
supposed footage of Mr. Barak. The Israeli
election was barely a week away, and Mr.
Barak was challenging Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu. The purported
images of Mr. Barak might be able to sway
the election — and fetch a high
price. -New
York Times.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
After
several weeks, the attorneys invited the New
YorkTimes to speak with Kessler
in mid-September. Then things got even
more unbelievable. Following a
mid-September meeting with The Times in
the Boies Schiller offices, Kessler went rogue -
contacting the paper and accusing Boies and
Pottinger of an extortion plot
against the subjects of said tapes.
Barely an hour after the
session ended,
the Times reporters received an email from
Kessler: “Are you free?” He said he wanted
to meet — alone. “Tell no one else.”
...
Kessler complained that Mr. Boies
and Mr. Pottinger were more interested in
making money than in exposing wrongdoers.
He pulled out his phone, warned the
reporters not to touch it, and showed more
of what he had. There was a color photo of a
bare-chested, gray-haired man with a slight
smile. Kessler said it was a billionaire.
He also showed blurry,
black-and-white images of a dark-haired man
receiving oral sex. He said it was a
prominent C.E.O.
"At
one point, he showed what he said were
classified C.I.A. documents," writes
the Times.
Weeks
after the meeting, the lawyers struck a deal
with the Times during the last Friday
in September. They would send a team overseas to
download Kessler's evidence from his servers
(and had alerted the FBI and the US Attorney's
Office in Manhattan of their intention to do
so), and would then share all the evidence with
the paper on the condition that they
would have discretion over which men could be
written about, and when.
Separately, Kessler had arranged to give the
Times his evidence using a convoluted
series of steps. On the day the data was to be
transmitted,
Kessler canceled at the 11th hour, claiming 'a
fire was burning' and he had to flee to
Ukraine.
In
early October, Kessler said he was ready to
produce the Epstein files. He told
The Times that he had created duplicate
versions of Mr. Epstein’s servers.
He laid out detailed logistical plans for
them to be shipped by boat to the United
States and for one of his associates — a
very short Icelandic man named Steven — to
deliver them to The Times headquarters at 11
a.m. on Oct. 3.
Kessler warned that he was
erecting a maze of security systems.
First, a Times employee would need to use a
special thumb drive to access a proprietary
communications system. Then Kessler’s
colleague would transmit a code to decrypt
the files. If
his instructions weren’t followed precisely,
Kessler said, the information would
self-destruct.
Specialists at The Times set
up a number of “air-gapped” laptops
— disconnected from the internet — in a
windowless, padlocked meeting room.
Reporters cleared their schedules to sift
through thousands of hours of surveillance
footage.
On the
morning of the scheduled delivery, Kessler
sent a series of frantic texts. Disaster had
struck. A fire was burning. The duplicate
servers were destroyed. One of his team
members was missing. He was fleeing to
Kyiv.
Except two hours later,
Kessler contacted
Pottinger and didn't mention any emergency.
Instead, he asked Pottinger to formulate
two schemes for prying up to $1 billion
from potential targets with the footage which
the Times suggested may have been a
trap.
Pottinger obliged, describing two options for
capitalizing on the evidence. The first, a
"standard model" for legal settlements, would
include splitting the money among Epstein's
victims, a charitable foundation, Kessler, and
the lawyers - who would get up to 40%.
In the second hypothetical,
the lawyers would approached the
high-profile men, convince them to hire them to
ensure they wouldn't get sued, and then "make a
contribution to a nonprofit as part of their
retainer."
Pottinger would effectively represent a victim,
settle their case, and then represent the
victim's alleged abuser - a legal, yet morally
questionable practice for an attorney to engage
in.
Dershowitz
and the weird recorded phone call
In late
September, Dershowitz's secretary related a
message that Kessler wanted to speak with him
about Boies - with whom Dershowitz has a
long-running feud. Dershowitz recorded the call,
during which Kessler said he no longer trusted
Boies and Pottinger.
"The
problem is that they don’t want to move forward
with any of these people legally," said Kessler,
adding "They’re just interested in trying to
settle and take a cut."
“Who are these people that you have on
videotape?” Mr. Dershowitz asked.
“There’s a lot of people,” Kessler said,
naming a few powerful men. He added,
“There’s a long list of people that they
want me to have that I don’t have.”
“Who?” Mr. Dershowitz asked. “Did they ask
about me?”
“Of
course they asked about you. You know that,
sir.”
“And you don’t have anything on me, right?”
“I
do not, no,” Kessler said.
“Because I never, I never had sex with
anybody,” Mr. Dershowitz said. Later in the
call, he added, “I am completely clean. I
was at Jeffrey’s house. I stayed there. But
I didn’t have any sex with anybody.”
As the
Times asks, "what was the purpose of
Kessler’s phone call? Why did he tell Mr.
Dershowitz that he wasn’t on the supposed
surveillance tapes, contradicting what he had
said and showed to Mr. Boies, Mr. Pottinger and
The Times? Did the call sound a little
rehearsed?"
Dershowitz told the Timeshe has no idea why
Kessler called him.
Holding
out hope
In a
November 7 email, Boies told the Times
"I still believe he is what he purported to be,"
adding "I have to evaluate people for my day
job, and he seemed too genuine to be a fake, and
I very much want him to be real."
That
said, he also noted "I am not unconscious of the
danger of wanting to believe something too
much."
Ten
days later, Mr. Boies arrived at The Times
for an on-camera interview. It was a bright,
chilly Sunday, and Mr. Boies had just flown
in from Ecuador, where he said he was doing
work for the finance ministry. Reporters
wanted to ask him plainly if his and Mr.
Pottinger’s conduct with Kessler crossed
ethical lines.
Would they have brokered secret settlements
that buried evidence of wrongdoing? Did the
notion of extracting huge sums from men in
exchange for keeping sex tapes hidden meet
the definition of extortion?
Mr.
Boies said the answer to both questions was
no. He said he and Mr. Pottinger operated
well within the law. They only intended to
pursue legal action on behalf of their
clients — in other words, that they were a
long way from extortion. In any case, he
said, he and Mr. Pottinger had never
authenticated any of the imagery or
identified any of the supposed victims, much
less contacted any of the men on the “hot
list.”
When
the Times showed Boies text exchanges
between Kessler and Pottinger, he "showed a
flash of anger and said it was the first time
seeing them."
Eventually, Boies concluded that Kessler
was probably a con man.
"I
think that he was a fraudster who was just
trying to set things up," adding that he had
probably baited Pottinger into writing things
that were more nefarious than they really were.
Pottinger, meanwhile, claims he was
stringing Kessler along - "misleading him
deliberately in order to get to the servers."
Despite
Kessler's story falling apart, the Times
asks if his claims are plausible.
Did
America’s best-connected sexual predator
accumulate incriminating videos of powerful
men?
Two women who spent time in
Mr. Epstein’s homes said the answer was
yes. In
an unpublished memoir, Virginia Giuffre, who
accused Mr. Epstein of making her a “sex
slave,” wrote that she discovered a
room in his New York mansion where monitors
displayed real-time surveillance footage.
And Maria Farmer, an artist who accused Mr.
Epstein of sexually assaulting her when she
worked for him in the 1990s, said that Mr.
Epstein once walked her through the mansion,
pointing out pin-sized cameras that he said
were in every room.
“I
said, ‘Are you recording all this?’”
Ms. Farmer said in an interview. “He said, ‘Yes.
We keep it. We keep everything.’”
During a 2005 search of Mr. Epstein’s Palm
Beach, Fla., estate, the police
found two cameras hidden in clocks
— one in the garage and the other next to
his desk, according to police reports. But
no other cameras were found.
So - it appears that Kessler was either a fraud
or an operative, and the entire saga may have
been designed to cast doubt over whether tapes
actually exist. Or, Kessler is for real - and
for some reason hasn't found a way to release
the videos. That said, since he says he's not
interested in extortion,
what's the hold-up?
This article was originally published by "ZeroHedge"
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