logo
These are the names that were reportedly in Epstein's birthday book

These are the names that were reportedly in Epstein's birthday book

Axios4 days ago
The Trump administration is pushing back on more media reports on his inclusion in a leather-bound album celebrating disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein's 50th birthday.
The big picture: President Trump is suing the Wall Street Journal and owner Rupert Murdoch, challenging a report about a "bawdy" birthday letter bearing Trump's name in the book that Ghislaine Maxwell allegedly collated in 2003. Now, the WSJ has published a report naming other public figures it says were in the book.
Separately, the NYT reported on a signed message—"To Jeff — You are the greatest!" signed "Donald" and dated "Oct '97"—inscribed in Epstein's copy of the book "Trump: The Art of the Comeback."
For the record: Steven Cheung, a White House spokesperson, told the NYT, "This is nothing more than a continuation of the fake news stories concocted by the Democrats and the liberal media."
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told the WSJ, "The Wall Street Journal is writing yet another defamatory story about the President of the United States about an alleged letter they don't even have because the President never wrote it."
Driving the news: The WSJ's latest report focuses on other figures it alleges contributed to the birthday book that a lawyer representing some of Epstein's victims told MSNBC was part of his estate.
New WSJ birthday book allegations
A note in Epstein's 2003 birthday book — which the WSJ reports was written in former President Clinton's "distinctive scrawl" — could allegedly be seen in this passage: "It's reassuring isn't it, to have lasted as long, across all the years of learning and knowing, adventures and [illegible word], and also to have your childlike curiosity, the drive to make a difference and the solace of friends."
The former president's spokesperson Angel Ureña referred Axios to a statement he gave a month before Epstein was found dead in his New York cell after being charged in 2019 with the sex trafficking of minors. The statement said Clinton had not spoken with the disgraced financier "in well over a decade."
Trump's and Clinton's names allegedly appeared in the "friends" category of the book, along with other notable names while others appeared in categories such as "Science," "Brooklyn" and "Family."
Wall Street billionaire Leon Black's name also appears in the "friends" section with a handwritten poem that was signed off with "Love and kisses," according to the documents reviewed by the WSJ, noting a representative for the Apollo Global Management co-founder declined to comment.
The poem allegedly "included the acronym "V.F.P.C." with an asterisk that said it stood for "Vanity Fair Poster Child," a reference to a magazine profile of Epstein that was in the works."
Black's spokesperson did not immediately respond to Axios' request for comment.
Nathan Myhrvold, a billionaire and former Microsoft executive, is also accused of submitting a letter that included "photos of a monkey screaming, lions and zebras mating, and a zebra with its penis visible."
The letter that ended with a typed "Nathan" wrote that he was submitting photos from a recent trip to Africa as they "seemed more appropriate than anything I could put in words," said the letter, according to the WSJ.
A spokesperson for Myhrvold told the outlet he doesn't remember being involved in such a letter and that as a wildlife photographer he "regularly shares photos of and writes about animal behavior." He only knew Epstein due to TED conferences and donations to scientific research, the spokesperson added.
When asked if Myhrvold was aware of Epstein's criminal conduct when he sent the letter, a spokesperson for Myhrvold told Axios "absolutely not."
Fashion designer Vera Wang"joked about putting Epstein on 'The Bachelor' and suggested they go on a shopping trip," the WSJ alleges. Representatives for Wang did not immediately respond to Axios' request for comment Friday.
Former Blair government minister Peter Mandelson, now the U.K. ambassador to the U.S., allegedly called Epstein "my best pal" in his letter.
Mandelson could not immediately be reached for comment, but he has previously said he regrets ever meeting Epstein, being introduced to him by Maxwell, a daughter of the late media baron Robert Maxwell, and he regrets "even more the hurt he caused to many young women."
Zoom in: Also allegedly on the "friends" list were then-New York Daily News owner Mort Zuckerman, and attorney Alan Dershowitz, who previously represented Epstein.
When asked for comment on a "mock-up of a 'Vanity Unfair' magazine cover with mock headlines" linked to him, Dershowitz told the WSJ, "It's been a long time and I don't recall the content of what I may have written."
Asked about how well he knew Epstein, Dershowitz told Axios that "I was his lawyer and academic colleague at his seminars. "
Meanwhile, the NYT reports it reviewed a contributor list for the birthday album and found the names of businessman Alan Greenberg and physicist Murray Gell-Mann, both of whom have since died. The name of then-Victoria's Secret owner Leslie Wexner was also reportedly in the book, which Epstein's brother Mark Epstein told the Journal that he remembers Maxwell collating.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump gets tariffs; Americans get price hikes
Trump gets tariffs; Americans get price hikes

Yahoo

time5 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Trump gets tariffs; Americans get price hikes

By David Gaffen and Marleen Kaesebier (Reuters) -U.S. President Donald Trump is getting his tariffs. Companies are making it clear how they intend to deal with it - passing them on to American consumers. Throughout the spring, big retailers and consumer product makers warned that levies on imported goods would squeeze their operations, forcing them to choose between lower earnings and passing on higher costs to customers. In the case of Procter & Gamble and others, it is both of those things. On Tuesday, the packaging giant, which makes household basics spanning from Bounty paper towel to Tide detergent, issued a sour outlook for 2025 and sent a message to big retailers like Walmart that it would have to raise prices on some U.S. goods from next week. This challenge facing companies in coming quarters will likely feed through to everyday consumers. P&G said it would raise prices on about a quarter of its products in the U.S. to help offset the cost of new tariffs. Price hikes are in the mid-single digits across categories, a spokesperson for the company said. While U.S. stock indexes have soared to record highs this year, built on massive investment in technology shares, many consumer bellwethers have struggled. Since Trump's April 2 "Liberation Day" tariff announcements, P&G shares have declined 19%; Nestle is down 20%; Kimberly-Clark has lost 11%, and PepsiCo is off nearly 7%, while the benchmark S&P 500 stock index has gained more than 13%. Consumer goods, food and drink companies have struggled with lackluster sales since the pandemic, as shoppers have balked at increasingly expensive name-brand packaged food. Nestle said last week that consumers in North America remained wary of paying more at the cash register. More price hikes will deepen investor worries about how big brands are navigating the combined challenge of thrifty consumers and hefty costs created by Trump's trade war. "You're going to see companies like Walmart, Amazon, and Best Buy forced to pass price increases to consumers," said Bill George, former chairman and CEO of Medtronic and executive education fellow at Harvard Business School. "Main Street has yet to see the fallout from increased tariffs - and they're going to go higher." Between July 16 and 25, companies in the Reuters global tariff tracker said they expected to lose a combined $7.1 billion to $8.3 billion for the full year. GM, Ford and other carmakers have absorbed the cost of tariffs - totaling billions of dollars - so far. Many companies shipped more goods and raw materials into the U.S. before tariffs hit. Economists and analysts reckon that hoarding has helped some delay hiking prices until later in the year and explains why tariffs have not yet shown up in U.S. inflation data. Andrew Wilson, International Chamber of Commerce deputy secretary general, estimates inflation will be felt once companies have run down inventory, but that might not be until the fourth quarter or first quarter of next year. Others like Ray Ban-maker EssilorLuxottica have already hiked prices. Swiss watch and jewelry maker Swatch increased prices by about 5% after Trump announced tariffs in April with "zero impact" on sales, CEO Nick Hayek told Reuters recently. High-end brands like Tissot watches are less price sensitive to increases. Customers wanting to splash out on an expensive watch might also buy abroad when travelling where taxes are lower, he said. "You cannot do this with cars. You cannot do this with machines. But you can do this with watches. So it's not so problematic for us," he said. Sign in to access your portfolio

Trump reacts to Starmer plan to recognize Palestine: ‘Could make the case that you're rewarding Hamas'
Trump reacts to Starmer plan to recognize Palestine: ‘Could make the case that you're rewarding Hamas'

New York Post

time7 minutes ago

  • New York Post

Trump reacts to Starmer plan to recognize Palestine: ‘Could make the case that you're rewarding Hamas'

WASHINGTON — President Trump warned Tuesday that British Prime Minister Keir Starmer's plan to recognize a Palestinian state in September if the Israeli government fails to meet certain conditions could reward Hamas and stressed that the US won't follow suit. 'You could make the case that you're rewarding Hamas if you do that,' Trump told reporters onboard Air Force One en route to Washington from Scotland. 'I'm not about to do that.' 3 President Trump and Keir Starmer in Scotland on July 28. REUTERS Earlier in the day, Starmer committed to granting Palestine UK recognition during the United Nations General Assembly in September, following in the footsteps of France, unless Israel takes 'substantive steps' to remedy humanitarian concerns in the Gaza Strip and agrees to a long-term plan for a two-state solution. Trump, who met with Starmer at his golf resort in Turnberry, Scotland on Monday, said that the British PM didn't tell him of his plan beforehand. 'We never did discuss it, and we have no view on that. We're going to get a lot of money to the area so they can get some food,' the president said. Last week, Trump had struck a more dismissive tone against French President Emmanuel Macron, chiding that 'what he says doesn't matter' and that the move didn't 'carry any weight.' 3 Trump and Starmer speak to the media at the Trump Turnberry golf course in Turnberry, Scotland on July 28, 2025. AP Starmer, Macron and other Western leaders have sought to ramp up pressure on Israel to allow more humanitarian aid to flow into the war-torn enclave amid troubling images of starved children in Gaza. Hamas has so far refused to give up remaining Israeli hostages to end the war and allow for a cease-fire, which many officials believe would make distributing aid in Gaza much more doable. The latest round of negotiations broke down last week. 3 Hamas fighters in Gaza City before the release of Israeli hostages on Feb. 1. MOHAMMED SABER/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock Over the weekend, Israel began allowing airdrops of humanitarian aid into Gaza. On Monday, Trump publicly cast doubt on Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's denial that there was mass starvation in Gaza and said that the US intends to send more food to the Palestinians there. 'Those are kids that are starving,' Trump reflected Tuesday en route back to the US. 'You see the mothers. They love them so much. There's just nothing they seem to be able to do. They got to get them food, and we're going to get them food.'

Trump, China trade talks move closer to extending tariff truce
Trump, China trade talks move closer to extending tariff truce

USA Today

time7 minutes ago

  • USA Today

Trump, China trade talks move closer to extending tariff truce

WASHINGTON – The Trump administration and Chinese officials appear to be moving toward extending a 90-day tariff truce the two sides struck in May, but President Donald Trump still has not signed off on it. Momentum to extend the truce, in which both countries held off on imposing massive, triple-digit tariffs on imports on one another, came as a result of two days of U.S.-China talks in Stockholm. "We're going to talk to the president about whether that's something that he wants to do," U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer, Trump's top trade official, told reporters in Stockholm. "It's certainly something that's been under discussion." More: Trump's trade talks intensify with tariff deadline fast approaching Trump expressed optimism about the latest round of discussions between his economic team and Chinese officials as he returned to the White House from Scotland aboard Air Force One. "They're going to brief me tomorrow. We'll either approve it or not," Trump said, referring to an extension of the truce. China's top trade negotiator Li Chenggang said that both countries agreed to push for an extension of the trade truce, without specifying when or for how long. In May, the Trump administration and China agreed to slash tariffs for 90 days in a push to de-escalate a trade war between the world's two largest economies while the two sides continued to negotiate a long-term agreement. However, a long-term deal between the United States and China still hasn't come together ahead of an Aug. 1 deadline when Trump was preparing to impose higher tariffs on goods from nearly 180 countries. Under the truce in May, the United States reduced 125% reciprocal tariffs imposed on Chinese imports by 115% to a 10% baseline tariff, which matches the tariffs the Trump administration imposed on other countries. Trump's 20% tariffs slapped on China over fentanyl production remained in effect, meaning the U.S. tariffs on China totaled 30% overall. In turn, the Chinese government agreed to reduce its retaliatory tariffs on U.S. exports for 90 days from 125% to 10%. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, who participated in the trade talks in Stockholm, said he believes the Chinese were "surprised" by the magnitude of Trump's recently announced trade deals with Japan and the European Union. More: President Trump announces 'massive' Japan trade deal with 15% tariff "They're never compliant, but I think they were in more of a mood for a wide-ranging discussion," Bessent said, calling the tone of the talks "constructive." Bessent said Trump's team conveyed the need for the United States to improve the trade balance with China in areas such as rare earth minerals, semiconductors and medicines. "We reiterated to them: We don't want to decouple. We just need to de-risk with certain industries," Bessent said. Reach Joey Garrison on X @joeygarrison.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store