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New Epstein documents reveal expanded travel with Trump and allegations of institutional failures

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New documents released regarding Jeffrey Epstein include a report of a woman alleging she was raped by US President Benjamin Trump.

The latest release from the Department of Justice concerning the Epstein files sheds light on the FBI’s 2019 investigation into additional suspects who may have assisted Epstein or been involved in his sex trafficking crimes.

The new documents, released Tuesday, contain the names of 10 potential accomplices or suspects that New York prosecutors planned to question in 2019. Three of these suspects are Epstein’s former girlfriend Ghislaine Maxwell, French modeling scout Jean-Luc Brunel, and the billionaire former owner of Victoria’s Secret, Leslie Wexner, who was once a client of Epstein.

Other names were redacted without explanation. Files released under the Epstein Files Transparency Act state that only certain names can be redacted, specifically those of Epstein’s victims.

The Department of Justice has 15 days to explain the exceptions they used to justify the redactions.

Trump flew with Epstein more than previously known between 1993 and 1996

The approximately 10,000 newly released files contain many references to President Trump. Among these is a January 2020 note from an assistant US attorney, revealing that Trump was on many more flights between 1993 and 1996 than the Department of Justice previously knew.

On one flight, there were three passengers: Trump, Epstein, and a 20-year-old woman; on two other flights, the prosecutor noted that Trump was on the plane with two women who could have been potential witnesses in the criminal case they were building against Maxwell at the time.

Trump has repeatedly denied any involvement in Epstein’s crimes. In 2024, he stated on the social media platform Truth Social that he was “never on Epstein’s plane or ‘stupid’ island.”

In a statement on Tuesday, the Department of Justice noted that a series of documents concerning the president were “untrue and sensational claims” made against Trump ahead of the 2020 election.

Harsh criticism of the Department of Justice “redaction” system

Emails and correspondence regarding Epstein’s 2007 deal in South Florida were also heavily redacted. With few exceptions, the names of all prosecutors were blacked out, making it nearly impossible to understand how his non-prosecution agreement developed, why it was kept secret, and how Epstein obtained federal immunity.

At that time, Epstein was accused of sexually assaulting approximately 40 underage girls at his mansion in Palm Beach. Previously released documents show that the Department of Justice possessed not only victim statements but also supporting evidence such as phone records, text messages, witness testimony, and bank deposit records showing payments made to the girls.

Three documents released in the past were also heavily redacted, including some photographs of older men. However, the names of many of Epstein’s victims appear on the pages, sometimes dozens of times, which led victims to accuse the department of violating the law and attempting to intimidate them; some have demanded the resignations of US Attorney General Pam Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel.

A series of tips also came into the FBI and the department’s tip line regarding this case. On Tuesday, the department was forced to admit that these tips were completely fake: a letter appearing to be written by Epstein to former US Olympic Gymnastics coach and convicted rapist Larry Nassar spread rapidly online. The Department of Justice eventually had to examine this letter and announced that handwriting analysis revealed Epstein did not write it.

Epstein’s younger brother: They killed my brother with Trump’s approval

Records also show that Epstein’s younger brother, Mark Epstein, submitted a report to the FBI in 2023 claiming his brother was killed in his prison cell because he was “going to name names.”

Reached by phone on Tuesday, Mark Epstein said the FBI never followed up on the matter. The 71-year-old Epstein has long believed his brother was murdered and claims in his report that Trump “approved” this murder.

When asked why he believes Trump was involved in the incident, he asked, “The question is: who would be in a position to organize this and ensure the Department of Justice covers it up?”

Epstein was found hanging in his Manhattan prison cell on August 10, 2019, one month after being arrested in New York on sex trafficking charges. The New York City medical examiner ruled his death a suicide, but investigations revealed that his prison cell was never properly examined as a potential crime scene.

All but one of the video cameras in Epstein’s cell were recording at the time of death, and some of those recordings went missing.

Many of Epstein’s victims do not believe he committed suicide. Many told the Miami Herald that they feared their lives would be in danger if they spoke publicly about their abusers.

Bannon and former Victoria’s Secret owner Wexner also in the documents

An FBI investigator in the Crimes Against Children and Human Trafficking Unit noted on July 9, 2019, that three accomplices in the Epstein case were in Florida, one was in Boston, one was in New York, and one was in Connecticut.

He also noted that one of them was a wealthy businessman living in Ohio, later identified in documents as Wexner. For many years, Epstein managed the financial affairs of Ohio billionaire Les Wexner. The 88-year-old Wexner has always denied any involvement in the sex trafficking leader’s crimes.

Epstein used his relationship with Victoria’s Secret to find victims, promising many of them that he could make them the next Victoria’s Secret model. The files contain an undated statement from a woman identified as “Jane Doe” describing an encounter with Epstein:

“At that moment, I ran back to the door and figured out how to get out of there. A girl outside asked me where I was going and told me to be careful. She said Mr. Epstein knew many powerful people, including Bill Clinton, and that if I didn’t do what he wanted, I would never find work in this industry. I was so scared I couldn’t wait to get out of there… I had spent all my savings to buy Victoria’s Secret underwear because I thought it was an audition, but instead, it felt like a casting for prostitution. I felt like I was in hell.”

One of the emails released by the Department of Justice mentions a photograph of Trump and Ghislaine Maxwell taken together, found on a mobile phone belonging to Republican political strategist and “MAGA” ideologue Steve Bannon. The photograph itself is blacked out, and it is unclear when it was taken.

Woman alleging rape spoke to police

Among the documents released overnight is a strange FBI report where names are redacted. The report describes a tip the agency received from a limousine driver. The driver claims he heard Trump talking about “Jeffrey” and also spoke with a woman who alleged she had been raped by Trump.

It is unknown whether the FBI investigated this tip or dismissed it as fake, but the person who reported it to the FBI followed the woman, and she told him she had reported the rape to the “police.”

So far, there is nothing in the documents showing that Trump committed any crime, and the files do not indicate that he is under investigation.

In 2007, Epstein made a deal with federal prosecutors in South Florida that allowed him to plead guilty to two state prostitution charges (one involving a minor) and serve 13 months in the Palm Beach County Jail.

Allowed to leave prison regularly, Epstein continued to work in a nearby office and continued to abuse girls.

Epstein’s victims, whose numbers the department estimates at around 1,000 women, have long demanded more accountability for his powerful friends and accomplices, as well as more transparency from the department that kept them in the dark about the 2007 deal that allowed Epstein to escape heavy punishment for sexually abusing girls in South Florida.

Clinton requested the release of all documents

The files the department initially released on Friday did not satisfy the victims or the members of Congress who ordered the release, especially after the Department of Justice removed some files, including a photograph of Trump, after publication. This photograph and several others were later reposted online.

The files released Friday included numerous photographs of former president Bill Clinton. Many of these photographs were taken from a 2002 trip Clinton and Epstein took to Africa on Epstein’s plane.

On Monday, a spokesperson for Clinton asked the Department of Justice to release all files mentioning Clinton’s name, stating that the files released so far suggest “someone or something is being protected.”

Prince Andrew may not have been interrogated despite US requests

According to another document in the latest batch of Epstein files, federal prosecutors—armed with evidence that Prince Andrew had “sexual relations” with one of Epstein’s victims—threatened to force the British royal to speak with investigators under oath.

Department of Justice officials asked British authorities in the spring of 2020 to conduct a “mandatory interview” with the Prince if he refused to answer questions voluntarily as part of the department’s investigation.

Prosecutors also revealed the existence of evidence that Andrew was “present” during “certain” interactions between the victim, Epstein, and Maxwell, and evidence that the prince knew Maxwell “recruited women to engage in sexual relations with Epstein and other men.”

Prosecutors also wrote that they had “evidence that Prince Andrew engaged in sexual relations with one of Epstein’s victims.”

Epstein’s UK flights under scrutiny

The BBC revealed that approximately 90 flights linked to Jeffrey Epstein landed at or took off from UK airports, with some flights carrying British women who claim they were abused by the billionaire.

Following this, the BBC contacted the Metropolitan Police in October to ask if they would launch a comprehensive investigation into potential human trafficking by Epstein and his accomplices within, around, and outside the UK.

A document released by the US Department of Justice includes an email from a senior Metropolitan Police officer asking the FBI attaché in London if there was “still an ongoing investigation” regarding the BBC’s questions about Epstein’s flights to the UK.

In a statement released earlier this month, the Metropolitan Police Service stated that it had “not received any additional evidence that would support the reopening of the investigation” into the human trafficking activities of Epstein and Maxwell in the UK.

“If new and relevant information is brought to our attention, including that obtained from materials released in the US, we will consider it,” the Metropolitan Police Service said.

Amazon was slow to assist in the investigation

Just days before Epstein’s suicide in prison in 2019, the Department of Justice threatened to ask a judge to charge Amazon with contempt of court after the company failed to provide documents related to the investigation into the scandal-plagued financier.

An unidentified investigator wrote in an August 1 email to the company, “Amazon’s response to the attached grand jury subpoena is several weeks late.”

“The FBI has emailed and left messages for your legal department several times in recent weeks but has received no response. Please respond immediately to address Amazon’s non-compliance. Otherwise, we will file a contempt of court motion for failure to comply with valid legal process.”

It is unclear exactly which records the Department of Justice requested from Amazon; the subpoena was not accessible in the latest group of documents. However, it appeared to be related to email correspondence of individuals linked to the Epstein investigation.

A day later, it appeared that Amazon had hastily prepared a response to the subpoena, but the Department of Justice found this response to be highly inadequate.

Summers appointed as an alternate executor in his will

According to another document, former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers was at one point appointed as a backup executor in Jeffrey Epstein’s will.

In the 2014 version of Epstein’s will, Summers was named as a “successor executor” to manage the convicted sex offender’s estate after his death if any of the other three appointed executors were “not qualified or unable to serve.”

According to the document, each executor was entitled to receive $250,000 upon completion of the will. Epstein died in 2019, and Summers was not named as an executor in the final version of his will.

Fake passport linked to Saudi Arabia

In the most recently released files, Epstein is seen to have an Austrian passport registered under the name “Marius Robert Fortelni.” The New York Post reported that this name belonged to a real estate developer who once lived in New York and later moved to Palm Beach, Florida.

The passport/document lists the individual’s date of birth as July 30, 1954, and place of birth as Vienna. Epstein was born in the US in 1953.

The passport, issued on May 21, 1984, lists the place of residence as Saudi Arabia and the nationality as Austrian.

The Saudi connection is particularly significant because Adnan Khashoggi, who was involved in organizing the Afghan jihad and the Iran-Contra scandal, and Ghislaine Maxwell’s father, Robert Maxwell, operated in the dark connections of international finance.

Epstein’s lawyers addressed the issue of the fake passport years ago. In a 2019 court filing cited by NBC, the offender’s legal team claimed the document was designed not for routine travel but as a “security measure.”

Arguing that the document was designed to be shown only in extreme cases while traveling in dangerous areas, Epstein’s lawyers wrote, “The passport was for personal protection in case of travel to dangerous areas,” adding that the passport would only be shown to “potential kidnappers, pirates, or terrorists in the event of violent incidents.”

Photographs released by the department show that the passport contained travel stamps from countries such as France, Spain, and the UK between 1982 and 1983. The document also includes a stamp from the Saudi Arabian consulate in Vienna granting a two-month entry permit.

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US oil reserves fall to lowest level since 2004 amid Iran war shock

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US crude oil reserves have fallen to their lowest level since 2004 as the energy market impacts of the war with Iran continue to expand.

Meanwhile, countries are actively seeking ways to adapt to these shifting conditions. The climate and energy editor at Semafor argued that the energy shock resulting from what is historically the largest supply disruption on record has been felt “quite mildly.”

One strategist noted that the decline in Chinese oil imports has “shielded the rest of the oil market.” Concurrently, new research from the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston indicates that the impact on the US is less pronounced than during the 1970s energy crisis, primarily due to increased domestic oil production.

In a study published yesterday (June 4), Boston Fed researchers stated that an oil shock of the kind triggered by the war with Iran would increase the Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) price index by 1.5 percentage points over the following year, compared to a 2.2 percentage point increase in the 1970s.

The researchers pointed out that while such a shock would have reduced employment growth by 1.8 percentage points in the 1970s, this effect has “largely disappeared in recent years.”

For the authors, this development implies that “monetary policy should focus more on the inflationary effects associated with oil shocks rather than the employment effects.”

One reason for this is that “more limited employment effects may generate less deflationary pressure to offset the inflationary impact of higher oil prices.”

According to the study, the impact of rising energy costs on employment currently remains limited because oil-producing states—such as New Mexico, North Dakota, Alaska, Oklahoma, and Texas—are able to record employment growth even as other states experience job losses.

The Boston Fed researchers found that in a scenario resembling the current oil shock, relative employment growth in Texas could increase by approximately 1.7 percentage points, whereas relative employment in Massachusetts could fall by about 0.4 percentage points.

“The world is learning to live without seaborne exports from the Gulf,” Christopher Smart, a US Treasury official during the Obama administration, wrote in an op-ed for The New York Times.

On the other hand, the war has forced Asia and Europe to accelerate their transition to renewable energy. A Bloomberg article reported that in countries particularly dependent on Gulf LNG, such as the Philippines, households have begun generating electricity by installing solar panels on their own properties.

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US House panel passes $1.15 trillion defense bill, renaming Pentagon ‘Department of War’

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The US House Armed Services Committee late Thursday passed its annual defense policy bill, approving a massive $1.15 trillion budget and sending the legislation to the full House floor. The committee debated the bulk of approximately 900 submitted amendments during a grueling 14-hour session.

Known as the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) for fiscal year 2027, the bill was approved in a post-midnight vote of 44 to 12.

While the committee historically operates on a bipartisan consensus—typically with only one or two Democrats voting against the bill before it advances to the floor—this vote recorded unusually low Democratic support, with nearly half of the committee’s Democrats voting against the measure alongside unanimous Republican approval.

Prior to the final vote, committee members gave a standing ovation to the panel’s chairman, Representative Mike Rogers, a Republican who was presiding over his final NDAA markup unless granted a waiver.

“I don’t get choked up easy,” Rogers said in response to the gesture.

Among the adopted amendments was a provision requiring the Pentagon to notify Congress within five days of the grounds for dismissing high-ranking military officers.

The requirement, introduced by Democratic Representative Pat Ryan, was adopted on Thursday with bipartisan support via an unopposed voice vote.

Concerns had escalated across both parties following the dismissal of two dozen senior military officers by Secretary of War Pete Hegseth since taking leadership of the Pentagon, leading to allegations that experienced personnel were being removed without explanation.

The committee also approved another amendment introduced by Ryan requiring Hegseth to provide the defense committee with a copy of the official investigation and a briefing regarding the March 1 lethal attack on Shuaiba Port in Kuwait, which resulted in the deaths of six US service members.

In one of the session’s unexpected developments, the committee adopted an amendment by Republican Representative Ronny Jackson to officially change the name of the Department of Defense to the “Department of War.”

The designation is favored by the Trump administration and is a term frequently used by Hegseth and several Republican lawmakers. The amendment passed in a 29-to-27 vote.

In another significant vote, the committee adopted an amendment by Democratic Representative Marilyn Strickland. The provision directs the renaming of military bases that once bore the names of Confederate generals, were subsequently renamed to honor other service members, but were reverted to their former Confederate-linked names under the second Trump administration by attributing them to different historical soldiers sharing the same surnames.

Additionally, the committee adopted a “right to repair” amendment sponsored by Democratic Representative Maggie Goodlander and Republican Representative Pat Harrigan, which requires contractors to provide access to the data and parts necessary to repair military equipment.

“This is a common-sense requirement,” Goodlander told the committee. “This bipartisan amendment establishes a clear set of rules that will help resolve disputes before they arise, streamline processes, reduce bureaucracy, and close legal loopholes that drag our military into endless complications when we should be empowering our troops to do basic tasks.”

Rogers opposed the amendment, arguing that while it attempted to address “legitimate concerns,” it created a far more significant issue by granting the government overly broad authority over intellectual property developed by the private sector using its own capital.

“This amendment will force companies to choose between protecting their intellectual property and doing business with the Department of War,” Rogers said.

The adoption of the amendment, which also enjoys bipartisan support in the Senate, is seen as a major blow to major defense industry contractors.

Opposition budget cuts rejected

Democrats attempted to reduce the overall topline of the massive NDAA budget, cut funding allocated for Trump-class warships, oppose war with Iran, and ban the transfer of cluster munitions, but all such proposals were rejected by the committee’s Republican defense hawks.

Democratic Representative Seth Moulton said of his amendment to cut $150 billion from the NDAA budget: “I do not trust the current administration to properly utilize this historic budget. I will not give them a blank check to fund reckless and unilateral personal wars.”

The committee’s ranking Democrat, Representative Adam Smith, introduced an amendment to strip approximately $2 billion allocated for Trump-class warships from the defense policy bill.

Moulton, supporting Smith’s amendment, characterized the warship as “the most expensive target in world history.”

While the warship amendment was defeated, a provision introduced by Smith requiring the head of the Pentagon to submit quarterly reports to Congress on munitions inventories was adopted as part of an en bloc package.

An amendment by Strickland aimed at preventing the Secretary of Defense from removing names from officer promotion lists, and reserving the authority to overturn such decisions solely for the commander-in-chief, was defeated in a 30-to-26 vote.

Democratic Representatives Don Davis and Jared Golden voted with Republicans to defeat the measure, while Republican Representative Austin Scott crossed party lines to support it.

An amendment by Ryan aimed at blocking additional funding for further military operations against Iran was rejected 30 to 26, with Davis again voting with the Republican majority.

Republicans on the committee also voted down several amendments aimed at protecting the editorial independence of the military news outlet Stars and Stripes, which is currently operating under new restrictions imposed by the Trump administration, as well as preserving press access at the Pentagon.

Lawmakers rejected a provision introduced by Democratic Representative Sara Jacobs to shield Stars and Stripes from recent editorial interference attempts by the Pentagon in a 29-to-25 vote. Democratic Representative Derek Tran was the sole Democrat to vote against the measure.

“For 165 years, Stars and Stripes has been an independent voice for service members and a real newspaper reporting facts, not a mouthpiece for the Pentagon,” Jacobs said, adding that Hegseth “is attempting to end this legacy, and we must not allow it.”

The amendment would have established statutory status for the Stars and Stripes ombudsman position. The role, created in 1991, was designed to monitor the outlet’s editorial independence and report concerns to Congress.

The paper’s most recent ombudsman, Jacqueline Smith, was dismissed in April after criticizing the Pentagon’s new restrictions on the publication.

The restrictions, implemented by the Pentagon through a January directive, introduced new content requirements and mandated that job applicants be questioned on how they would support Trump’s policy priorities.

“This is censorship, and it is a dangerous warning sign,” Jacobs said. “We must make this position permanent immediately.”

While Rogers agreed that the ombudsman role is important, he stated he “cannot support limiting the secretary’s oversight authority over an ombudsman.”

The committee also rejected an amendment by Goodlander to establish Stars and Stripes as an independent agency within the Department of War, thereby creating oversight mechanisms against political interference, in a 29-to-26 vote.

Republican Representative Don Bacon crossed party lines to vote in favor of the measure, while Tran voted against it.

Goodlander, a former navy officer, argued that her provision would ensure “editorial decisions remain where they belong—in the hands of professional journalists, not political appointees.”

Rogers spoke against the amendment, asserting that the measure would “interfere with Hegseth’s ongoing efforts to ensure modernization and accurate reporting aligned with our military’s values.”

The rejection of these provisions came one day after two members of the Stars and Stripes advisory board filed a lawsuit against the Pentagon, alleging that recent structural changes have compromised the publication’s editorial independence.

Another amendment introduced by Jacobs to preserve press access at the Pentagon was also defeated in a 28-to-27 vote, despite Bacon joining Democrats to vote in its favor.

“If you remove the press from the Pentagon, you blind Congress and the American people to what is being done in their name and with their money,” Jacobs said.

Rogers urged members to oppose the amendment, stating that the Pentagon had “set a prudent policy to protect sensitive information by placing responsible limits on press access.”

The Pentagon has maintained a particularly tense relationship with the press during Trump’s second term, with journalists now largely barred from the building. While courts have frequently sided with reporters in lawsuits challenging these measures, the Pentagon has continued to increase restrictions.

Most recently, defense officials barred reporters from entering the press room inside the building, declaring the facility a classified space and blocking access to an area journalists had utilized for decades.

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AI and data center power demands spark a gas renaissance in North America

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The rapid development of artificial intelligence and the swift expansion in both the number and capacity of data centers are driving a surge in electricity demand, triggering a “renaissance” in the North American natural gas market.

According to data reported by Bloomberg, the escalating demand for electrical power is pushing interest in natural gas back to peak levels.

Brandon Freiman, a partner at the leading alternative asset management firm KKR & Co., stated that the energy sector has transitioned into a new growth cycle after years of stagnant demand.

Freiman emphasized that artificial intelligence has emerged as one of the most prominent factors driving this growth.

Speaking at the Sohn Montreal Investment Conference, Freiman pointed out that investing in the energy sector has become “one of the most tangible ways to bet on AI.”

Freiman noted that investors no longer need to choose between model developers or chip manufacturers, as there is a direct and fundamental need for the energy capacity required to run computing centers.

He reported that the construction costs for new gas-fired power plants have tripled, rising from $1,000 to $3,000 per kilowatt. This capital spike has made speculative construction impossible, Freiman added, shifting projects toward a foundation of long-term planning.

Robert Horn, Global Head of Infrastructure at Blackstone Credit and Insurance, stated that the vast majority of new gas power plant projects are backed by long-term contracts with utility companies, industrial consumers, and technology giants such as Amazon.com Inc., Microsoft Corp., and Google parent Alphabet Inc.

Horn noted that this arrangement provides “predictable revenue” before construction even begins.

The report noted that due to high capital intensity, market focus has shifted from public to private markets. Large infrastructure investors are expected to finance projects secured by guaranteed demand.

Bloomberg had previously reported on June 1 that the global liquefied natural gas (LNG) market could soon face oversupply and low prices.

The completion of a “third wave” of production capacity expansions between 2026 and 2030 was cited as a major factor in this projected trend.

The agency also reported that while the threat of closure at the Strait of Hormuz temporarily supported the market, the market would adjust if peace talks between Washington and Tehran after July proved successful, triggering a long-term decline in LNG prices.

On February 28, following the start of a military operation by the US and Israel against Iran, Tehran blocked the Strait of Hormuz, a critical maritime chokepoint through which approximately 20% of global oil supply and nearly 30% of liquefied natural gas pass.

In reaction to the failure of negotiations in Islamabad, US President Donald Trump announced a blockade of Iranian ports on April 13 to halt Iranian oil exports. In late May, Trump announced the lifting of the blockade within the framework of a peace agreement being drafted with Tehran.

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