RUSSIA/РОССИЯ THREAD—ASSANGE CHRGD W/ SPYING—DJT IMPEACHED TWICE-US TREASURY SANCTS KILIMNIK AS RUSSIAN AGNT

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EPSTEIN CONNECTED TO THE CAREER OF A RUSSIAN MODEL TURNED EMPOWERMENT ENTREPRENEUR! AND LINKED TO OTHER MODELS KNOWN TO BE CONNECTED TO THE WEALTHY!!!


Billionaire Pedophile Jeffrey Epstein Funded This ‘Women's Empowerment’ Entrepreneur

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A Russian model who advocates for women entrepreneurs funded her nonprofit with help from billionaire sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, a review of tax records shows.

Lana Pozhidaeva is president of a New York-based charity called Education Advance, which received a majority of its $56,000 in revenues from Epstein in 2017.
According to its now-disabled website, Education Advance’s mission is to “support education in the STEM field.”

“Our mission is to increase the diversity of the American education system by providing scholarships to minority students to study STEM (science technology engineering and mathematics). Our purpose is to increase the number of students studying STEM, both at undergraduate and graduate levels,” the website stated.

Pozhidaeva, who was recently profiled on Forbes’ website, as well as Vogue Ukraine and the Italian version of Maxim, declined to answer a list of questions about her charity from The Daily Beast. In an email sent on Saturday, Pozhidaeva said Epstein did make a donation, and $50,000 of it “helped develop an impactful program at MIT.” Pozhidaeva’s boyfriend, with whom she runs the nonprofit, said she didn’t know much about the allegations against Epstein when she took his donation.


Epstein’s attorney Darren Indyke—who also represents Pozhidaeva’s business,
WE Talks, in a trademark application—didn’t return emails or voice messages.

Last October, Epstein tried donating to the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee—only to see his money returned three days later.
“Without second thought, the DCCC immediately refunded this unsolicited donation,” one committee spokesperson told The Daily Beast at the time.

A hedge-funder who counted Donald Trump, Bill Clinton and Prince Andrew as friends, Epstein has seen his reputation nosedive amid accusations that he sexually assaulted scores of underage girls at his Palm Beach mansion over a period of years, only to receive a slap on the wrist through a secret plea agreement. Epstein faced life in prison for his sex acts with minors, but under a sweetheart deal inked with former U.S. attorney and current Labor Secretary Alexander Acosta, he spent only 13 months of his 18-month sentence in a county jail. Most of that time was on “work release,” records show.


Epstein is a registered sex offender in New York and Florida.
He’s apparently kept a low profile in recent years and in his annual sex offender registrations listed his primary address as Little St. James, his private island in the Virgin Islands.


“Epstein is a registered sex offender in New York and Florida.”
In New York, Epstein is listed as a level 3 offender, a designation given to those who are at a “high risk of repeat offense and a threat to public safety exists,” according to the state’s Division of Criminal Justice Services.

In February, a federal judge ruled Acosta violated the law by keeping Epstein’s victims in the dark about the non-prosecution agreement, and the Department of Justice launched an investigation into possible “professional misconduct” by prosecutors.

The bad press surrounding Epstein has also prompted some charities to decline his money. In 2015, Reuters reported that a handful of nonprofits and researchers said they would stop accepting funds from the 66-year-old financier, in light of one accuser’s claims that Epstein forced her to have sex with several men, including Prince Andrew, while she was underage. (The victim has now been identified as Virginia Roberts Giuffre. Prince Andrew has adamantly denied Giuffre’s claims.)

But, according to a review of public records, Epstein has continued to bestow funds on at least one congresswoman in the Virgin Islands, and Pozhidaeva’s nonprofit in New York City.

Education Advance’s latest and only annual tax return reveals Epstein provided $55,000 in funding in 2017. Most of that money, records show, went to a Buddhist organization at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

The group’s total revenues were $56,500 for the tax year beginning Jan. 1, 2017 and ending Dec. 31, 2017. And the only “substantial contributor” listed was “J Epstein Virgin Islands FD Inc” for a total of $55,000, tax records show.


“The only 'substantial contributor' listed was 'J Epstein Virgin Islands FD Inc' for a total of $55,000.”
According to the group’s IRS 990 Form, Education Advance provided $50,000 to Prajnopaya at MIT and listed the religious organization under “Our Partners” on its now-defunct website. In an email to The Daily Beast, the Prajnopaya Institute said it returned Education Advance’s funds.

“We immediately responded by investigating internally,” the email stated. “We discovered that our records do show that Prajnopaya Institute received a one-time contribution of 50K USD from Education Advance in 2017 to support STEM learning related projects. There was no listing of who funded Education Advance. We have returned the contribution.”

Education Advance deleted its website on Monday after The Daily Beast contacted a director of the nonprofit, Pendleton King, who is Pozhidaeva’s boyfriend.

For his part, King told The Daily Beast that Education Advance would return Epstein’s $55,000 donation. He said Pozhidaeva knew very little about the allegations against Epstein when the foundation accepted his donation. “She’s never been involved in anything shady,” King said of Pozhidaeva.

“The money went to something positive,” King added. “Why would you focus on something that’s going to a good cause?”


“The money went to something positive. Why would you focus on something that’s going to a good cause?”
— Pendleton King, a director of Education Advance
While King claimed Pozhidaeva had little contact with Epstein after meeting him at a charity event six or seven years ago, public records show they, at the very least, share the same attorney.

Darren K. Indyke—an attorney for Epstein who in October 2015 represented the billionaire during a deposition of Alan Dershowitz—filed trademark paperwork for Pozhidaeva’s latest project, WE Talks.
The company bills itself as a monthly event series for female entrepreneurs and recently hosted a media mixer for media professionals who’ve been laid off, and a competition to win $10,000 from investors.

Documents filed with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office show WeWork Companies Inc., which provides work space for startups, is opposing WE Talks’ trademark.

In the trademark filings, Indyke’s Lexington Avenue address is the same as Education Advance’s address listed in IRS documents. That address also matches one for the Jeffrey Epstein VI Foundation on Epstein’s website.

Meanwhile, in January 2016, Pozhidaeva was photographed by the Daily Mail one Saturday afternoon leaving Epstein’s mansion on Manhattan’s Upper East Side.


“In January 2016, Pozhidaeva was photographed by the Daily Mail one Saturday afternoon leaving Epstein’s mansion on Manhattan’s Upper East Side.”


Pozhidaeva was represented by MC2 Model Management, which was accused in court papers of supplying minor girls to Epstein.
In one January 2015 court filing, Giuffre said she had sex with MC2 owner Jean Luc Brunel multiple times, when she was 16 through 19 years old. “He was another of Epstein’s powerful friends who had many contacts with young girls throughout the world,” Giuffre stated in the declaration.

Soon after, Brunel issued a statement denying Giuffre’s accusations: “I strongly deny having participated, neither directly nor indirectly, in the actions Mr Jeffrey Epstein is being accused of. I strongly deny having committed any illicit act or any wrongdoing in the course of my work as a scouter or model agencies manager.”

Brunel's name was discovered on message pads Palm Beach cops pulled from trash bins outside Epstein’s home, an attorney for Epstein’s victims, Brad Edwards, said in a 2010 court filing called a “statement of undisputed facts.”


The model kingpin filed a lawsuit against Epstein, claiming his “illegal actions” cost his agency business because of “false links” between the men in press reports.

When registering WE Talks’ web domain in April 2018, Pozhidaeva listed her contact address as an E. 66th Street building in Manhattan where Epstein rents units and was accused of housing underage models. “Jeffrey rents several apartments there where he keeps his girls, alleged models for the MC2 agency,” Edwards told Page Six in 2009.



“Pozhidaeva told 'Vogue' that choosing the right team members is key to launching a business.”
Edwards’ court document said Epstein provided MC2 with “financial support,” and that MC2 employees told Edwards that Epstein’s condos at East 66th Street were used to house young models.

The filing was part of a court battle between Epstein and Edwards, whom Epstein accused of bringing bogus lawsuits by accusers to help his former colleague, convicted Ponzi schemer Scott Rothstein.

Edwards countersued Epstein for malicious prosecution, claiming Epstein was retaliating against him for representing women in lawsuits against the billionaire.

The case was settled just before trial in December. Three of Epstein’s accusers were expected to testify. Epstein, through one of his attorneys, issued a public apology saying his accusations against Edwards were false.

In a profile by Vogue Ukraine last year, Pozhidaeva said she moved to New York seven years ago. Her LinkedIn profile says she studied politics at the Moscow State Institute of International Relations, received a master’s degree at the ICN Business School in France, and studied accounting and business management at Harvard’s online business school.

Pozhidaeva told Vogue that choosing the right team members is key to launching a business. “Most startups fall apart precisely because of a wrong or ineffective team,” she said. “It is also quite important to find advisors with extensive experience and a good reputation in the industry. It is better to choose those people who… will be ready to give you time (for example, five hours a month), and not just be a person on your site.”

Two former Education Advance board members contacted by The Daily Beast, Daniel Streeter and Margaret White, said they had no knowledge of the Epstein donation and were no longer associated with Education Advance.

“Lana is a very earnest and very caring person,” White told The Daily Beast.
 
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nytimes.com
‘My Dad’s Not a Racist’: Book Describes Ivanka Trump’s Defense After Charlottesville
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A new book tries to unravel the narrative that Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner are stabilizing voices inside an otherwise chaotic White House.CreditCreditDoug Mills/The New York Times
WASHINGTON — When Gary D. Cohn was considering resigning as the top White House economic adviser after President Trump blamed “both sides” in a deadly white nationalist protest in Charlottesville, Va., his first stop was a meeting with Mr. Trump’s children.

In a conversation in August 2017 with Ivanka Trump, the president’s eldest daughter and senior adviser, Mr. Cohn was shocked by her reaction to his concerns, according to a new book about Ms. Trump and her husband, Jared Kushner.

“My dad’s not a racist; he didn’t mean any of it,” Ms. Trump said of the president’s refusal to condemn white nationalists outright. Appearing to channel her father, she added, “That’s not what he said.”


Mr. Cohn ultimately did not resign over the Charlottesville episode, instead leaving after losing a battle over trade policy last year. In a statement late Monday, Mr. Cohn said: “Ivanka and Jared brought me into the administration. We worked well together and continue to be friends to this day.”

But the episode permanently changed his view of Ms. Trump and Mr. Kushner, who are often painted as moderating influences on the president, according to “Kushner Inc.,” by the journalist Vicky Ward.

The book, which will be published by St. Martin’s Press on March 19, seeks to tell the behind-the-scenes story of Ms. Trump and Mr. Kushner’s rise to extraordinary power in the White House. Ms. Ward has said she spent two years interviewing 220 people for the book, granting many of them anonymity.

Her account is not a flattering one, and White House officials have dismissed the book and any coverage of it.

She portrays Ms. Trump and Mr. Kushner as two children forged by their domineering fathers — one overinvolved with his son, one disengaged from his daughter
— who have climbed to positions of power by disregarding protocol and skirting the rules when they can. And Ms. Ward tries to unravel the narrative that the two serve as stabilizing voices inside an otherwise chaotic White House, depicting them instead as Mr. Trump’s chief enablers.

The portrait that emerges, according to Mr. Kushner’s camp, is far removed from reality. “Every point that Ms. Ward mentioned in what she called her ‘fact checking’ stage was entirely false,” Peter Mirijanian, a spokesman for Mr. Kushner’s lawyer, Abbe Lowell, said in a statement. “It seems she has written a book of fiction rather than any serious attempt to get the facts. Correcting everything wrong would take too long and be pointless.”

Ms. Trump and Mr. Kushner wanted to control who could travel on trips funded by the State Department, Ms. Ward wrote, citing a source at the department. Ms. Trump also often requested to travel on Air Force planes when it was not appropriate. When Rex W. Tillerson, the former secretary of state, would deny the requests, the couple would invite along a cabinet secretary, often Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, to get access to a plane.


Over the past two years, Mr. Trump has waffled on whether he wanted his children serving in his administration. When he hired John F. Kelly as his chief of staff, a move that Ms. Trump and Mr. Kushner supported at the time, he gave an early directive: “Get rid of my kids; get them back to New York.”

Mr. Trump complained, according to the book, that his children “didn’t know how to play the game” and generated cycles of bad press. Mr. Kelly responded that it would be difficult to fire them, but he and the president agreed that they would make life difficult enough to force the pair to offer their resignations, which the president would then accept.


Ms. Trump and Mr. Kushner, however, have outlasted those plans, and Mr. Trump’s desire for them to leave the West Wing has come and gone in waves, associates said. Mr. Kelly resigned in December, and the couple has only gained in power since his departure.

If there is sympathy in Ms. Ward’s book for her protagonists, it is found in explaining how they grew up. Ms. Trump, she wrote, was wealthy but isolated. When she went to tour Choate Rosemary Hall, the elite Connecticut boarding school where she would attend high school, Ms. Trump arrived in a white stretch limousine. But she emerged from the car all by herself. “No one was there with her,” said her tour guide, who remained anonymous in the book.

Mr. Kushner’s father, meanwhile, had been grooming his son since childhood to become his successor in the family real estate company, Kushner Companies. When Mr. Kushner went away to Harvard, Ms. Ward wrote, his parents had a business associate keep an eye on him — by taking him out for dinner and reporting back on his activities — to make sure he was not dating non-Jews or doing drugs.

When Mr. Kushner and Ms. Trump decided to get married, both sets of parents were skeptical. Ms. Trump eventually won over the Kushners with her commitment to a grueling religious conversion regimen and her apparent intense desire to become part of a close-knit family.

Mr. Trump, meanwhile, did not understand why his daughter had to change her religion for anyone, even though he liked Mr. Kushner. He would joke that Ms. Trump could have married Tom Brady, the quarterback for the New England Patriots, and once joked to Robert K. Kraft, the team’s owner, that “Jared is half the size of Tom Brady’s forearm.”


A version of this article appears in print on March 12, 2019, on Page A16 of the New York edition with the headline: Book Questions Moderating Roles of Trump’s Daughter and Her Husband. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe
 
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