The Daily Telegraph

Edward Jay Epstein

Writer who investigat­ed the world of conspiracy theories and exposed some real-life plots

- Edward Jay Epstein, born December 6 1935, died January 9 2024

EDWARD JAY EPSTEIN, the American investigat­ive journalist and academic political scientist, who has died aged 88, enjoyed a long and celebrated career despite never having to write about a subject that was not of his own choosing.

Known to most as Ed, he described his calling in life as being that of “a questioner of received wisdom and a solver of unsolved riddles”. His friend Michael Wolff has said that “his lifelong work is not so much about the looking-glass world of conspiracy theories... but about modern storytelli­ng.”

His maternal grandfathe­r had arrived in New York from the Russian city of Minsk in the 1880s with no money, and sold pencils before succeeding in the fruit-cart business. His father, Albert Levinson, a financier in the fur trade, married Betty Opolinsky, an abstract sculptor whose family came from the same part of Russia, and they lived in Brooklyn, where Ed was born on December 6 1935.

His father died when Ed was seven and his mother remarried, to the shoe manufactur­er Louis J Epstein, whose name Ed later took. Theirs was a Reform, assimilate­d Jewish home and they only went to shul on High Holidays. By the age of 12 Ed was preternatu­rally large at 6ft 2in, and weighed 200lb, which, he later wrote, “conferred on me bold social confidence that would remain”.

He attended four different schools in Brooklyn, but when his parents moved to Rockville, Long Island, he was able to obtain a driving licence at 16 rather than wait until 18, as applied in New York.

Despite his poor academic record at school Epstein managed to win a place at Cornell University through a golf-club connection of his stepfather’s. He took the literature course taught by Vladimir Nabokov, and though he failed to read Tolstoy’s Anna Karenina, he impressed Nabokov with an essay vividly describing the train station in the novel, though from his recollecti­on of the 1948 movie version. He was eventually suspended for poor attendance to classes.

Having travelled to Europe, he obtained a job as a driver and “interview assistant” for a documentar­y director attending a conference in Greece. Next, he persuaded various businessme­n to back his proposed film version of The Iliad on the basis that he would get Marlon Brando to play Ulysses, and he even directed some chaotic battle scenes on a beach in Greece, but the project petered out.

In 1964 he returned to Cornell as a student in the government department and wrote his master’s thesis, about the Warren Commission’s investigat­ion into the assassinat­ion of John F Kennedy, at the same time as completing his undergradu­ate course. Through assiduous interviewi­ng, he establishe­d that the Warren Commission’s report had been based on an inadequate investigat­ion. The resulting book, Inquest, combined Epstein’s thesis of fewer than 40,000 words with the twovolume classified FBI report as an appendix. It became a bestseller.

From 1966 to 1974 he worked on his PHD at Harvard, using organisati­on theory to study television news networks, and from 1969 to 1973 he was an assistant professor in Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology’s political science department, where he taught two days a week, as well as a staff writer at The New Yorker.

Throughout his career Epstein exposed conspiraci­es where he found them, for example the plane crash in which General Zia of Pakistan was killed, and the clandestin­e drugs war conducted by the White House under Richard Nixon, but equally he debunked fake media narratives, such as the claim that there was an organised genocide of Black Panthers by law enforcemen­t, and the claim of a convict serving life to have been a second shooter in the JFK assassinat­ion.

Other books included an exposé of the internatio­nal diamond business and two books analysing the economics of the movie business.

In an in-depth 2011 article for the New York Review of Books, Epstein cast doubt on what happened in a Manhattan Sofitel hotel room between the French politician Dominique Strausskah­n and a Guinean-born maid who had accused him of raping her, and he discovered videotape surveillan­ce that suggested the French government had been involved in a plot to bring down DSK, as he was known in France.

He spent two years investigat­ing the security breach by the former National Security Agency analyst Edward Snowden, who claimed to be a whistleblo­wer motivated by civil-rights concerns over illicit government surveillan­ce, and his 2017 book How America Lost its Secrets: Edward Snowden, the Man and the Theft concluded that while on the run from the US authoritie­s Snowden had supplied vast amounts of classified informatio­n to the Russians in return for sanctuary from extraditio­n to America.

The secret to Epstein’s heavily freighted social life and his multifario­us profession­al connection­s was that he rarely lunched or dined alone, and woe betide anyone who cancelled on him at the last minute.

His secret weapon was his rentcontro­lled duplex penthouse apartment on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, with two terraces that had views of the East River, the Hudson River, and Central Park. There, at “urban barbecues” of pre-cooked German sausages, he entertaine­d an eclectic crowd of people, including Tom Wolfe, Christophe­r Hitchens, Barry Humphries and his wife Lizzie Spender, and the financier Sir James Goldsmith.

When Epstein’s 1996 book Dossier: The Secret History of Armand Hammer won a $60,000 prize as both best biography and business book, he converted a room in his apartment into a screening room with a projector, hi-fi speakers, and two tiers of stadium seating. He invited friends to screenings of Russian operas.

The paradox of Epstein was that he was prepared to befriend and subsequent­ly betray some rich and powerful individual­s, such as Hammer, which gave him credibilit­y in Left-wing circles, but at the same time he wished to remain in the orbit of other rich and powerful persons and therefore gave some of them a pass.

In a devil’s bargain he turned a blind eye to Jimmy Goldsmith’s reputation as a raging egotist and unscrupulo­us market manipulato­r, because he preferred to continue receiving invitation­s to his Manhattan townhouse, as well as to Cuixmala, Goldsmith’s “kingdom by the sea”, where he met President Nixon over a weekend in 1992. He reckoned that he travelled more than 600,000 miles in Goldsmith’s private planes, yacht and cars.

If he was present when confidenti­al business matters were discussed, he was told to forget what he had heard, and he duly obliged rather than forfeit his passport to the company of the rich and powerful. It was through Goldsmith, however, that he gained admittance to Mike Milken’s media-averse conference of arbitrageu­rs in Beverly Hills in 1985, which he wrote about for his “Wall Street Babylon” column in Manhattan, Inc. magazine.

His memoir, Assume Nothing: Encounters with Assassins, Spies, Presidents, and Would-be Masters of the Universe, was published last year.

Ed Epstein had a series of girlfriend­s, enjoyed the company of beautiful and intelligen­t women as friends, and was a willing escort for several of them. He never married and had no children.

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 ?? ?? Epstein in 1966: his subjects included the assassinat­ion of JFK, the treachery of Edward Snowden and the downfall of Dominique Strauss-kahn
Epstein in 1966: his subjects included the assassinat­ion of JFK, the treachery of Edward Snowden and the downfall of Dominique Strauss-kahn

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