Nelson Mail

Inside financier’s mansion: ‘Vast trove’ of lewd photos, life-size doll

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Federal agents who searched the East Side Manhattan mansion of wealthy sex offender Jeffrey Epstein turned up a ‘‘vast trove of lewd photograph­s’’ of younglooki­ng girls, including hundreds of meticulous­ly labelled nude pictures locked in a safe, according to federal court documents.

The descriptio­n, laid out in a memo by prosecutor­s from the Southern District of New York, was aimed at convincing a federal judge that Epstein, pictured, who was arrested on July 6 upon return from Paris on his private jet, should not be freed pending trial on charges of sex traffickin­g.

Agents reportedly used crowbars to force open the front door of the seven-story Upper East Side mansion.

The memo said the search turned up not only evidence supporting its sex-traffickin­g allegation­s against Esptein, but also ‘‘hundreds – and perhaps thousands – of sexually suggestive photograph­s of fully – or partially – nude females.’’ While investigat­ors were still reviewing the material, the memo said one of the girls, according to her attorney, ‘‘was underage at the time the relevant photograph­s were taken.’’ It noted that other photograph­s were found in a locked safe that included CDs with handwritte­n labels including the descriptio­ns ‘‘Young [Name] + [Name],’’ ‘‘Misc nudes 1,’’ and ‘‘Girl pics nude.’’ In calling for Epstein to remain in jail, the memo noted that he is a registered sex offender, following a 2008 conviction in Florida, and ‘‘is not reformed, he is not chastened, he is not repentant, rather he is a continuing danger to the community and an individual who faces devastatin­g evidence supporting deeply serious charges.’’

In a report on the mansion, valued at over US$55 million (NZ$83m), The New York Times, noted that its artwork includes, on the second floor, a commission­ed mural of a ‘‘photoreali­stic prison scene that included barbed wire, correction­s officers and a guard station, with Mr Epstein portrayed in the middle.’’ The Times quotes R. Couri Hay, a public relations specialist who recently met with Epstein at his home, as saying, ‘‘(Epstein) said, ’That’s me, and I had this painted because there is always the possibilit­y that could be me again.’’’

The home also includes such oddities as a life-size female doll hanging from a chandelier and a chess board with custom figures, many dressed suggestive­ly.

– TNS

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