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2.86 MB

Extraction Summary

8
People
5
Organizations
3
Locations
1
Events
1
Relationships
3
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Email correspondence
File Size: 2.86 MB
Summary

An email from Jeffrey Epstein (using the alias Jeffrey E./jeevacation) to 'Ed' (identified by context as journalist Edward Jay Epstein) dated December 19, 2015. Epstein responds to an email containing a WSJ article written by Edward Jay Epstein about conspiracy theories. In his response, Jeffrey Epstein asks to hire the journalist to 'organize my story into a coherent presentation,' estimating it to be a 'six- 9 moth job.'

People (8)

Name Role Context
Jeffrey E. Sender
Jeffrey Epstein (using email jeevacation@gmail.com) asking the recipient to organize his story.
Ed [Redacted] Recipient
Likely Edward Jay Epstein (journalist), the author of the article pasted in the email chain.
Edward Jay Epstein Author
Author of the WSJ article 'They're Not Really Out to Get You' pasted in the email body.
Rob Brotherton Author
Mentioned in the article as author of the book 'Suspicious Minds'.
Richard Hofstadter Essayist
Mentioned in the article for his essay 'The Paranoid Style in American Politics'.
Stanley Kubrick Film Director
Mentioned in the article regarding a fake moon landing conspiracy theory.
Earl Warren Historical Figure
Mentioned in relation to the Warren Commission and JFK assassination.
George W. Bush Former President
Mentioned in the article regarding 9/11 conspiracy theories.

Organizations (5)

Name Type Context
Wall Street Journal
Publication source of the article discussed.
Center on Law and Security at Fordham University
Cited in the article regarding terrorism statistics.
Warren Commission
Mentioned in the article regarding the JFK assassination.
Russian TV channel
Mentioned in the article as interviewing the author.
Roman Senate
Historical reference in article.

Timeline (1 events)

12/18/2015
Publication of article 'They're Not Really Out to Get You' in Wall Street Journal.
Wall Street Journal

Locations (3)

Location Context
Mentioned in the article regarding public opinion on 9/11.
Mentioned in the article regarding the moon landing conspiracy.
Mentioned in the article regarding 9/11.

Relationships (1)

Jeffrey E. Professional/Potential Client Edward Jay Epstein
Jeffrey asks Ed if he can pay him to organize his story into a presentation.

Key Quotes (3)

"could i pay you to organzie my story into a coherent presentation. . probaly a six- 9 moth job."
Source
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Quote #1
"Conspiracy, a word derived from the Latin “to breathe together,” has been a salient part of the darker side of recorded history"
Source
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Quote #2
"Conspiracy charges are the rule rather than the exception in cases brought against businessmen accused of fixing prices, evading environmental regulations, using insider information or laundering money."
Source
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Quote #3

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (4,061 characters)

From: jeffrey E. [jeevacation@gmail.com]
Sent: 12/19/2015 2:28:32 PM
To: Ed [REDACTED]
Subject: Re: My review today in wsj of conspiracy theories
Importance: High
could i pay you to organzie my story into a coherent presentation. . probaly a six- 9 moth job.
On Fri, Dec 18, 2015 at 10:36 PM, Ed [REDACTED] wrote:
They're Not Really Out to Get You
By EDWARD JAY EPSTEIN
Dec. 18, 2015, Wall Street Journal
1
Conspiracy, a word derived from the Latin “to breathe together,” has been a salient part of the darker side of
recorded history ever since some 60 conspirators in the Roman senate, including Brutus and Cassius, plotted
together to assassinate Julius Caesar in 44 B.C. Nowadays the “C” word does not always sit well with
journalists, who commonly employ it in conjunction with “theory” to describe paranoid distortions of reality.
Even so, a criminal conspiracy is not a rare phenomenon. Not only was a foreign conspiracy responsible for the
monstrous 9/11 attack on the World Trade Center (as well as the previous attempt to blow it up in 1993) but,
according to the Center on Law and Security at Fordham University, over 90% of routine federal indictments
for terrorist attacks since 9/11 contain at least one conspiracy charge. The government’s pursuit of conspiracies
is by no means limited to terrorism. Conspiracy charges are the rule rather than the exception in cases brought
against businessmen accused of fixing prices, evading environmental regulations, using insider information or
laundering money.
But there are also pseudo-conspiracies that exist only in a delusional or misinformed mind. And some of
them achieve a huge following. In Pakistan, according to public opinion polls, a majority of the population
believes that the 9/11 attack was staged by President George W. Bush to launch a war on Islam. The claim that
the 1969 moon landing was faked is still around. Just two days ago a crew from a Russian TV channel rushed
to my apartment to interview me about a viral post on YouTube in which the deceased director Stanley
Kubrick supposedly made a deathbed confession to having filmed the landing in a Hollywood studio—even
though everything about the post, including a fake Kubrick, was untrue.
Why people believe in pseudo-conspiracies is the focus of Rob Brotherton’s fascinating book “Suspicious
Minds.” Mr. Brotherton, an academic psychologist, advances the thesis that the belief in pseudo-conspiracies
proceeds from the “quirks and foibles” in the way that the human brain, or at least some human brains, process
evidence. He lucidly reviews studies showing common defects in the brain’s wiring, such as the bias that
selects evidence to confirm rather than undermine a pre-adopted thesis. “We seek what we expect to find,” as
Mr. Brotherton puts it. Relatedly, “biased assimilation” causes us to “interpret ambiguous events in light of
what we already believe.”
Discussing Richard Hofstadter’s 1964 essay “The Paranoid Style in American Politics,” Mr. Brotherton
accepts Hofstadter’s characterization of proponents of politically motivated conspiracy theories as “paranoid”
and suffering from “a psychic phenomenon” that prevents them from seeing the absurdity of their position. But
he disagrees with Hofstadter that this condition affects only a small number of people on the fringes of society.
For Mr. Brotherton, “conspiracy theories thrive in the mainstream.”
Until the controversy over the validity of Warren Commission’s 1966 report on the Kennedy assassination, the
phrase “conspiracy theory” had a more neutral meaning, suggesting a plausible yet unproven claim about
multiple actors in a single event. Only in the aftermath of the Warren Commission did it become a derogatory
term used to suggest theories that subvert conventional wisdom. To those who doubted the commission’s
finding that a single gunman killed Kennedy, Earl Warren became, Mr. Brotherton’s says, the “figurehead in a
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