High-profile resignations and replacements as Epstein case fallout spreads
More than 3 million pages of documents revealed ties between Epstein and global elites, prompting resignations, investigations, and reputational damage across multiple sectors.
- The document dump from the Justice Department revealed over 3 million pages of Epstein-related files, prompting resignations and investigations worldwide.
- Reporting found emails reference sexualized messages, references to pornography, massages, escorts, and gifts from Epstein to some individuals, including luxury items and fur coats.
- Investigators in Oslo said searches uncovered charges against Thorbjørn Jagland, former prime minister of Norway, at properties in Oslo, Risør, and Rauland.
- The commercial consequences are visible as DP World CEO resigned on Friday after emails linked him to Epstein, raising stakes for the company.
- AP and partner newsrooms report ongoing review and reputational damage from the released Epstein documents, prompting resignations and probes across various figures.
20 Articles
20 Articles
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The repercussions of the Jeffrey Epstein case are spreading around the world. Politicians, diplomats, business leaders and royalty members have seen their reputations smeared, investigations have been opened and jobs lost after a cache of more than 3 million pages of Epstein-related documents, published by the U.S. Department of Justice, revealed their links to the U.S. financier and convicted sex offender who died behind…
High-profile resignations and replacements as Epstein case fallout spreads
The fallout from the Jeffrey Epstein case is spreading around the world.
The condemned New York tycoon and paedophile Jeffrey Epstein was able to hide for years the plot of sexual abuse and human trafficking that he carried out together with his partner, Ghislaine Maxwell, and for which in July 2019, a month before taking his life, he was arrested. His illegal activities registered in the three million documents already known as 'Epstein Archives', took place with impunity to the refuge of Little Saint James Island, …
“This has to end.” Three days after the U.S. Department of Justice published three million documents, Donald Trump again tried to close the Epstein case as soon as possible in the face of journalists’ avalanche of questions. But, despite his will, this is not going to end. A worldwide expansion wave is spreading as names, facts, conversations and structures appear in that gigantic mass of documents.In one week, the damage was already considerabl…
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