Jeffrey
Epstein’s fortune is built on fraud, a former mentor says
By Heather
Timmons
10 July, 2019
How, exactly, did accused sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein propel himself from a middle-class boy in Brooklyn to a secretive, maybe-billionaire with multiple mansions and a private jet?
While
the financial world has been puzzling
over the question for years, it
is really not that complicated, according to Steven Jude Hoffenberg,
Epstein’s former mentor. Epstein used fraudulently gotten funds as
seed money, he told Quartz.
Epstein
became known in financial circles in the early 2000s for managing
money for Les Wexner, the billionaire head of Limited Inc. But as
Vicky Ward wrote in an extensive
2003 profile of Epstein in Vanity Fair, he
earlier worked for Hoffenberg. In the late 1980s, Hoffenberg “hired
his new protégé as a consultant at $25,000 a month.” They
traveled the world together on Hoffenberg’s plane, Ward wrote.
In
1997,
Hoffenberg—the head of bill-collection firm Towers
Financial—was sentenced
to 20 years in jail for
running one of the biggest
Ponzi schemes in US history. Thousands
of investors were bilked of more than $450 million.
Hoffenberg
now tells Quartz that Epstein was deeply involved in the fraud.
Epstein was never charged in the case, but he was “totally in the
mix,” Hoffenberg said. He added that Epstein helped him set up the
Ponzi scheme.
“He
was my colleague daily, seven days a week,” Hoffenberg added.
Hoffenberg
said Epstein’s connection to the crime didn’t come up at the time
because he pled guilty. “When you plead guilty you don’t go in
for elaborate discovery.”
Hoffenberg
was released from prison in late 2013 after serving almost 20 years
in jail. He still hasn’t paid back most of the money he took from
investors, a demand the judge included in his original sentence.
Epstein named in legal filings
Hoffenberg’s
allegations are also made in
a lawsuit filed in August 2018 by
former Towers investors. The suit calls Epstein an “uncharged
co-conspirator.” It also alleges that the millions in stolen
investment was the seed capital for Epstein’s hedge fund, which it
values at $50 billion. The suit says Epstein “knowingly and
intentionally utilized funds he fraudulently diverted and obtained
from this massive Ponzi scheme for his own personal use to support a
lavish lifestyle,” but does not elaborate.
Reid
Weingarten, the attorney representing Epstein, didn’t respond to a
request for comment on the various allegations made against Epstein.
One exhibit
filed with the court by
Hoffenberg and Towers noteholders says that Hoffenberg, Epstein and
Towers Financial “operated a classic Ponzi scheme from the late
1980s to mid-1990s,” which succeeded in soliciting over $500
million dollars in investments from participants. All of the money
was “misappropriated for improper and personal uses,” the exhibit
claims, but does not provide any substantiating evidence.
Epstein
“provided services including, but not limited to, assisting Mr.
Hoffenberg full-time in all matters of business operations and
management of TFC [Towers Financial], including, but not limited to,
raising capital as a co-conspirator in connection with the TFC Ponzi
Fraud,” the exhibit claims.
Together,
Hoffenberg and Epstein sold $272 million of promissory notes through
six private placements, based on “bogus income and asset figures to
conceal TFC’s true financial condition.” The proceeds were “used
to pay TFC’s operating expenses,” the filing claims. They did the
same with five private placements of $210 million of bonds, based on
bogus financial information.
In
October of 2018, the lawsuit was withdrawn. Hoffenberg said the
plaintiffs plan to refile it. A lawyer for the plaintiffs, however,
said they had no knowledge of that plan. A 2013
filing by Hoffenberg
claims Epstein should pay restitution to Towers investors from his
hedge fund. It was dismissed by a judge because the same law firm was
representing Hoffenberg and Towers investors.
Hoffenberg
added that in the 1990s, Epstein showed signs of the same predatory
behavior toward girls that he was charged with on Monday (July 8).
Off the Trump team
Hoffenberg,
a former Trump
Tower tenant, started
the pro-Trump political action committee Get
Our Jobs Back in
April of 2016. He said in a FEC filing in June it would conduct
a $50 million marketing campaign for Trump. He “left the Trump
team” after being disillusioned with their campaign tactics, he
told Quartz, and particularly their reliance on Wikileaks
“I’m
off the Trump team,” he said. “I told Roger Stone and all of them
not to do the Wikileaks, and no one listens.”
He
became a born-again Christian while he was in prison, he told Quartz,
and spent years studying the Bible at his wife’s urging. Hoffenberg
said he is speaking out now to help the original investors get their
money back. The 1997 judgement
against him requires
him to pay investors back.
“I
can’t support people who blatantly break the law. My moral compass
today as a born again Christian is very substantial,” he said.
Justin
Rohrlich contributed reporting.
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