From: Gmax Sent: Saturday, December 8, 2012 11:06 AM To: Jeffrey Epstein Subject: Re: were you aware of this? You low how I fee about him.. FACEBOOK <https://www.facebook.com/TerraMarProject> - TWITTER <http://twitter.com/terramarproject> - G+ <https://plus.google.com/104195649525707945586/posts> PINTEREST <http:// <http:/> pinterest.com/terramarproject/ <http://pinterest.com/terramarproject/» - INSTAGRAM <http:// <http:/> instagram.com/p/PhLoOKAVEq/ <http://instagram.com/p/PhloCIKAVEq/» - CITIZENSHIP <http://theterramarproject.org/#citizenship> - THE DAILY CATCH <http:// <http:/> theterramarproject.org/thedailycatch/ <http://theterramarproject.org/thedailycatch/» On Dec 8, 2012, at 10:07, "Jeffrey Epstein" <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]» wrote: no, but he tried to sell the portrait to me for 1 million, he is a bad guy On Sat, Dec 8, 2012 at 12:41 AM > wrote: http://www.courthousenews.com/2011/03/10/34803.htm LOS ANGELES (CN) - An investment fund claims it was conned by a self-described "master illusionist" who persuaded it to invest in rare books and art - including a portrait of Sir Isaac Newton - and then absconded with more than $543,000 and a bunch of the loot. Ensign Consulting Ltd., of the Virgin Islands, claims lead defendant Al Seckel spent years crafting a persona with the appearance of respectability before he approached one of its consultants about an investment in rare antique globes. Four months later, Seckel claimed to have sold the globes for a 30 percent profit, splitting the proceeds 50-50 with Ensign, according to the complaint. Soon Seckel approached Ensign again, telling its consultant (nonparty) Adam Gold that he was "at a chateau, where believe it or not, the owner has an enormous collection of antiquarian science books inherited from her dad," according to the Superior Court complaint. "It is a stunning collection. I am trying to negotiate it out now, but will only do so at a price that ma