. Pay me fifty million dc y amount. . 5 At first Epstein did nc +: asked that the payment— 7 escrow. If his strategy wo 4 B) bounced back to the clieni i a In the eighties, when R26 CHAPT bE. i much, much higher than ") _‘50 percent, it was an exti ") were other ways to make 1 —" a 4 In 1982, Epstein sold his Jeffrey Epsteim: 7® relatives, and others on an . Michael Stroll, had run W My a fe > ow did Jeffrey Epstein make all his money? 4 q een known tox ine PI Epstein would tell stories over the years about mon=— E Stroll put $450,000 int scovered from slippery characters. Sometimes, friends~ gt 1964, Michaels df erasanciotes would say, he'd suggest he had ties to the © ee Cemands andire e > ; j " : ; aan -ying listeners the impression that he was doing 7 q Epstein owed him, he got perteerse sa eatk ’ _ ment. Eventually he sued | us, glam : : +. higum i dangerous, 8 + that what Epstein re ally did, at this stage in his © 4 ing $440,000 —the case w ae ces much more banal, According to them, Epstein spent | eeesrein told the judge:ths oat Me 5 time coming up with creative new ways for the rich” ) W a aembaaiiass most ° 1 one taxes, The commission for tax-avoidance deals: q Like many cases invol to avoid pay ithough the number of deals Epstein was involved: | q court, the terms of the f was enormous, ; and with is a matter of conjecture, as is his record of suecesse ; m failures. ‘ ‘ a flat a But Epstein’s business model was evolving. He'd charge 4° 2 fee, No fancy math. No percentages. i q 108 4 q : HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_021966