TERSON * eh ; signation, Epstein still gets his )0 (roughly $275,000 in today’s | harges against him or any other 1 1e particulars of Epstein’s depar- } r mystery surrounding the man. 4 CHAPTE R 24 ip that Ace Greenberg had given ad fly it out, over the horizon? q q on his own. sf Pi nly get brighter. E. 7) Ana Obregon: 1982 | + i a q na Obregon was one of the world’s most beautiful women a 4 Aw well on her way to becoming famous as such when 7 she first met Jeffrey Epstein. For her, there would be film a q roles—in the 1984 Bo Derek vehicle Bolero, Ana Obreg6n gives 4 the star a run for her money—and appearances on the covers of Spanish Playboy and Spanish Vanity Fair. # q As for fortune, Obregon had that already. j Ana's father was a very wealthy investor in Spain. But he also : had serious problems. On June 15, 1982, a venerable stock- and q | bond-trading firm, the Drysdale Securities Corporation, announced 4 4 that it was going out of business. Just that year, Drysdale had spun . | off a subsidiary operation called Drysdale Government Securities. 3 _ And in May, DGS defaulted on $160 million in interest payments it q a Owed on Treasury securities that it had borrowed. In doing so, DGS q ‘ had dragged down its parent company. 100 a HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_022070