—aeeaauaQQQQ Ea . Pay me fifty million dc : amount. . + At first Epstein did nc t asked that the payment— : a escrow. If his strategy wo q “ bounced back to the clien ca In the eighties, when TER 26 oe a , CHAP much, much higher than P a 50 percent, it was an ext ) were other ways to make 1 Se in 1982 Epstein sold his in: 1984 = J eff rey Ep stein ae relatives, and others on an . a 4 Michael Stroll, had run W sw dtd Jeffrey Epstein make all his money? a | company known for the pi Epstein would tell stories over the years about mon- g Stroll put $450,000 int ses recovered from slippery characters. Sometimes, friends 7 7 apres 1884, Michaels d former associates would say, he’d suggest he had ties to the 4 eS eomands ands —_ nt, giving listeners the impression that he was doing : 4 Epstein owed him, he got oe ae orous cake ment. Eventually he sued | erous, : an x ” eatin aid that what Epstein really did, at this stage 1P his — u ce $440,000 — the case v was much more banal. According to them, Epstein spent | retin cold thee judge ti vost of his time coming up with creative new ways for the rich j a ee met ior aor (a) . qu ag . * mos d paying taxes. The commission for tax-avoidance deals” 4 Like many cases invol to avoi a Phnaattmomcdtet deals Epstein was involved” ‘¢ court, the terms of the f was enor ’ a i 1 with is a matter of conjecture, as is his record of successes #8 4 q failures. . , i at 7 : But Epstein’s business model was evolving. He d charge 4 7 4 i a fee. No fancy math. No percentages. ; : 108 q F HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_022077