[VISION] | PEOPLE: There are no visible people in the image. | TEXT: ``` apartment in Queens," responded Carter. And then the real troubles began. Epstein had a prodigious massage parlor outcall habit especially in Palm Beach with its many "Jack Shacks." After Epstein's round of publicity and widely touted association with Clinton, the stepmother of one of the massage parlor girls who went to Epstein's house called the police. The police interviewed the girl—who was TK at the time, but whose website identified her as 18—and the girl supplied the names of other girls, some of whom were also younger than 18. In the end, the police tracked down 18 girls—nine of whom were under 18; the others were in their 20s and 30s (one woman was in her 60s)—a number of whom gave statements describing happy-ending massages. (Although the nature of the allegations will dramatically grow into threesomes and forced sexual encounters, nobody at this point alleged anything more than this.) Epstein called in Dershowitz, who flew into Palm Beach to put the local authorities in their place—alienating Palm Beach officialdom—and, further amping up the profile of the case, also brought in Roy Black, the famous criminal attorney who defended William Kennedy Smith in his rape trial in Palm Beach. The release by the Palm Beach authorities of the depositions by the 18 girls describing the incremental details of the sex acts, the timing of the charges coming just after Rush Limbaugh's high profile Palm Beach drug bust, the Clinton connection and then with the ``` | OBJECTS: There are no significant objects present in the image. | SETTING: The setting appears to be indoors, possibly an office or a room with a white background. | ACTIVITY: The image does not depict any specific activity; it contains a block of text that seems to be part of a larger document or report. | NOTABLE: The text mentions a series of events involving Epstein, including his association with Clinton, the involvement of law enfor