
"A new batch of more than three million pages of investigative files about Jeffrey Epstein that was released by the Department of Justice on January 30 show how the disgraced financier and convicted child sex offender sought relationships with news outletsincluding Scientific Americanthrough his connections with scientists. New Scientist turns up in more than 50 documents released by the DOJ, and National Geographic appears in nearly 200 documents."
"At least five former members and one current member of Scientific American's scientific board of advisersLisa Randall, George Church, Danny Hillis, Martin Nowak, Lawrence Krauss and Nathan Wolfeappear to have had connections with Epstein, according to our analysis of the DOJ files, as well as documents and e-mails that were released by the nonprofit whistleblower website Distributed Denial of Secrets and obtained by Scientific American. None of the board members included in the files have been charged with crimes relating to their engagements with Eps"
More than three million pages of Department of Justice investigative files released on January 30 document Jeffrey Epstein's efforts to cultivate relationships with news outlets through his scientific connections. The files include references linking Epstein to Scientific American, New Scientist, National Geographic, Seed, and Forbes, with hundreds of mentions across documents. Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell served on the board of the defunct science magazine Seed. The files reference at least five former and one current member of Scientific American's advisory board as having connections to Epstein. None of the referenced board members have been charged with crimes related to those engagements.
Read at www.scientificamerican.com
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