Epstein's shadow in Mexico: A diplomat under scrutiny, thousands of videos and alleged ties to drug trafficking
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Epstein's shadow in Mexico: A diplomat under scrutiny, thousands of videos and alleged ties to drug trafficking
"The declassification of files belonging to convicted sex offender and pedophile Jeffrey Epstein, who died in jail in 2019 while awaiting trial, has profoundly affected various political figures and governments, primarily in the United States and Europe. The latest batch of documents from the financier's archive more than three million pages, 2,000 videos, and around 180,000 images, according to the U.S. Department of Justice has triggered investigations, resignations, and reputational crises at the highest levels of power."
"Epstein's shadow is long, and Mexico has not been spared. Emails from witnesses and victims, as well as documents from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), expose his visits to Mexican territory, especially to destinations like Puerto Vallarta and Cancun. There are also accusations that the financier used the country on more than one occasion to carry out crimes related to child sex trafficking."
Declassified files from Jeffrey Epstein's archive contain more than three million pages, 2,000 videos, and around 180,000 images. The documents have triggered investigations, resignations, and reputational crises among political figures and governments in the United States and Europe. Emails, witness statements, and FBI records indicate Epstein visited Mexican destinations such as Puerto Vallarta and Cancun and allegedly used Mexico to facilitate child sex trafficking. FBI informant Kenneth Turner links former U.S. Navy SEAL commander Richard Marcinko and former U.S. ambassador Earl Anthony Wayne to an abuse scheme in Mexican territory. Turner communicated multiple allegations to NYPD Detective Walter E. Harkins.
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