
by The Vigilant Fox at
DIARY OF A CEO: “Do you think Jeffrey Epstein was a spy?”
CIA WHISTLEBLOWER: “I believe very strongly he was a spy, yes.”
DIARY OF A CEO: “And who do you think he was working for?”
CIA WHISTLEBLOWER: “The Israelis. I’m confident it was the Israelis.”
DIARY OF A CEO: “Why?”
JOHN KIRIAKOU (CIA whistleblower): “Jeffrey Epstein is kind of the stereotypical example that they give you in training for what’s called an ‘access agent.’ This is a different kind of recruit.
“So, for example, if you’re a foreign intelligence service and you want information, like close-in information from a former president, from the CEO of the biggest company in the world, from a member of the British royal family, you’re not going to recruit these guys.
“You’re not going to recruit Bill Clinton or Bill Gates or Prince Andrew. So you do the next best thing. You recruit somebody who has regular access to them. And that person that you recruit is going to need to make these people feel comfortable and appreciated.
“And so you give him plenty of money. So he has this house on an island, or he has the whole island. And maybe you bring in young girls, you get them in compromising positions, just in case you need to use what’s called ‘kompromat,’ compromising pictures.
“We know now that Jeffrey Epstein’s house on the island had video cameras hidden, video cameras in literally every room, including the bathrooms. Why? Why would he care what was going on unless it was to use that information against people?
“As I said, only the Israelis and the Russians use extortion as a motivator.”
DIARY OF A CEO: “So would they have made Jeffrey Epstein rich in order to give him that access?”
JOHN KIRIAKOU: “Yeah.”
DIARY OF A CEO: “How could they have done that?”
JOHN KIRIAKOU: “Oh, that’s easy. I mean, governments are the only ones really that can launder money unfettered. And you can also do it through real estate, through fine art, and through horses. Those are the three easiest ways to launder money today: fine art, real estate, and racehorses.”
DIARY OF A CEO: “But presumably he would have spoken out at some point. No? He would have said something, or?”
JOHN KIRIAKOU: “No. But it would explain why he got a sweetheart deal in 2006. I mean, this is a guy that’s been convicted of child sex crimes, and he gets six months of house arrest with an ankle bracelet? We have mandatory minimums in this country. That’s a five-year mandatory minimum, first offense.”
DIARY OF A CEO: “He definitely had some interesting power, didn’t he?”
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