Sunday, December 28, 2025

Scams, Schemes, Ruthless Cons: The Untold Story of How Jeffrey Epstein Got Rich

 

Scams, Schemes, Ruthless Cons: The Untold Story of How Jeffrey Epstein Got Rich

The New York Times Magazine [no paywall]: For years, rumors swirled about where his wealth came from. A Times investigation reveals the truth of how a college dropout clawed his way to the pinnacle of American finance and society.

 “For years, rumors swirled about where his wealth came from. 

A Times investigation reveals the truth of how a college dropout clawed his way to the pinnacle of American finance and society…Much of the last quarter-century of Epstein’s life has been carefully examined — including how, in the 1990s and early 2000s, he amassed hundreds of millions of dollars through his work for the retail tycoon Leslie Wexner. 


Yet the public understanding of Epstein’s early ascent has been shrouded in mystery. How did a college dropout from Brooklyn, claw his way from the front of a high school classroom to the pinnacle of American finance, politics and society? How did Epstein go from nearly being fired at Bear Stearns to managing the wealth of billionaires? 


What were the origins of his own fortune? We have spent months trying to pierce this veil. We spoke with dozens of Epstein’s former colleagues, friends, girlfriends, business partners and financial victims. 


Some agreed to speak on the record for the first time; others insisted on speaking confidentially but gave us access to never-before-seen records and other information. We sifted through private archives and tracked down previously unpublished recordings and transcripts of old interviews — including one in which Epstein gave a meandering account of his personal and professional history. We perused diaries, letters, emails and photo albums, including some that belonged to Epstein. We reviewed thousands of pages of court and government records. 


What emerged is the fullest portrait to date of one of the world’s most notorious criminals — a narrative that differs in important respects from previously published accounts of Epstein’s rise, including his arrival at Bear Stearns. In his first two decades of business, we found that Epstein was less a financial genius than a prodigious manipulator and liar. 


Abundant conspiracy theories hold that Epstein worked for spy services or ran a lucrative blackmail operation, but we found a more prosaic explanation for how he built a fortune. 


A relentless scammer, he abused expense accounts, engineered inside deals and demonstrated a remarkable knack for separating seemingly sophisticated investors and businessmen from their money. 


He started small, testing his tactics and seeing what he could get away with. His early successes laid the foundation for more ambitious ploys down the road. Again and again, he proved willing to operate on the edge of criminality and burn bridges in his pursuit of wealth and power…”

Some Epstein file redactions are being undone with hacks

 

Un-redacted text from released documents began circulating on social media on Monday evening


SHOCKING NEWS FROM THE WORLD OF SCIENCE:  Calcium, vitamin D levels essential for bone health in older adults.


Kangaroos fix their posture to save energy at high hopping speeds, study shows PhysOrg. An IgNobel candidate?


Can Bibliotherapy Heal the Pain of the World?

Literary Hub – “As a librarian, I’ve often felt like a part-time therapist. People confide in librarians the way they do with bartenders; we form bonds with our regular customers, listen to their troubles and serve up more than just books. 

After I learned the word “bibliotherapist,” during library school 20 years ago, I became curious about both casual and serious uses of the word. Was bibliotherapy any kind of soothing literary experience? Or did it require a licensed mental health practitioner? Art, music and drama therapy all have graduate degree programs and a place in the mental health landscape, but I never heard much about bibliotherapy. 

I kept wondering, When will “book medicine” have its big moment? That moment may be now, as bibliotherapy has a leader, Emely Rumble, LCSW, author of the new book Bibliotherapy in the Bronx (Row House, April 2025). Rumble’s book isn’t an academic tome with an audience limited to social workers, but a lyrical, unpretentious guide for book lovers. 

As Rumble shows, book medicine is hardly a new concept. In ancient Egypt, one of the very earliest libraries welcomed visitors with a sign on the door reading “The House of Healing for the Soul.” The term bibliotherapy first appeared in a 1916 Atlantic Monthly piece, “A Literary Clinic” by Samuel McChord Crothers. 

This satirical advertisement describes Dr. Bagster’s availability to prescribe books to treat “Tired business men,” “Tired business men’s wives,” and “Tired mothers who are reading for health.” During World War I, the Library of Congress and American Library Association circulated nearly 720 books and prescribed reading for therapeutic purposes to troops at home and abroad. 

Librarians debated about whether patients should avoid reading books about their conditions, and whether or not reading should offer escapism or a chance to reflect on one’s problems. “What genres make the best medicine?” is a question posed in a blog from the University of Connecticut Archive website on wartime hospital libraries. Librarians in these clinics generally wore medical uniforms and worked closely with doctors and nurses in prescribing books…”

4 Ruby operation - 11 Divia - wake- It’s the world’s first “preservation archive” for music which is fully open

 

PHILOSOPHY OF CARE

Dr. Harris is a proponent of the “less is more” philosophy, wherein the least invasive surgical procedures are explored as a primary consideration, with a deliberate effort to avoid fusion whenever possible. His ultimate objective is to expedite patients’ return to an active and improved state of well-being while minimizing their recovery 



In a world filled with digital distractions, these shows will help you indulge, develop or rekindle a love for reading.


This free app turned my phone into a portable film scanner

How to Geek: “Photography has undergone immense changes over the last few decades, and as a result, you probably have a family photo collection in a variety of formats. More recent photos and videos are stored digitally on your devices or in the cloud, while older ones could be stashed away as printed photos, scrapbooks, or even film negatives and slides. If all or part of a photo collection is made up of film negatives, it can be hard to take a casual trip down memory lane or share images with others. 

Luckily, there’s a way to use your smartphone to scan film negatives, turning them into digital images that can be freely edited, shared, or backed up in the cloud. Whether you’re still shooting on film (the nostalgia factor is bringing 35mm film cameras back) or are working with old family archives, various free apps can help convert negatives into digital photos. 

They all work basically the same way, but the one I used was FilmBox because of its popularity and support for both iOS and Android. As someone taking on the task of preserving my family’s photo collection and getting into the world of half-frame film photography in 2025, I was surprised to find FilmBox surpassed my expectations..”


Anna’s Archive rips 86 million of the most popular songs on Spotify

  1. Over-focus on the most popular artists. There is a long tail of music which only gets preserved when a single person cares enough to share it. And such files are often poorly seeded.
  2. Over-focus on the highest possible quality. Since these are created by audiophiles with high end equipment and fans of a particular artist, they chase the highest possible file quality (e.g. lossless FLAC). This inflates the file size and makes it hard to keep a full archive of all music that humanity has ever produced.
  3. No authoritative list of torrents aiming to represent all music ever produced. An equivalent of our book torrent list (which aggregate torrents from LibGen, Sci-Hub, Z-Lib, and many more) does not exist for music.

This Spotify scrape is our humble attempt to start such a “preservation archive” for music. Of course Spotify doesn’t have all the music in the world, but it’s a great start. Before we dive into the details of this collection, here is a quick overview:

  • Spotify has around 256 million tracks. This collection contains metadata for an estimated 99.9% of tracks.
  • We archived around 86 million music files, representing around 99.6% of listens. It’s a little under 300TB in total size.
  • See also Ars Technica: “World’s largest shadow library made a 300TB copy of Spotify’s most streamed songs. Spotify is reportedly investigating how much music Anna’s Archive scraped.”
  • See also The Verge – Pirate library rips 86 million of the most popular songs on Spotify – “Spotify says it has launched new protections against “anti-copyright attacks” after the open-source library / pirate activist group Anna’s Archive announced it’s ripped 86 million songs from the platform that it plans to make available in torrents, as reported earlier by Billboard. According to the group, “We have archived around 86 million music files …”

Saturday, December 27, 2025

An amateur codebreaker may have just solved the Black Dahlia and Zodiac killings


By Christopher Goffard Staff Writer | Dec. 23, 2025

 When police questioned Marvin Margolis following the murder of Elizabeth Short — who became known as the Black Dahlia — he lied about how well he had known her. The 22-year-old Short had been found mutilated in a weedy lot in South Los Angeles, severed neatly in half with what detectives thought was surgical skill. 

Margolis was on the list of suspects. He was a sullen 21-year-old premed student at USC, a shell-shocked World War II veteran who had expressed an eagerness to practice surgery. He was “a resentful individual who shows ample evidence of open aggression,” a military psychiatrist had concluded.
At first, Margolis did not tell detectives that he had lived with Short for 12 days at a Hollywood Boulevard apartment, three months before her January 1947 murder.
Margolis later admitted they had lived together in Apartment 726 at the Guardian Arms Apartments. But he soon moved to Chicago and changed his name, frustrating further attempts to question him. Among many suspects, a district attorney investigator would note, Margolis was “the only pre-medical student who ever lived as a boy friend with Beth Short.”
A generation later and hundreds of miles north, a killer who called himself the Zodiac terrorized the San Francisco Bay Area with five seemingly random murders from 1968 to 1969, taunting police and media for years with letters and cryptograms.
The toughest to decipher was the letter he sent in April 1970 to the San Francisco Chronicle, with the words “My name is —” followed by a 13-character string of letters and symbols. It came to be called the Z13 cipher, and its brevity has stymied generations of PhDs and puzzle prodigies.

Alex Baber, a 50-year-old West Virginia man who dropped out of high school and taught himself codebreaking, now says he has cracked the Zodiac killer’s identity — and in the process solved the Black Dahlia case as well. 
Alex Baber became a sleuth, devoting himself to cryptography, forensics and computer science.
(Courtesy of Alex Baber)
“It’s irrefutable,” said Baber, obsessive, hyperfocused and cocksure in manner, his memory encyclopedic and his speech a firehose of dates, locations and surprising linkages. 
Baber has never been a cop. He is not a licensed private eye. Critics have called him overconfident and underqualified. Said one: “This guy is a great smooth talker, but it’s a lot of empty calories.”
Diagnosed with autism at 12, Baber said he endured schoolyard beatings throughout his childhood in rural Florida. He got a GED, skipped college and taught himself cryptography, forensics and computer science.
He runs a firm called Cold Case Consultants of America, with victim-advocate investors and inherited money, and since 2021 has devoted himself day and night to proving a nexus between what might be the two most infamous unsolved cases in America. 
“I started running variables based on letter-frequency analysis,” Baber said. “It’s my autism. Once I start on something, I have to see it through. The deeper I go, the harder I push. My mind’s wired differently.”
He became interested in the Bay Area killings when he saw David Fincher’s 2007 film “Zodiac.” He learned that the Z13 cipher is regarded as the Holy Grail of Zodiac studies; the killer sent it to the newspaper after the head of the American Cryptogram Assn. publicly dared him to put his real name in a code.
To attack the problem, Baber used artificial intelligence and generated a list of 71 million possible 13-letter names. Using known details of the Zodiac killer, based on witness descriptions, he cross-checked those names against military, marriage, census and other public records.

Los Angeles detectives initially considered Margolis a viable suspect in Elizabeth Short’s murder, but he has received relatively little attention in the carnival free-for-all of Black Dahlia literature. Other theories proliferate: The killer was a bellhop, a Skid Row alcoholic, the gangster Bugsy Siegel, the director Orson Welles, a venereal-disease doctor.
William J. Mann’s upcoming “Black Dahlia: Murder, Monsters, and Madness in Midcentury Hollywood” takes Margolis seriously as a suspect. Former Times copy editor Larry Harnisch, a longtime student of the case, has already denounced the book as “fraud and fakery” and regards the Margolis-as-killer theory as a waste of time.
Harnisch points to an LAPD report that says police interviewed and cleared Margolis, along with his sometimes housemate, “due to their work and where they were during the time the victim was missing.”
The report does not give details of the supposed alibi, however, and other evidence makes it clear Margolis remained an active suspect even after he relocated to Chicago. In remarks before a grand jury, a prosecutor found it relevant that Margolis had lived with Short not long before her death, and noted that as a USC student he would have dissected a body.
         Betty Short, a.k.a. Elizabeth Short.
  
Roberts, the former cold case detective at the LAPD, said the original investigators erred in assuming that Short was kidnapped soon after she was seen at the Biltmore Hotel in downtown Los Angeles on Jan. 9, 1947, while dismissing evidence she had been alive and free for days afterward.
That evidence included the account of a policewoman who claimed (at least initially) that on the day before the body’s Jan. 15 discovery, she found Short at a downtown bus station, sobbing in fear that an ex-boyfriend was stalking her and wanted to kill her. (Short also told people the ex-boyfriend she feared had been a Marine — a branch which Margolis, as a corpsman, had served with.)
Roberts said the mistaken timeline — the assumption that Short’s killer had control of her for a whole week — permitted Margolis to peddle a convincing alibi.
“He was in the Top 10 [suspects] in the D.A. file,” Roberts said. “He got pushed to the back because of the timeline.”
But he could not be ruled out, she said, and then he vanished.
The initial investigation uncovered evidence of Margolis’ psychological instability. Lt. Frank Jemison, who worked at the district attorney’s investigative unit, studied his military records. He learned that Margolis had seen immense carnage in the Navy medical corps, and was among the first wave of troops landing on Okinawa in April 1945.
Three months later, Margolis was diagnosed with “tremulousness, recurring battle dreams, tiredness which is chronic and intermittent, startled reactions and periods of depressions,” according to Jemison’s May 1950 summary of the records.
The Navy had thwarted Margolis’ ambition to be a surgeon. “He desired operation room technique which was never granted to him and this is one of the underlying bases for his resentment and disgust,” Jemison wrote.
Because of his mental trauma, the Navy discharged him with a 50% disability. He seemed to suggest that he would kill whoever tried to send him to war again. “The next time there is a war, two of us are not going — the one who comes after me and myself,” he told a military psychiatrist.
In August 1945, after the war, Margolis was back in Chicago, his hometown. He posed smiling with his battle ribbons and a rifle for a glowing feature story in the Chicago Garfieldian newspaper, which said he had cared for the wounded as a “pharmacist’s mate” during the war.
Marvin Margolis in the Chicago Garfieldian newspaper.
(Chicago Garfieldian)
“Professionally Margolis plans to be a surgeon,” the article said.
He never became a doctor. After dropping out of USC, he moved between several states and plied many trades, working as a builder, architect and portrait painter. He married twice and had four kids. 
He seemed to relish attention, and in 1961, he was smiling again as the subject of another glowing feature story, this time in the Wellington Daily News in Kansas.
He was now calling himself “Skip Merrill.” The article described him as an artist and an intellectual who hoped to bring artistic culture to Kansas. He exaggerated his service record, saying he was a pilot with the Flying Tigers during the war, and claimed to have studied art under Salvador Dali at USC.
Later, in California, he ran a restaurant in Atascadero and worked as an engineer at Intel in Santa Clara. In the early ‘70s, he ran Bucksavers Automotive Repair & Parts Supply in Oceanside and got a 30-day jail term — plus three years’ probation — for defrauding customers. 
Margolis’ interest in art proved critical in catching him, said Baber, the amateur sleuth.
Baber approached Margolis’ son, Roark Merrill, with the ruse that he was researching his father’s World War II service but soon revealed his interest in the Black Dahlia case. 
Merrill, it turned out, had inherited a peculiar drawing from his father, and kept it on his own office wall. His father had sketched it as cancer was killing him. Would Baber care to see it?
The sketch, called “Elizabeth,” depicts a woman who is peering with one eye through a curtain of hair that hangs over her face. She is naked from the waist up. Her lower half is not visible, as if cut off above the navel. One of the nipples appears to be severed. The torso bears a series of marks that might be stab wounds, amid an area of shading that suggests blood. It is signed “Marty Merrill ‘92,” reflecting another alias Margolis used.
To Baber’s team, the similarities it bears to Short’s bisected and mutilated body are hard to ignore, suggesting firsthand knowledge of the killing. Making this claim hard to prove: Graphic photos of her corpse went public as early as the mid-1980s, in Kenneth Anger’s book “Hollywood Babylon II.”
Because Margolis died in 1993, Baber and the two retired detectives view the drawing as a kind of deathbed confession to Short’s murder. And because “Zodiac” appears to be hidden in the shading, they also see it as a confession to the Zodiac crimes.
Although The Times has reviewed an image of the sketch, Roark Merrill — when contacted — declined to grant permission for the image to be published, and also declined to comment. 
Baber also believes he has found the so-called “murder room” that has eluded investigators for nearly 80 years — the place Short was killed, drained of blood and cut in half. He thinks it was at 2615 Santa Fe Ave., in Compton, a cluster of stand-alone bungalows and one of the few area motels in 1947 that had a bathtub.
On the night before the killing, newspaper accounts say, a nervous young man had been driving between motels in the area, desperately seeking a room with a bathtub and claiming his wife needed it. 
At the time, the Compton bungalow complex was called the Zodiac Motel, a fact Baber discovered by using AI to unearth a newspaper ad. He thinks it inspired the name the Bay Area killer called himself.
“That was the key to where she was murdered as well as his future moniker,” Baber said.
Roberts, the former cold case detective, said the LAPD has been made aware of the new findings, but the case is not one of the department’s priorities. “It’s not a burning thing on their radar right now,” Roberts said. “I don’t think the LAPD will ever take a position and say it’s solved.”

This remarkable book about a ‘wild boy’ reveals what makes us human

A visualisation of news popularity

Code is open source. Global news sources are via Google News. Topics include: World, Nation, Business, News, Technology, Entertainment, Sport, Science and Health.


This remarkable book about a ‘wild boy’ reveals what makes us human Washington Post 


The most popular homes featured on Vogue Living in 2025

These are the top ten homes you loved on Vogue Living this year—as told by Instagram.

Can Bibliotherapy Heal the Pain of the World?  Lit Hub


A Thousand and One Nights in Italy Public Domain Review. “In mid-19th century Italy, two eccentric aristocrats set forth on parallel projects: constructing ostentatious castles in a Moorish Revival style. Iván Moure Pazos tours the psychedelic chambers of Rochetta Mattei, optimised for electrohomeopathic healing, and Castello di Sammezzano, an immersive, orientalist fever dream.”


From Nabeel Qureshi:

Yet not a word is wasted. It sounds paradoxical, but Proust is economical with his prose. He is simply trying to describe things that are extremely fine-grained and high-dimensional, and that takes many words. He is trying to pin down things that have never been pinned down before. And it turns out you can, indeed, write 100 pages about the experience of falling asleep, and find all kinds of richness in that experience.

And this:

…, a clear-sightedness on human vanity and a total willingness to embarrass himself. There are passages in the Albertine sections which are shocking – such as the extended stretch, around 50 pages long, in which he describes watching her sleep — and, reading them, you start to understand that this was written by a dying man who did not care about anything apart from telling the whole truth in as merciless way as possible.

Third, hypotaxis in sentences. The opposite of hypotaxis is parataxis, which you often find in Hemingway, as in: “The rain stopped and the crowd went away and the square was empty.” Each item here is side by side, simple, clean. The Bible often uses such types of sentences: “And God said, Let there be light: and there was light. And God saw the light, that it was good: and God divided the light from the darkness.”.

Hypotaxis, by contrast, describes sentences with many subordinate clauses, like nesting dolls.

Nabeel says In Search of Lost Time is now his favorite novel.