
Dick Cavett
Richard Alva Cavett is an American television personality, comedian and former talk show host. He appeared regularly on nationally broadcast television in the United States from the 1960s through the 2000s.
Why Dick Cavett Appears in the Documents
Dick Cavett is mentioned in 3 documents within the Epstein file corpus, consisting of 3 emails, originating from the House Oversight Committee.
These appearances are in: "Cavett's guilt and horror - anagram", "Cavett's guilt and horror - anagram", "Forward: radical breakthrough". Based on the document summaries, these mentions appear to be incidental — Dick Cavett's name comes up in the context of broader discussions rather than in direct connection to Jeffrey Epstein or his activities.
Disclaimer: Appearing in the Epstein document corpus does not imply wrongdoing, guilt, or any form of association with criminal activity. Many public figures are mentioned incidentally in these documents due to the broad scope of the released materials.
Documents (3)
Cavett's guilt and horror - anagram
An internal email thread reveals Dick Cavett admitting he once gave Jeffrie a false anagram and then correcting it by claiming that the letters in “PRESIDENT TRUMP” rearrange to “MR. PUTIN’S RED PET,” accompanied by a brief aside about “the chicken matter” and a reference to House Oversight.
Source: House Oversight Committee
Cavett's guilt and horror - anagram
An internal email thread reveals Dick Cavett admitting he once gave Jeffrie a false anagram and then correcting it by claiming that the letters in “PRESIDENT TRUMP” rearrange to “MR. PUTIN’S RED PET,” accompanied by a brief aside about “the chicken matter” and a reference to House Oversight.
Source: House Oversight Committee
Forward: radical breakthrough
This forwarded email reads as a sprawling, stream-of-consciousness brainstorm mixing names and affiliations with a broad set of speculative notes on neuroscience, cognition, and a possible radical breakthrough in AI—covering topics such as coherent visual and auditory representations, mental objects and neural knotting, memory, perception and attention, motivation and deception, power laws and economic dynamics, and even bio-inspired ideas like membrane computing, FFTs, and plant communication, all wrapped in a confidentiality notice.
Source: House Oversight Committee