
Robert De Niro
Robert Anthony De Niro is an American actor, director, film producer, and restaurateur. He is considered to be one of the greatest and most influential actors of his generation.
Why Robert De Niro Appears in the Documents
Robert De Niro is mentioned in 13 documents within the Epstein file corpus, consisting of 7 articles, 5 emails, 1 book, originating from the House Oversight Committee.
These documents include titles such as "Filthy Rich", "Filthy Rich: Jeffrey Epstein (Chapters 20-38)", "Oscar Diary" among others. Robert De Niro's name appears across these documents in various contexts. The document corpus contains a wide range of materials including media coverage, government records, and legal proceedings where many public figures are mentioned.
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 (13)
Filthy Rich
Filthy Rich chronicles Jeffrey Epstein’s rise from a Brooklyn-born financier to a billionaire whose velvet circle—Ghislaine Maxwell and a constellation of powerful men including Les Wexner, Donald Trump, Prince Andrew, and Alan Dershowitz—helped him recruit, traffic, and conceal underage victims. The narrative threads through Epstein’s charm, leverage, and expansive network that opened doors to elite wealth and influence, including his patronage of scientists and high-society mind-shifts, while detailing how Maxwell and others facilitated the abuse, transported girls, and kept a precarious duplicitous system afloat. It also exposes the legal arc surrounding his crimes: a controversial 2007–2008 non-prosecution agreement, a 2008 state guilty plea that resulted in a relatively light sentence and life-time sex-offender registration, and later civil suits and federal probes that continued to haunt his associates and the public conscience. Against the glittering glamour of elite access lies a culture of entitlements where money and status often shielded horrific acts, a truth slowly laid bare by victims’ testimonies and investigative scrutiny.
Source: House Oversight Committee
Filthy Rich
Filthy Rich chronicles Jeffrey Epstein’s rise from a Brooklyn-born financier to a billionaire whose velvet circle—Ghislaine Maxwell and a constellation of powerful men including Les Wexner, Donald Trump, Prince Andrew, and Alan Dershowitz—helped him recruit, traffic, and conceal underage victims. The narrative threads through Epstein’s charm, leverage, and expansive network that opened doors to elite wealth and influence, including his patronage of scientists and high-society mind-shifts, while detailing how Maxwell and others facilitated the abuse, transported girls, and kept a precarious duplicitous system afloat. It also exposes the legal arc surrounding his crimes: a controversial 2007–2008 non-prosecution agreement, a 2008 state guilty plea that resulted in a relatively light sentence and life-time sex-offender registration, and later civil suits and federal probes that continued to haunt his associates and the public conscience. Against the glittering glamour of elite access lies a culture of entitlements where money and status often shielded horrific acts, a truth slowly laid bare by victims’ testimonies and investigative scrutiny.
Source: House Oversight Committee
Filthy Rich
Filthy Rich chronicles Jeffrey Epstein’s rise from a Brooklyn-born financier to a billionaire whose velvet circle—Ghislaine Maxwell and a constellation of powerful men including Les Wexner, Donald Trump, Prince Andrew, and Alan Dershowitz—helped him recruit, traffic, and conceal underage victims. The narrative threads through Epstein’s charm, leverage, and expansive network that opened doors to elite wealth and influence, including his patronage of scientists and high-society mind-shifts, while detailing how Maxwell and others facilitated the abuse, transported girls, and kept a precarious duplicitous system afloat. It also exposes the legal arc surrounding his crimes: a controversial 2007–2008 non-prosecution agreement, a 2008 state guilty plea that resulted in a relatively light sentence and life-time sex-offender registration, and later civil suits and federal probes that continued to haunt his associates and the public conscience. Against the glittering glamour of elite access lies a culture of entitlements where money and status often shielded horrific acts, a truth slowly laid bare by victims’ testimonies and investigative scrutiny.
Source: House Oversight Committee
Filthy Rich: Jeffrey Epstein (Chapters 20-38)
Filthy Rich traces Jeffrey Epstein’s ascent from a Brooklyn-born prodigy to a billionaire whose influence stretched across finance, fashion, and high society, aided by mentors and collaborators like Ace Greenberg, Leslie Wexner, Ghislaine Maxwell, and others who opened doors to wealth, power, and glamorous access. It chronicles his improbable career moves—from Bear Stearns to independent ventures and tax-weaving schemes—while revealing a pattern of cultivating a circle of beautiful women and underage girls, with Maxwell helping recruit and facilitate abuse, and victims’ accounts that span Palm Beach, New York, and beyond. The book also details how Epstein and his allies navigated investigations, media scrutiny, and lawsuits—illustrating how money, secrecy, and social connections enabled seemingly untouchable influence, even as explosive allegations and investigations mounted against him.
Source: House Oversight Committee
Filthy Rich: Jeffrey Epstein (Chapters 20-38)
Filthy Rich traces Jeffrey Epstein’s ascent from a Brooklyn-born prodigy to a billionaire whose influence stretched across finance, fashion, and high society, aided by mentors and collaborators like Ace Greenberg, Leslie Wexner, Ghislaine Maxwell, and others who opened doors to wealth, power, and glamorous access. It chronicles his improbable career moves—from Bear Stearns to independent ventures and tax-weaving schemes—while revealing a pattern of cultivating a circle of beautiful women and underage girls, with Maxwell helping recruit and facilitate abuse, and victims’ accounts that span Palm Beach, New York, and beyond. The book also details how Epstein and his allies navigated investigations, media scrutiny, and lawsuits—illustrating how money, secrecy, and social connections enabled seemingly untouchable influence, even as explosive allegations and investigations mounted against him.
Source: House Oversight Committee
Filthy Rich: Jeffrey Epstein (Chapters 20-38)
Filthy Rich traces Jeffrey Epstein’s ascent from a Brooklyn-born prodigy to a billionaire whose influence stretched across finance, fashion, and high society, aided by mentors and collaborators like Ace Greenberg, Leslie Wexner, Ghislaine Maxwell, and others who opened doors to wealth, power, and glamorous access. It chronicles his improbable career moves—from Bear Stearns to independent ventures and tax-weaving schemes—while revealing a pattern of cultivating a circle of beautiful women and underage girls, with Maxwell helping recruit and facilitate abuse, and victims’ accounts that span Palm Beach, New York, and beyond. The book also details how Epstein and his allies navigated investigations, media scrutiny, and lawsuits—illustrating how money, secrecy, and social connections enabled seemingly untouchable influence, even as explosive allegations and investigations mounted against him.
Source: House Oversight Committee
Oscar Diary
Peggy Siegal’s Oscar Diary offers a candid, insider account of the 85th Academy Awards weekend, tracing the social theater from ticket lineups and a line-cutting DreamWorks moment to the backstage chatter, campaigns, and box-office power that shape the race, with behind-the-scenes conversations about the Best Actress contenders, the politics surrounding Zero Dark Thirty and Les Misérables, and the global prestige and party-going hustle that define this glamorous, high-stakes Hollywood week.
Source: House Oversight Committee
My Thoughts on Currencies
Stephen L. Jen’s November 2016 note contends that after Trump’s victory markets may retrace in the near term, but the overarching trend will be shaped by a policy mix that strengthens the dollar and subjects the Fed to greater scrutiny, with growth hinges on faster nominal GDP and a move toward Growth Alpha through targeted fiscal reform and industrial policy. Global trade shifts away from unconditional globalization toward bilateral arrangements, while governments must lead structural improvements in areas like R&D, regulation, and infrastructure to sustain growth. Emerging markets will diverge, benefiting those with genuine growth drivers and facing renewed stress for those stuck on growth beta, as Europe grapples with a slate of elections and political headwinds. Framed as an “Economic Olympics,” the note urges decisive national strategy—especially tax reform and smart investment—to boost competitiveness and manage financial risk in a post-globalization world.
Source: House Oversight Committee
My Thoughts on Currencies
Stephen L. Jen’s November 2016 note contends that after Trump’s victory markets may retrace in the near term, but the overarching trend will be shaped by a policy mix that strengthens the dollar and subjects the Fed to greater scrutiny, with growth hinges on faster nominal GDP and a move toward Growth Alpha through targeted fiscal reform and industrial policy. Global trade shifts away from unconditional globalization toward bilateral arrangements, while governments must lead structural improvements in areas like R&D, regulation, and infrastructure to sustain growth. Emerging markets will diverge, benefiting those with genuine growth drivers and facing renewed stress for those stuck on growth beta, as Europe grapples with a slate of elections and political headwinds. Framed as an “Economic Olympics,” the note urges decisive national strategy—especially tax reform and smart investment—to boost competitiveness and manage financial risk in a post-globalization world.
Source: House Oversight Committee
My Thoughts on Currencies
Stephen L. Jen’s November 2016 note contends that after Trump’s victory markets may retrace in the near term, but the overarching trend will be shaped by a policy mix that strengthens the dollar and subjects the Fed to greater scrutiny, with growth hinges on faster nominal GDP and a move toward Growth Alpha through targeted fiscal reform and industrial policy. Global trade shifts away from unconditional globalization toward bilateral arrangements, while governments must lead structural improvements in areas like R&D, regulation, and infrastructure to sustain growth. Emerging markets will diverge, benefiting those with genuine growth drivers and facing renewed stress for those stuck on growth beta, as Europe grapples with a slate of elections and political headwinds. Framed as an “Economic Olympics,” the note urges decisive national strategy—especially tax reform and smart investment—to boost competitiveness and manage financial risk in a post-globalization world.
Source: House Oversight Committee
Oscar Diary
Peggy Siegal’s Oscar Diary from March 2013 offers a vivid insider’s portrait of the 85th Academy Awards season: the feverish, star-studded social circuit, the colossal, money‑driven campaigns behind favorites like Argo, Lincoln, Life of Pi, Les Misérables, Django Unchained, and Zero Dark Thirty, the behind‑the‑scenes debates and political undercurrents shaping winners and snubs, and a backstage world of line‑cut invitations, fashion fittings, high‑pressure meetings, and relentless networking as Siegal navigates the theater of Oscars week.
Source: House Oversight Committee
SNL Baldwin Trump, De Niro Mueller cold open
An internal email from Richard Kahn of HBRK Associates to Jeffrey Epstein, sharing a link to an Axios piece about Saturday Night Live’s season 44 finale cold open, featuring Alec Baldwin as Trump and Robert De Niro as Mueller.
Source: House Oversight Committee
SNL Baldwin Trump, De Niro Mueller cold open
An internal email from Richard Kahn of HBRK Associates to Jeffrey Epstein, sharing a link to an Axios piece about Saturday Night Live’s season 44 finale cold open, featuring Alec Baldwin as Trump and Robert De Niro as Mueller.
Source: House Oversight Committee