These are the Spaniards who appear on Epstein's contact list
The White House and the US Department of Justice publish the magnate's contact book, among other documents that had already been previously leaked
US Attorney General Pam Bondi released a package of documents from the Epstein case a few days ago. Despite expectations, the White House and the Justice Department have released previously leaked and known files. Among the previously unpublished documents released are: The Tycoon's Contact Book, a list where hundreds of people appear, among them several Spaniards. One of them is Alejandro Agag, José María Aznar's son-in-law, and another is the former president's son, José Aznar, which does not mean that they have committed any crime. In fact, the newspaper The Country He claims to have been able to contact them and both claim that they are on the list for business reasons. The names of Jacobo Gordon, convicted in the Gürtel case, Maite Arango, a director of Acciona who belongs to the board of trustees of the Princess of Asturias Foundation, and Joaquín Fernández de Córdoba, Duke of Arión, also appear on the list.
The content of the four documents
The contact list was included in one of four documents released by the Justice Department on Thursday. The department itself has stated that there are still more files in the case to be revealed. The first of the four documents is a brief three-page list of different objects without much context or specifics, such as massage tables and sex toys, and also mentions a red bag with "two photographs of women's buttocks." In no case is it stated that these objects are part of the Epstein case.
Although the volume of the second package of documents - more than 120 pages - had generated much expectation, it has finally turned out that this entire file contains information already previously released about the passengers of Epstein's private flights. In addition, some of the documents are almost illegible and contain information that is part of the Ghislaine Maxwell case and not Epstein's.
The third document barely provides any concrete information, but it is valuable to understand the magnitude of the case: seven pages with 254 names crossed out of people who appear as "masseuses", alleged victims of sexual exploitation. To protect the victims, the identity of the people on the list is unknown, but it has emerged that many of them were minors at the time of the events. The fourth document is part of the file that includes the different contacts collected by Epstein and Maxwell, which includes different names of Spanish personalities. This same list was already published by Anonymous in 2020, although at that time the reliability of this content, now published by the Department of Justice, was questioned.
Jeffrey Epstein, tycoon, pedophile and sexual predator, He committed suicide in prison in August 2019 while awaiting trial for child sex trafficking. The scandal, which involved all kinds of personalities, is still raging today and, in fact, the world is still waiting for some documents to be declassified. According to Pam Bondi, the US government has demanded that the FBI hand over all the files, which could be declassified soon.