Now the heat is on Thorbjørn Jagland, the former Secretary General of the Council of Europe, former Prime Minister of Norway, and Chair of the Norwegian Nobel Committee that awarded Obama the Nobel Prize.
Meanwhile, Epstein’s best friend is the President of the United States, destroying not only the White House but also the very fabric of American Society and US global standing.
In September, the Epstein Fallout Just Went Global: Peter Mandelson, the UK’s ambassador to the United States, was fired over his links to Jeffrey Epstein. Then, soon after, Prince Andrew was stripped of all titles after Virginia Giuffre’s memoir. Her family declares ‘victory’. This could have happened long ago, as it’s been known for more than two decades:
Daily Mail: Prince Andrew, Donald and Melania Trump at a party with billionaire paedophile Jeffrey Epstein at the President’s Florida Mar-a-Lago club in 2000
The latest revelations are also not new. Thorbjørn Jagland had to answer for it more than ten years ago; he then dismissed the accusations as a conspiracy theory and his own behavior as normal diplomacy.
“But her emails” might be the phrase that handed the Apprentice his first term in the White House. Let’s make sure his friendship with Epstein, who died while in his custody, and his emails become what takes the criminal, rapist, Felon 47 down.
Today’s Epstein Associate Larry Summers
Former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers is stepping back from his duties at Harvard University amid renewed scrutiny of his friendship with Jeffrey Epstein. Apparently, until today, you can be in a pedophile ring and be a professor at Harvard, but lose your whole career for saying Palestinians have a right to exist. That is zionism.
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Jeffrey Epstein had 1,571 names of contacts in his little black book.
Fewer than 40 names—just 2.4%—were circled.
Donald Trump’s was one of them.
Epstein had 14 phone numbers for Trump. Fourteen ways to reach him.
If that’s not “being on the Epstein List,” what the f*ck is?
— Seth Abramson (@sethabramson.bsky.social) November 14, 2025 at 7:29 AM

European Democratic Party; Many may not remember the controversial summit between Trump and Putin in Helsinki in 2018. During that meeting, the U.S. president publicly questioned his own intelligence services and appeared disturbingly deferential towards the Russian leader. The backlash in Washington was immediate and bipartisan. Now, newly released emails reveal that, before that summit, Jeffrey Epstein offered himself as a secret channel to the Kremlin, claiming he had helped Russian diplomats “understand Trump.”
We don’t know what’s true in these exchanges — nor do we know what Epstein may have shared with Russian contacts. But the timing of this initiative, so close to the Helsinki summit and its troubling outcome, raises serious questions. And it adds to growing concerns about Trump’s attitude towards Putin, which has remained remarkably accommodating over the past year. We believe that transparency is not optional — it is essential to protect democracy and rebuild trust.

Russian ‘backchannel’ Subject of Mail between Epstein and Jagland

Of course, we all know Lavrov, Russia’s longest-serving foreign minister since the Soviet era. Sergey Viktorovich Lavrov is a Russian diplomat who has served as Minister of Foreign Affairs since 2004.
Vitaly Churkin, on the other hand, might not be a household name for most people. Vitaly Ivanovich Churkin (February 21, 1952 – February 20, 2017) was a prominent Russian diplomat who served as Russia’s Permanent Representative to the United Nations from 2006. In 2014, Churkin presented a letter from ousted Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych to the UN, requesting Russian intervention—directly aligning with Putin’s decision to invade Crimea.
Churkin died of an apparent heart attack in his New York office the day before his 65th birthday; the exact cause was not publicly disclosed due to diplomatic immunity requests from Russia.
Churkin’s ties to Trump trace back to the 1980s and resurfaced in Epstein-related documents. As a junior diplomat at the Soviet Embassy in Washington, Churkin—known for his fluent English and slang—helped Soviet Ambassador Yuri Dubinin organize Trump’s first trip to the Soviet Union in July 1987, ostensibly for business discussions about a Moscow hotel project. This visit, later detailed in Trump’s book The Art of the Deal, has fueled speculation about early Russian cultivation of Trump, though no direct evidence of recruitment exists. More recently, the 2018 Epstein emails claim Churkin discussed Trump with Epstein before Churkin’s 2017 death, with Epstein boasting that Churkin “understood Trump after our conversations” and that “it is not complex—he must be seen to get something, it’s that simple.” Epstein positioned himself as an advisor on Trump’s psychology for Russian diplomats. Trump, upon Churkin’s death, issued a White House statement calling him an “accomplished diplomat” who “worked alongside his U.S. counterparts… for more than a decade,” expressing sadness at the loss. These links underscore Churkin’s role in U.S.-Russia backchannels during Trump’s rise.
Epstein mails list for Steve Bannon, 40 days before his death



“Donald trump knew that I was thirteen”
— The Resonance (@Partisan_12) November 15, 2025
Katie Johnson is one of the victims of Donald J Trump. pic.twitter.com/LDffvjgZ5d



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