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The documents are public. The EFTA archive has been online for years, and everything you're about to read was sitting there the whole time.

Richard Kahn, Epstein's accountant and estate co-executor, bought a fully equipped ambulance for Zorro Ranch, delivered with an EMT instructor. He also managed a second ambulance for Little Saint James. Two properties, two ambulances, one accountant.

The ranch had a fire truck from 1961 with an engine from the 1950s. Custom gaskets had to be fabricated. Epstein spent the money anyway.

The maintenance schedule, written and formal and kept by a staffer named Manolito, is the most damning document of all. Daily: check the gun cabinet. Bi-weekly: ammunition inventory. Monthly: run the fire truck, check the oxygen bottles, test the foam packs.

There were horses, too, and a farrier named Robert Holt who got paid monthly for shoeing them. There was a vault next to the wood shop, a runway, a hangar, five to six full-time staff, and a guy named Carlos J. Delgado on bi-weekly payroll from a Deutsche Bank account in the US Virgin Islands. None of this has ever been publicly reported. Until now.

The FBI interviewed the ranch manager, Brice Gordon, at the guest house. He told them he could provide the names of every masseuse Epstein brought in — some of them hired locally from Ten Thousand Waves Day Spa in Santa Fe. The agents followed him to the office to get the records.

Then his phone rang — it was the main office. They were no longer allowed to speak with the agents. The interview ended and the ranch was never forensically searched. The names were never provided.

The New Mexico Truth Commission has subpoena power. The tip line is active. Link in the piece.

Ranch Central: What Jeffrey Epstein Was Building in New Mexico While No One Was Looking
Apr 26
at
3:37 PM
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