Sergey Brin, Google co-founder, reportedly visited Jeffrey Epstein’s infamous ‘pedophile island’: Court documents

Sergey

Google co-founder Sergey Brin and his wife visited the infamous Jeffrey Epstein pedophile island, according to a new batch of unsealed court documents released on Monday (Jan 8).

Sarah Ransome, one of Epstein’s accusers, stated that she met Brin and his fiancée at the time, Anne Wojcicki, on the late financier’s private island. In a series of emails to journalist Maureen Callahan in 2016, Ransome supplied images from her time in Epstein’s circle, including one with Brin and Wojcicki.

“I also have other photos of the Epstein girls and I, whilst on the Island including a couple of pictures of me with Sergey Brin and his then finance Anne Wojcicki,” Ransome said in one of the emails, as sourced by the New York Post.

“I met the pair when they visited the Island for the day as Sergey wanted to try out his new kite surfing equipment as he had only just started surfing and was very eager to try out his new equipment with us girls,” she added.

Brin has already been linked to Epstein in lawsuits alleging that the pedophile enticed the Google CEO to conduct business with banking behemoth JPMorgan Chase.

According to court documents released last year, Brin became a JPMorgan client in 2004 on Epstein’s recommendation and went on to collect almost $4 billion in accounts. Other records revealed that Epstein asked a JPMorgan banker about the ostensibly tax-saving Grantor-Retained Annuity Trust (GRAT) while Brin was present.

Brin is not the only Google co-founder who has been linked to Epstein. Last year, the US Virgin Islands government stated that it was having difficulty contacting Larry Page to serve him with a subpoena in connection with a case against JPMorgan Chase for allegedly supporting Jeffrey Epstein’s sex trafficking organization.

According to the Virgin Islands government’s three-page court docs, the 50-year-old billionaire Google executive “is a high-net-worth individual to whom Epstein may have referred or attempted to refer JPMorgan.”

The Virgin Islands asserted that despite good faith efforts, including engaging an investigative agency to investigate public record databases, it had been unable to identify Page, who co-founded and co-owns Alphabet Inc.

JPMorgan Chase reached an agreement with the US Virgin Islands in September last year to settle charges that it enabled disgraced late financier Jeffrey Epstein’s exploitation of teenage females.

The bank made no admissions of wrongdoing in the settlement, which provided $55 million to Virgin Islands charities and anti-trafficking operations.

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