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“There were doctors and psychiatrists and gynecologist visits. There were dentists who whitened our teeth. There was a doctor who gave me Xanax. What doctor in their right mind, who is supposed to protect their patients, gives girls and young women Xanax?” said victim Virginia Giuffre, who was one of Epstein’s child sex slaves who was trafficked to Prince Andrew when she was just a teenager.
Following the arrest and subsequent death in prison of alleged child sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein, a little-known Israeli tech company began to receive increased publicity, but for all the wrong reasons. Not long after Epstein’s arrest, and his relationships and finances came under scrutiny, it was revealed that the Israeli company Carbyne911 had received substantial funding from Jeffrey Epstein as well as Epstein’s close associate and former Prime Minister of Israel Ehud Barak, and Silicon Valley venture capitalist and prominent Trump backer Peter Thiel.
Carbyne911, or simply Carbyne, develops call-handling and identification capabilities for emergency response services in countries around the world, including the United States, where it has already been implemented in several U.S. counties and has partnered with major U.S. tech companies like Google.
Britain’s Prince Andrew has once again triggered “tremendous public disgust” after it emerged that the disgraced royal has been living in luxury rent-free for the past 22 years.
Andrew recently relinquished his title as the Duke of York amid ongoing accusations tied to Jeffrey Epstein.
Now, King Charles III’s brother is facing new scrutiny after reports revealed he has lived rent-free in his 30-room Royal Lodge home in Windsor for more than two decades.
According to The Times, which obtained the leasehold agreement, Andrew paid £1 million ($1.33M) for the lease and invested another £7.5 million ($10M) in refurbishments completed in 2005.
Since 2003, the disgraced royal has paid just “one peppercorn (if demanded)” per year in rent.
The lease allows Andrew and his ex-wife, Sarah Ferguson, to occupy the residence until 2078.
If he were to give up the lease early, The Times reports that The Crown Estate would owe him compensation of roughly £185,865 ($248K) per year until 2028, totaling more than £550,000 ($667K).
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