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Sickening contents of Epstein’s secret hideout revealed

Jeffrey Epstein used one of his secret stashes across America to stash slave manuals, nude images and pornographic material, according to newly surfaced data that sheds further light on the scale and secrecy of his activities.

If RadarOnline.com Recently, the late s– human trafficker, who died in 2019 at the age of 66, revealed a series of lockups across the US – most of them in Florida – between 2003 and 2019, paying thousands of dollars to extract assets from his properties.

The material contained therein was said to have been transferred ahead of a planned police raid on his Palm Beach mansion in October 2005. The items were said to have been stored at a facility in Florida for years while authorities investigated allegations of abuse involving underage girls.

An inventory of one of the units has now revealed lists of computers, address books and explicit media.

The safe contained disturbing and highly sensitive material, including nude photographs believed to depict victims and video recordings of sexualised teenagers.

A former law enforcement source familiar with the case said: “Taken together, the types of documented material strongly indicate a deliberate attempt to move and secure potentially incriminating items to places where authorities would be less likely to find them during searches.

“The level of detail in the directories, alongside the compiled lists of masseuses, suggests that this was not a random registration, but part of an organized framework that supported and maintained Epstein’s broader network of contacts and operations.”

One lockup’s inventory included three computers, 29 address books and a three-page list of masseuses operating in Florida. Other items included VHS tapes, DVDs, an 8mm cassette apparently showing a woman in lingerie, and personal documents such as lab results and a 2005 calendar.

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It comes next Radar revealed that Epstein installed secret cameras in everyday objects including Kleenex boxes, raising new questions about how he may have collected material to influence powerful figures.

He allegedly ordered the installation of hidden surveillance devices in household items at his properties, including his mansion in New York and his estate in Florida.

Emails included instructions for installing motion-activated cameras disguised in tissue boxes, with one contact sending him an email saying: “Remember what we talked about if you want to install cameras in your home. It will have to be done very discreetly. The Russians may come in handy.”

The revelations are part of a broader cache of documents and financial data showing that Epstein also used a network of storage units in the US to hide computers, photos and electronic equipment.

A source familiar with the documents said: “The use of something as mundane as a Kleenex box to conceal surveillance equipment indicates a level of planning that goes beyond casual monitoring. It suggests a deliberate attempt to gather information discreetly, in a way that would never arouse suspicion among guests or staff moving through these premises.

“The mention of the Russians shows that Epstein clearly had plans to make key figures his puppets in the global honeytrap spy ring he clearly led.”

They noted: “Epstein was essentially hoarding recordings of powerful people in highly compromising situations, passing them on to his spy handlers, and it was used as bribery material.”

Records show that from 2003 through 2019, Epstein secretly rented at least six storage units across America, including in New York and Florida. The payments continued for years after the initial investigations began, with credit card receipts showing regular charges.

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