Jeffrey Epstein, the notorious sex offender, was drafting a letter to Leslie Wexner, the billionaire retail tycoon who had once been his main financial benefactor. Years after their acrimonious split in 2007, Mr. Epstein was contemplating the rekindling of that relationship, and he apparently wanted to remind Mr. Wexner of what he said was their shared history.
“You and I had ‘gang stuff’ for over 15 years,” Mr. Epstein wrote in a draft of the letter, which was included in the millions of pages of Epstein-related documents that the Justice Department released last week. He noted that “I owe a great debt to you, as frankly you owe to me.” He added that he had “no intention of divulging any confidence of ours.”
It is not clear what Mr. Epstein was hinting at or whether he even sent the undated letter, which was addressed to “Les.” Mr. Wexner — the source of hundreds of millions of dollars of Mr. Epstein’s wealth — has not been charged with wrongdoing.
But the letter fit into a broad pattern in which Mr. Epstein toyed with the idea of telling his past, present and potential financial sponsors that he knew — and was keeping quiet about — their supposed secrets. The messages, written with stray punctuation and spelling errors, veered from menacing to sentimental.
There was the 2013 email that Mr. Epstein sent to himself about the billionaire Bill Gates. The email rattled off the “morally inappropriate” work supposedly done for Mr. Gates, including procuring antibiotics “to deal with consequences of sex with russian girls” and arranging “illicit trysts, with married women.” It is not clear whether the allegations are true, why Mr. Epstein drafted the email or whether it was ever sent to Mr. Gates.
There were the dozens of messages that Mr. Epstein sent to Leon Black, the private equity billionaire, badgering him for millions of dollars and, on at least one occasion, noting Mr. Epstein’s work structuring payments Mr. Black made to a woman who accused him of sexual assault. (Newly released documents show that Mr. Epstein recommended Mr. Black hire an investigator to track the woman’s movements and that he was receiving updates on other women to whom Mr. Black had made payments.)