It’s gotten awfully quiet in the last few days about Jeffrey Epstein and his pedophile lifestyle. Turns out that ABC hack and former Clinton goon, George Stephanopoulos was at a big party for Jeffrey Epstein in 2010, shortly after he was released from prison on that plea deal that sunk Alex Acosta. Katie Couric and George Stephanopoulos, comedienne Chelsea Handler, and director Woody Allen all sat around the same dinner table of convicted Epstein. It’s also been rumored that George Stephanopoulos has taken a few trips to pedo island with Bill Clinton, though there is no concrete proof of that yet.
George Stephanopoulos partied with pedophile Jeffrey Epstein in 2010 |
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On the evening of December 2nd, 2010, a handful of America’s media and entertainment elite—including TV anchors Katie Couric and George Stephanopoulos, comedienne Chelsea Handler, and director Woody Allen—convened around the dinner table of convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. It wasn’t just any dining room, but part of a sprawling nine-story townhouse that once housed an entire preparatory school. And it wasn’t just any sex offender, but an enigmatic billionaire who had once flown the likes of former President Bill Clinton and former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak around the world on his own Boeing 727. Last spring, Epstein completed a 13-month sentence for soliciting prostitution from a minor in Palm Beach. Now he was hosting a party for his close friend, Britain’s Prince Andrew, fourth in line to the throne.
When a photo later surfaced of the two men walking in Central Park that weekend, the British press seized on the story, spinning out weeks of headlines about the 16-year relationship between Epstein and Andrew, with salacious details of underage “masseuses” and even a cozy weekend in Balmoral. Members of parliament began calling for Prince Andrew’s resignation as Britain’s trade envoy, and when another photo surfaced of Andrew and a 17-year-old concubine Epstein had allegedly “loaned” him splashed across the London tabs, even Britain’s business secretary wouldn’t confirm the royal could keep his role. But the uproar over “The Prince and The Perv”—as the British headlines screamed—mysteriously drowned in the Mid-Atlantic. New Yorkers barely batted an eye about the scandal-mongering across the pond. “A jail sentence doesn’t matter anymore,” says David Patrick Columbia, founder of New York Social Diary. “The only thing that gets you shunned in New York society is poverty.”