Wednesday, February 04, 2026

Chump's greed will be the end of him

Isaiah's THE WORLD TODAY JUST NUTS "Cosplay Expert


hegsethbs

 

Second up, Katie Phang.

 


Elaine noted "Chump targets Don Lemon" and Jim Acosta is convinced Chump is contemplating more arrests of journalists.  He told MS NOW:


"One of the things that Donald Trump relies upon is having the press in there, taking his picture and putting him on TV," Acosta said. "It's what he likes and craves. And so I say, if he's going to continue to arrest journalists — take it. Take it away from him.

"And I just think at this point it's going to take some kind of collective action. And I just think, you know, there's been so much bending the knee over the last year that it's emboldened him. And so I think what's needed at this point is just strong, determined action to send the message that we're just not going to tolerate this. And we also need to make sure that folks like Don [Lemon] understand that we all support him. This shouldn't be a moment where folks say, well, you know, 'Don did this or that,' or 'maybe I don't like Don. And so I'm not going to support him.' No."

Acosta has had plenty of experience of pushing back against the Trump administration. In 2018, the White House revoked Acosta's press pass and barred him from covering the president. Acosta has described how the president's approval was not his concern.


Don Lemon was arrested for reporting.  Reporting in the US under Chump is a crime.  That's how much Chump has degraded our country.


Legal experts say President Donald Trump’s $10 billion lawsuit against the IRS over the leak of his tax information raises a plethora of legal and ethical questions, including the propriety of the leader of the executive branch pursuing scorched-earth litigation against the very government he is in charge of.
The lawsuit, filed Thursday in federal court in Florida, includes the president’s sons Donald Jr. and Eric as plaintiffs. It alleges that the leak of Trump's and the Trump Organization’s confidential tax records caused “reputational and financial harm, public embarrassment, unfairly tarnished their business reputations, portrayed them in a false light, and negatively affected President Trump, and the other Plaintiffs’ public standing.”

In 2024, former IRS contractor Charles Edward Littlejohn, of Washington, D.C. — who worked for Booz Allen Hamilton, a defense and national security tech firm — was sentenced to five years in prison after pleading guilty to leaking tax information about Trump and others to two news outlets between 2018 and 2020.

The outlets were not named in the charging documents, but the description and time frame align with stories about Trump’s tax returns in The New York Times and reporting about wealthy Americans’ taxes in the nonprofit investigative journalism organization ProPublica. The 2020 New York Times report found Trump paid $750 in federal income tax the year he first entered the White House and no income tax at all some years thanks to reported colossal losses.
[. . .]

Amy Hanauer, executive director at the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, says a legal remedy has already been provided for the leak.

“The contractor who leaked this information has been imprisoned, the Trump administration’s Treasury Department canceled its contracts with the company that employed the leaker, and the IRS issued a rare public apology to taxpayers affected by the leak,” and the IRS has pledged to strengthen its data protection procedures as a result, Hanauer said.

She adds that “even if an unbiased judge rightly rejects Trump’s demands as preposterous, there is a great danger that the IRS would ‘agree’ to settle and pay out an enormous sum of taxpayer dollars to Trump.”

He doesn't deserve millions.  He's a liar and a bully.  You can see it in his continued attacks on Harvard University:


The standoff between President Donald Trump and Harvard University escalated late Monday night, with the president posting on Truth Social that he is now demanding $1 billion in damages and declaring that his administration wants "nothing further to do, into the future, with Harvard University."
The post came hours after The New York Times reported his administration had dropped a previous demand for a $200 million settlement to resolve a long-running dispute with the Ivy League school.

Trump has repeatedly accused Harvard and other universities of engaging in antisemitic behavior by falling to protect Jewish students during pro-Palestinian rallies on campus protests in 2024, and of promoting what he calls "woke" ideology through diversity and inclusion policies.

The Wall Street Journal and other outlets have reported that the Trump administration has cut off billions of dollars in federal research grants, frozen funding, threatened Harvard's tax-exempt status and targeted the enrollment of international students. Several of those actions have been challenged in court, including a ruling last year by a federal judge in Boston restoring Harvard's federal funding and blocking limits on international students. 
The Times reported Monday that Trump had "backtracked" on negotiations, citing four people familiar with the matter who said the president no longer expected a $200 million payment to end the dispute.
 
Hours later, Trump publicly rejected the report, accusing both Harvard and the newspaper of spreading misinformation.

"Strongly Antisemitic Harvard University has been feeding a lot of nonsense to the Failing New York Times," he wrote. "Harvard has been, for a long time, behaving very badly! They wanted to do a convoluted job training concept. "  

Trump went on to accuse the university of proposing a "convoluted job training concept" as a way to avoid paying what he described as a $500 million settlement. The Times reported that Harvard had previously rejected the idea of paying hundreds of millions of dollars to the U.S. Treasury amid backlash from liberal students and faculty. 

His greed will condemn him.  It will put him in the coffin before this is all over.  And the world won't shed a tear when -- in the midst of one of his rages -- he has a stroke and taps on out of this life. 


Here's C.I.'s "The Snapshot:"


Tuesday, February 3, 2026.  Donald Chump's name is all over the pages released last Friday in the latest Epstein document dump, at least three million pages remain unreleased, Donald wants the Republican Party to oversee voting in the US, Hegseth continues his embarrassing attack on Senator Mark Kelly, and much more. 



Donald Chump is lying again, claiming he's not even mentioned in the latest dump of 3 million pages of The Epstein Files when, in fact, he's mentioned over 1,000 times. 

 
Another lies that they tell is that these are all the documents and they're not.  And no one believes them.  Barney Henderson (NEWSWEEK) reports:


The DOJ has itself identified over 6 million pages of Epstein documents, Democratic members of the U.S. House Judiciary Committee pointed out over the weekend, but “released only about half of them—including over 200,000 pages that DOJ redacted or withheld.”

So what’s missing from the documents and is the worst yet to come for Trump, as the ghost of Epstein continues to haunt his old friends?
[. . .]
Robert Garcia, the top Democrat on the House Oversight Committee, accused Attorney General Pam Bondi and the DoJ of breaking the law.

In a statement he said: “Donald Trump and his Department of Justice have now made it clear that they intend to withhold roughly 50% of the Epstein files, while claiming to have fully complied with the law. This is outrageous and incredibly concerning.
“The Oversight Committee subpoena directs Pam Bondi to release all the files to the committee, while protecting survivors. They are in violation of the law.

“We are demanding the names of Epstein’s co-conspirators and the men and pedophiles who abused women and girls.”

Today,  Stephen Fowler and Jaclyn Diaz (NPR's MORNING EDITION) offer this overview of the latest document dump:



NPR's review of the documents has found numerous examples of the Justice Department failing to redact names of publicly identified victims of sexual abuse as well as names of individuals who have not previously been publicized.

The Epstein Files Transparency Act, signed by President Trump last year, called for the Justice Department to minimize its redactions while turning over information about the life and death of Epstein and the criminal charges he and his accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell faced. Maxwell is serving a 20-year sentence in federal prison for sexual exploitation and trafficking of children, crimes she committed with Epstein.

Those redactions, too, are inconsistent with what the law directs.

"In addition to the documentary redactions, which includes personal identifying information, victim information and other privileges, there is extensive redaction to images and videos to protect victims," Blanche said Friday, announcing the final batch of files. "We redacted every woman depicted in any image or video, with the exception of Ms. Maxwell. We did not redact images of any men unless it was impossible to redact the woman without also redacting the man."

But multiple examples can be found in the Epstein files repository that show the faces of women and hide the faces of men, including one text message conversation between former Trump adviser Steve Bannon and Epstein where Trump's face in a news article was obscured with a black box.

The files aren't shared in chronological order or grouped in any identifiable way. Countless duplicate copies of email threads, investigative files and correspondence are spread throughout the database, sometimes with different levels of redactions applied.

The same PowerPoint presentation prepared last fall by the Justice Department detailing the timeline and cases against Epstein and Maxwell, alleged victims and powerful figures in his orbit who faced allegations of misconduct appears six times with different information blocked out in each version.

Annie Farmer, one of the women who testified in court against Epstein and Maxwell, told NPR's All Things Considered on Monday that the redaction issues felt intentional.

"There's just no explanation for how it could've been done so poorly," she said. "They've had victims' names for a very long time. I don't think this is just about rushing to get this information out."


MEIDASTOUCH NEWS notes that the dump appears to exist to protect Chump "from political fallout."



"Roughly half of the material remains withheld or heavily redacted," MTN notes.  Six million pages and only three million released.  Anna Betts (GUARDIAN) notes:


One document in the newly released tranche is a summary that FBI officials appear to have compiled last summer, of more than a dozen tips received by the agency involving Trump and Epstein.

It is unclear why the investigators put together the summary, and it does not say when the tips, which include unsubstantiated claims of sexual abuse, were received. The document also does not include any corroborating evidence or indication that the tips were verified.

Trump has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing in connection with Epstein. In response to a request for comment from the New York Times, the White House referred to a statement from the justice department on Friday, which stated that the new tranche of documents “may include fake or falsely submitted images, documents or videos”. 

“Some of the documents contain untrue and sensationalist claims against President Trump that were submitted to the FBI right before the 2020 election,” the DoJ statement added. “To be clear, the claims are unfounded and false, and if they have a shred of credibility, they certainly would have been weaponized against President Trump already.”


Survivors of Epstein have been further attacked by the US government with the release of the papers which has not redacted all of their names, which has included non-redacted photos of the survivors.  

As Lawrence O'Donnell noted last night, this has led some survivors to call for pages released to be deleted. 







Geoff Bennett:

And for a closer look at the legal issues surrounding this latest release of Epstein files, we turn to Barbara McQuade. She's a former federal prosecutor and a professor at the University of Michigan Law School.

It's great to have you back on the program.

Barbara McQuade, Former U.S. Attorney:

Thanks, Geoff. Glad to be here with you.

Geoff Bennett:

So the Justice Department says Friday's release brings it into compliance with the Epstein Files Transparency Act, but millions of files, as you well know, remain unreleased, withheld for reasons like attorney-client privilege, privacy concerns, and the like.

Democrats are now demanding access to the full record. From a legal standpoint, did the DOJ actually comply with the law?

Barbara McQuade:

Well, no.

First of all, the deadline was December 19, and here we are many weeks after that deadline. But also, in light of all of these redactions, Geoff, I think there is some room to argue here that they're not in compliance in it.

Within 15 days, which should have been 15 days from December 19, the Justice Department is also required to produce a log explaining what was redacted and why. One of the things they have said they have redacted is internal memoranda and things that disclose their deliberative privileges.

But that was specifically spelled out in the statute that required production. That could be something that the Justice Department and Congress might have to litigate if the Justice Department continues to refuse to produce those things.

But I think that the enormous amount of redactions seems to go beyond the scope of what would be obvious, things like names of survivors and other things. And so I think we're going to have to see that log first before Congress can really ascertain exactly what was withheld.

Geoff Bennett:

Why have no perpetrators beyond Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell been charged, despite years of investigation and the volume of information that's now public?

Barbara McQuade:

Well, of course, we still don't know what's behind those redaction bars.

But I think what the public is seeing here is, there is a difference between things that are wrong, morally reprehensible, shady, even awful. But to prove a crime, you would have to show that someone engaged in actual sex trafficking. That means transporting someone across state lines who is underage for the purpose of engaging in sex acts or, if they are not a minor, doing so through threats or coercion.

That requires a level of intent, knowledge, and the actions of doing these things. And I don't know that we have seen any evidence that that was done. Certainly, just associated with Jeffrey Epstein or even making comments about women is not enough to bring a case.

And so, as I said, we don't know what's behind those redaction bars, but it would not surprise me if the Justice Department simply did not have sufficient evidence to prove some of these cases.

Geoff Bennett:

And that might address a question I have seen a lot online since Friday's release, which is, why did the Justice Department, under multiple presidential administrations, to include the Biden administration under Merrick Garland, why did they not pursue broader prosecutions tied to Epstein's network?

Barbara McQuade:

Yes, I think it's the same.

So, certainly, Jeffrey Epstein was charged before he committed suicide, and Ghislaine Maxwell was charged and convicted. I think her trial occurred in 2021. But just because -- we had a term we used when I was working as a prosecutor, which is awful, but lawful.

Sometimes, people engage in really hideous conduct. You investigate, but you are just not able to prove the elements of an offense beyond a reasonable doubt. And so certainly there is some shady information here going on, but it is actually one of the reasons that the Justice Department typically does not disclose records unless there is an indictment.

And that is to protect people's reputations when there really is just sort of this sort of slimy, kind of awful conduct that doesn't amount to a crime. So we're seeing all these disclosures about these wealthy and powerful men and their affiliations with Jeffrey Epstein.

Certainly, perhaps they showed poor judgment. They may even have attended parties and gone to his island and other kinds of things. But if they have not engaged in the crime of sex trafficking, it's really sort of inappropriate. Typically, the Justice Department protects people like that from disclosure to protect reputations when they cannot prove a criminal case.

Geoff Bennett:

We have also seen some survivors say that their identifying information was released accidentally. I would imagine, in these documents that they weren't properly redacted.

What obligation does the DOJ have to survivors in releases like this? And what corrective steps, if any, could be taken at this point to correct the wrong?

Barbara McQuade:

Well, the statute itself said that they should not produce, they should withhold and protect from production the names and other identifying information about survivors, which is par for the course.

It is typical, when the prosecution produces even discovery to a defendant, to redact those names and provide only that which is necessary to share with them for a fair trial. And so, in some instances, it strikes me as sloppy.

Now, I know they had millions of documents they had to review in a very short period of time, but that's the law. You need to make those your priorities. Maybe there's some things you can't do that month. Maybe there's some immigrants, Geoff, that can't be arrested that month because you need prosecutors to be reviewing the documents, in compliance with the law.

What can be done about it? I suppose there could be civil lawsuits to the extent that survivors want to file a lawsuit to suggest that they have been defamed in some way by the production of their names, in violation of this federal statute. I think they could have some civil remedies available.

Geoff Bennett:

I also want to get you to weigh in on another important matter. And that's President Trump today suggesting that Republicans should, in his words, nationalize the voting process.

And he argued it's necessary to prevent what he calls crooked Democrat-led states from allowing illegal voting. Here's what he told Dan Bongino.

President Donald Trump:

These people were brought to our country to vote, and they vote illegally. And the -- amazing that the Republicans aren't tougher on it. The Republicans should say, we want to take over. We should take over the voting in at least many, 15 places. The Republicans ought to nationalize the voting.

Geoff Bennett:

When the president says "these people," he's talking about undocumented immigrants.

The Brennan Center for Justice has said time and time again that this is a lie. It's a conspiracy theory. There is no widespread voting by noncitizens. But from a constitutional standpoint, what would it even mean to nationalize elections? And does the federal government have the authority to do that when elections are the authority of state governments?

Barbara McQuade:

No, the Constitution says that it is the states that set the time, place and manner for elections. And that has consistently been held to mean that we have not one national election. We have 50 elections throughout our country on Election Day.

And there's good reason for that. One is state sovereignty, but another is, that kind of decentralized system is what protects us against some sort of widespread fraud that attacks our nation or the collection of one database of all voting records.

But in terms of administering the elections, that is all done at the state level by the Constitution. So the only way to nationalize elections would be through a constitutional amendment.




President Trump called in a new interview for the Republican Party to “nationalize” voting in the United States, an aggressive rhetorical step that was likely to raise new worries about his administration’s efforts to involve itself in election matters.

During an extended monologue about immigration on a podcast released on Monday by Dan Bongino, his former deputy F.B.I. director, Mr. Trump called for Republican officials to “take over” voting procedures in 15 states, though he did not name them.

“The Republicans should say, ‘We want to take over,’” he said. “We should take over the voting, the voting in at least many — 15 places. The Republicans ought to nationalize the voting.”

Under the Constitution, American elections are governed primarily by state law, leading to a decentralized process in which voting is administered by county and municipal officials in thousands of precincts across the country. Mr. Trump, however, has long been fixated on the false claims that U.S. elections are rife with fraud and that Democrats are perpetrating a vast conspiracy to have undocumented immigrants vote and lift the party’s turnout.


Ruth covered Chump's latest nonsense in "Convicted Felon Chump does not like free and fair elections."


Lets move over to Chump's personal gestapo,  Svante Myrick (THE HILL) notes:


President Donald Trump’s domestic militia troops are still wearing masks as they terrorize American communities. But the mask is off the Trump regime’s fascist brutality, especially since the execution-style killing of VA nurse Alex Pretti by federal immigration officers and the brazenly dishonest smear campaign waged against the murdered man by top administration officials.  
Millions of Americans saw the truth virtually in real time thanks to video taken at the scene. Pretti was using his phone to peacefully document federal officials’ actions in Minneapolis. He came to the aid of a woman who had been shoved to the ground. Then he was attacked by multiple masked officers and without justification shot multiple times in the back while he lay on the ground. 

The regime’s well-practiced propaganda machine swung into action immediately, trying to frame media coverage with outlandish lies. 

The Department of Homeland Security and its leader Kristi Noem lied that Pretti “wanted to do maximum damage and massacre law enforcement” and “violently resisted.” White House deportation czar Stephen Miller called Pretti a “would-be assassin” who “tried to murder law enforcement.” Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth responded to the Pretti killing by telling ICE officials “we have your back 100 percent” and posting “ICE > MN.” Right-wing pundits parroted the official line, suggesting that Pretti was to blame for his own killing. 

This has been the administration’s go-to strategy in previous incidents of violence at the hands of federal law enforcement. And the administration’s MAGA lapdogs once again played their part, spreading the lies and smears.  

But it isn’t working this time. The video evidence is just too clear. And that made the response by administration officials too obviously dishonest and dishonorable. 


Stevan Bunnell, Gus Coldebella, Ivan Fong, Kara Lynum, Jonathan Meyer and John Mitnick "all served as general counsels or acting general counsels for the Department of Homeland Security."   At THE NEW YORK TIMES, they write:



Immigration and Customs Enforcement has reportedly issued a memorandum that authorizes its agents to enter private residences forcibly without a judicial warrant. James Percival, the general counsel for the Department of Homeland Security, recently defended the department’s policy and wrote that “deep-state actors in the federal government have for decades told ICE officers that they may not enter a fugitive alien’s home even with a final order of removal and administrative warrant.”

We disagree.

We previously sat in the seat he now occupies, serving in both Republican and Democratic administrations; this is not a partisan issue. We disagree not only with Mr. Percival’s position but also with his characterization of lawyers at the Department of Homeland Security and elsewhere who seek to uphold the rule of law.

It is not the so-called deep state that has restrained ICE from entering homes using only administrative warrants. It is the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution — and the lawyers who took an oath to support and defend it. We worked with thousands of homeland security lawyers. They sought to ensure that the department’s actions are lawful and protect the constitutional rights of the people its agents encounter in day-to-day operations. Attempting to tarnish department attorneys as “deep state” operatives for giving legal advice that is faithful to the Constitution is not only offensive but also dangerous. It sends a message: If you give your best professional advice and urge the department to respect the law, you will be attacked for doing your job.



Judge Fred Biery of the Western District of Texas issued an order releasing five-year-old Liam Conejo Ramos and his father Adrian Conejo Arias from the Dilley Immigration Processing Center. Liam became a symbol of the human cost of the Trump administration’s occupying surge in Minnesota when a camera caught him standing in the cold with a blue bunny hat and backpack while government agents arrested the child. Judge Biery’s short, poignant order delivers a comprehensive civics lesson laced with contempt for what the judge calls “the perfidious lust for unbridled power.”

[. . .]

Judge Biery may have fired off a bare bones opinion, but it only takes a handful of sentences to lay out the legal issue:

Civics lesson to the government: Administrative warrants issued by the executive branch to itself do not pass probable cause muster. That is called the fox guarding the henhouse. The Constitution requires an independent judicial officer.

This is, of course, exactly right. ICE has been conducting enforcement actions based on administrative warrants — essentially permission slips the executive branch writes for itself — rather than judicial warrants supported by probable cause. The Fourth Amendment requires the latter. This has always been the case, and the administration keeps lying about it.

We noted that verdict yesterday but it's worth noting again especially when Joe's the one weighing in on it. 

Secretary of Play War Pete Hegseth continues his attack on US Senator Mark Kelly.  The TV personality learned at FOX "NEWS" that you can repeat any lie and people may believe you.  As usual, Pete's gotten a number of the brain dead to think he can legally demote Kelly for comments he made.  As usual, Panties Pete is learning that the bulk of Americans are not stupid.  Julie Roland (FULCROM) explains:

Pete Hegseth's attacks on Senator Mark Kelly represent such an astonishing threat to the foundation of our democracy that over forty-one retired high-ranking military leaders have come together to sound off in protest.

While the Trump Administration was conducting Caribbean boat strikes of questionable legality, Kelly posted a video wherein he and other lawmakers reminded servicemembers that they should feel empowered to refuse to follow an unlawful order. He didn't mention the strikes; he was correct on the law, yet Secretary Hegseth wrote in a letter of censure that Kelly's speech "bring[s] discredit upon the armed forces," "prejudices good order and discipline," and amounts to "conduct unbecoming an officer," threatening him with a demotion and cuts to his benefits. These antics are so un-American that King George would be tickled.
As outlined in the amicus brief submitted by the Vet Voice Foundation along with dozens of Admirals and Generals, no retired servicemember can lawfully be sanctioned for making factual statements. But while Hegseth's arguments have no basis, a bogus claim could still set a dangerous precedent if Kelly loses, which would, as the venerable veterans articulated in their brief, make it "unclear what constitutional protection would remain for veterans wishing to express public disagreement with a present Administration…" In other words, if a veteran can get punished for this, what just happened to freedom of speech?

As a prior Lieutenant Commander in the Navy, I took an oath to support and defend the Constitution. I felt proud to defend the doc that holds our Bill of Rights. Similarly, as I learned to fire hellfire missiles and rockets, I was comforted by the constant reminder of my obligation to disobey unlawful orders. When Admirals lectured us on judgment and ethics, I could detect the checks and balances in the subtext of their speeches and felt reassured. This is not the message the Secretary of War is sending today. Hegseth's subtext says something more like: shut up and don't you dare challenge us.

Let's wind down with this from Senator Elizabeth Warren's office:

“The cuts to federal student lending in President Trump’s OBBBA will make it more difficult for Americans to finance their educations—opening the door for private lenders to swoop in on vulnerable borrowers and their families”

“[These findings] underscore an urgent need for oversight of the private lending market as these companies prepare to cash in on the Administration’s agenda”

Report: “Costly Consequences: How the Trump Administration Unleashed Private Student Loan Lenders” (PDF)

Responses from: Citizens | College Ave | Navient | Nelnet | Sallie Mae | SoFi

Washington, D.C. — Today, U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), Ranking Member of the Senate Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs Committee, along with Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) and U.S. Senators Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), Ranking Member of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee; Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.); Mazie Hirono (D-Hawaii); Ron Wyden (D-Ore.); Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.); Ed Markey (D-Mass.); and Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.), released a new report revealing the findings of their investigation into how private student loan lenders will reap the benefits from cuts to federal student loan access enacted in Republicans’ Big, Beautiful Bill (OBBBA). The report is the first Congressional analysis of the impacts of the OBBBA’s student loan restrictions on the private lending market.

“Our report confirms what I’ve long sounded the alarm about: the Big Beautiful Bill is a massive giveaway to private student loan lenders,” said Senator Warren in a separate statement. Instead of helping sketchy private lenders profit from our college affordability crisis, the Trump administration should be lowering costs for students and borrowers.”

“The anticipated expansion of the role of private lending is deeply concerning, since private student loan lenders have a long record of predatory practices that raise costs for borrowers and deprive them of basic consumer protections,” wrote the senators.

OBBBA set new caps on federal student loan borrowing for graduate students and others, paving the way for a significant expansion of the private student loan market. The private student loan market currently accounts for approximately 8 percent of student loan debt, but represents more than 40 percent of student loan-related complaints submitted to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. The senators pressed six significant private student loan lenders, Citizens, College Ave, Navient, Nelnet, Sallie Mae, and SoFi—which, combined, lent over $14.7 billion via private student loans in 2024—to provide details on their policies, lending activity, and future plans related to OBBBA. The investigation found that:

  • There is a history of persistent predatory behavior in the private student loan market - and major lenders have been expanding their student loan activity each year;
  • Private student loan lenders expect more students to turn to private loans due to OBBBA’s loan limits, and at least one lender is already making plans to expand its loan offerings in response to this policy change;
  • Most of the private lenders surveyed offer minimal protections for borrowers who are defrauded by their schools or who face a sudden school closure;
  • Half of the private lenders surveyed either have sold student loans to private equity firms or plan to do so in the future; and
  • Private lenders do not yet have concrete plans in place to expand customer service capacity if they increased their student loan activity.

“Private student loan lenders have a record of utilizing abusive practices, including lying to borrowers about the availability of debt cancellation, autopay discounts, and unemployment protections for borrowers,” the senators warned.

“The Trump administration continues to capitulate to big corporations and special interest – all while increasing the pain and costs for American families. Higher education is a ticket for the middle class, and Republicans are trying to destroy this opportunity,” said Leader Schumer. “Our findings were horrific – but unfortunately not shocking. The so-called ‘Big Beautiful Bill’ forces students to turn to the predatory private student loan market to finance their education. And, as our report finds, this will expose students to predatory lending practices and a lack of consumer protections. Senate Democrats will continue to fight to protect students and borrowers so that anyone, regardless of income or family background, can have a chance at higher education.”

“This report makes it even more clear that by placing an arbitrary cap on federal student loans, President Trump and his Republican allies are making it more expensive for everyday students to pursue higher education. Why? To support huge tax breaks for themselves and their billionaire buddies,” said Senator Hirono. “Students should be able to pursue higher education without taking on a lifetime of debt. I will continue to do everything in my power to ensure that we put an end to abusive practices that exploit borrowers, to institute further consumer protections, and to prevent companies from cashing in on this regime’s political agenda.”

“Instead of addressing the rising cost of higher education, the Trump Administration and Republicans have slashed access to federal student loans – limiting opportunities for American students to pursue degrees, especially in fields where we face workforce shortages. Private lenders are eager to profit off these harmful restrictions, and more students will be at risk of falling victim to deceptive, predatory practices,” said Senator Van Hollen.

“Trump and MAGA Republicans’ Big Ugly Bill has made borrowing for college and graduate school riskier and more expensive, pushing the dream of higher education further out of reach for working and middle-class Americans,” said Senator Markey. “I’ll continue to fight to defend borrowers from predatory lenders and restore loan protections for students.”

“The Republican vision of ‘Families Lose, Billionaires Win’ is leading to less affordable student loan repayment options and a higher risk of folks falling victim to predatory lending, which overwhelmingly harms working families,” said Senator Merkley. “As private lenders prepare to cash in on this disastrous agenda, our report makes clear that urgent oversight is needed to protect borrowers and ensure they can access affordable higher education for generations to come.”

In response to the findings, the senators called for careful oversight of any new private loan offerings targeting students and families affected by the federal loan caps and for experts to examine potential impacts of private lenders selling student loans to private equity firms.

“One year into the Trump Administration, President Trump and Secretary McMahon have made countless efforts to strip federal support from student loan borrowers as part of their crusade to dismantle the Department of Education…[These findings] underscore an urgent need for oversight of the private lending market as these companies prepare to cash in on the Administration’s agenda,” the senators concluded.

###







The following sites updated:


Epstein and more

First up, Katie Phang.


Paul Weiss law firm?  Statement to the PW community where he made excuses.  He capitulated to Chump in March of 2025.   $10 million to the Chump priorities over the next four years -- $40 million pro bono over the four years.  

Paul Weiss was the first of the big law firms to capitulate and led the way for others to follow.  "They folded so damn fast, like a cheap wet piece of paper."  

You see the chains Chump put around various people and you see how eager firms like Paul Weiss were to be chained by Chump.  

Other news from the Epstein files Sandra Miller (RAW STORY) reports:


Newly released Epstein files have revived long-simmering rumors about Donald Trump’s personal life, after a 2019 text exchange between Jeffrey Epstein and former Trump strategist Steve Bannon appeared to suggest the president skipped his family during the 2018 holidays to spend time with his personal secretary, Madeline Westerhout. In the texts, Epstein bluntly tied Trump’s absence from his family to Westerhout, prompting a stunned reaction from Bannon. The messages surfaced alongside earlier claims from Trump biographer Michael Wolff, who alleged Trump stayed at the White House during the government shutdown for the same reason. While Westerhout has forcefully denied any affair and Trump has never addressed the allegations, the texts indicate the rumor was circulating privately among Trump’s inner circle years before it became public.

Some comments on the article:

Jake Jakeson
22 minutes ago
while she is older than his prefe3rred age of 13, he has shown that he's willing to pay adult women for some time together.  If they refuse pay, he will assault them. (found guilty)

Debbie Lee
1 hour ago
tRump has no respect for women or anyone that disagrees with him, a wannabe Nazi dictator with his Gestapo Ice agents.



Rush2112 ..
1 hour ago
Even his own family can't trust him!

 
Cee HowUR
1 hour ago
I find it believable.  Who really wants him around blustering through the holiday's telling lies at the dinner table.  Gives the little kids gold trimmed legos and no more than 2 dolls.  Of course they have to give him a gift before they get one in return.


Chump is a liar and now we know what he's been doing How he's been blackmailing in plain sight.  He's a liar and a con artist.  We've got to turn out in November to make clear that he will not be allowed to destroy our country.  We do that by showing up and voting for Democrats.  We put them in control of both houses of Congress.  And then we see Democrats standing up with the power to back up the needed probes and investigations.  

The judiciary -- below the Crooked Supreme Court -- has been the only one rebuking Chump's lies and power grabs and illegal actions.  Rachel Frazin (THE HILL) reports:


A federal court on Monday halted the last of five stop work orders issued by the Trump administration in December to block major offshore wind farms, giving the wind energy industry five legal wins in a row over the government.

Reagan appointee Royce Lamberth granted an injunction against the administration’s stop work order against Sunrise Wind, a project that would provide power to New York.
In recent weeks, courts have issued similar injunctions against stop work orders the administration issued to four other projects. Monday’s ruling means that all of the orders issued by the administration in December have been halted and all of the wind farms it aimed to block can keep building.

“With this decision, courts have now consistently rejected the government’s abrupt attempt to halt construction on these fully permitted projects,” said Hillary Bright, executive director of pro-wind group Turn Forward, in a written statement. 


Here's C.I.'s "The Snapshot:"


Monday, February 2, 2026.  MORNING JOE calls out the continued thuggery of ICE, Chump is exposed in the latest release of Epstein documents but THE NEW YORK TIMES announced they will not cover it without ever noting what "it" is (complaints of rape), and much more.



"Get trained before you draw your gun, idiot!"  Joe Scarborough notes today on MS NOW's MORNING JOE.


As he observes, "This is an undisciplined paramilitary force that does not answer to anyone -- obviously -- because they're still doing this."

We should all share Joe's outrage.   This is how ICE is still behaving.  After murdering Renee Nicole Good and Alex Pretti, this is how they're still behaving.


The key to holding Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents accountable for constitutional violations may lie in a 1987 law review article by a young law professor named Akhil Reed Amar.

“I think it was a good idea then,” he said last week, “and it’s only taken more than half a lifetime for people to actually read the thing.”

The article has, in truth, been quite influential. It has been cited, for instance, in seven Supreme Court opinions. But it was also 96 pages long and touched on many issues.

“I was actually trying to do a bunch of different things — and get tenure,” Professor Amar, now a leading constitutional scholar at Yale Law School, said of the article, “Of Sovereignty and Federalism.”

His central point for present purposes was that state legislatures can authorize lawsuits against federal officials for violating the Constitution. If that is right, such state laws would close an odd gap in federal law that — broadly speaking — allows such suits against state and local officials, like police officers, but not against federal ones, like ICE agents.

Congress authorized the first kind of lawsuit in an 1871 law that most people call Section 1983. But Congress has not enacted legislation allowing suits against federal officials for violating the Constitution.

“It’s an enormous problem that federal officials are in some ways the hardest people to hold accountable for violating people’s constitutional rights, even harder than state and local officials,” said Carolyn Shapiro, a professor at Chicago-Kent College of Law and a former solicitor general of Illinois.

The Supreme Court tried to address the gap in 1971 in Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents, allowing the victim of an unconstitutional search by federal agents to sue them. But the court has essentially abandoned that approach, saying instead that Congress must act if suits against federal officials are to be allowed.

That is where state lawmakers come in, Professor Amar said.


Somebody better come in real quick because this is a disaster and it's only getting worse.  They can see it in Canada.  GRAND PINNACLE TRIBUNE reports:

Michael Lipset, a Montreal resident originally from Minneapolis and one of the protest organizers, didn’t mince words when addressing the crowd. “The violence ICE is bringing upon people within the United States will not be tolerated anywhere,” he declared, as reported by CBC. Lipset and others also called out Canadian businesses—such as Vancouver-based Hootsuite, Ontario’s Roshel, and Montreal’s GardaWorld—for maintaining commercial ties with ICE. “We will not tolerate Quebec’s complicity and Canada’s complicity in that violence by way of corporate contracts with ICE,” Lipset added, urging an end to what he described as indirect support for U.S. immigration enforcement.

The anger on display in Montreal mirrors the frustration simmering inside the United States, particularly in places like the South Texas Family Residential Center in Dilley, Texas—the largest ICE family detention facility in the country. According to the Associated Press, attorney Eric Lee witnessed a protest inside the Dilley center on February 1, 2026. Detainees, including families and children, erupted in chants of “let us out, let us out,” as guards ordered visitors to leave and locked down the facility. The 2,400-bed center, which detains thousands of immigrants swept up in ICE raids, has become a flashpoint for criticism over deteriorating conditions and indefinite detention.

Lee, who represents several detained families, described what his clients have called “a deliberate policy of cruelty.” He detailed reports of contaminated water—used by mothers to mix baby formula—food infested with bugs and debris, and regular verbal abuse by guards. “The water is putrid yet mothers have to mix baby formula with it,” Lee told AP. “Food has bugs and debris in it. Guards are regularly engaging in verbal abuse.”

Conditions at other ICE centers have drawn similar scrutiny. At a Texas facility near El Paso, detainees allege routine beatings by guards and being forced to use clothing to mop up sewage water in areas where meals are served. In Baltimore, a viral video showing dozens of people crammed into a holding cell sparked a lawsuit by immigration advocates, who described “inhumane conditions.”

Despite these reports, Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin categorically denied any wrongdoing.


And we stop there because we don't quote known liars. 

Last week, US House Rep Jasmine Crockett visited a Texas 'facility' (gulag) holding Liam, the five-year-old kidnapped from Minnesota.  Because of her work and the work of others in Congress in focusing on Liam, he has been released from the gulag.  


 Liam Conejo Ramos, the 5-year-old boy who was detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents and went viral, has returned to Minneapolis with his father, Adrian Conejo Arias, after they were released from a detention center in Texas.

On Sunday, Feb. 1, the father-son duo boarded a plane to Minnesota, as seen in footage obtained by ABC News. The pair went viral back in January, when ICE agents detained them in their driveway following their return home from Conejo Ramos' preschool.

 "I'm happy to finally be going home," Adrian told ABC News as he carried his sleeping son onto the aircraft.

Their trip home comes a day after a Minnesota judge ordered that Adrian and Liam be released from the South Texas Family Residential Center in Dilley, Texas.

  Judge Fred Biery of the Federal District Court for the Western District of Texas pointed out an “ill-conceived and incompetently government pursuit of daily deportation quotas, apparently even if it requires traumatizing children," according to the order obtained by The New York Times

He also called out the “government’s ignorance of an American historical document called the Declaration of Independence.” 



 Liam’s case, Biery wrote, originated in “the ill-conceived and incompetently-implemented government pursuit of daily deportation quotas, apparently even if it requires traumatizing children.”

“Observing human behavior confirms that for some among us, the perfidious lust for unbridled power and the imposition of cruelty in its quest know no bounds and are bereft of human decency,” wrote the judge. “And the rule of law be damned.”     

Biery also took aim at administrative warrants, which federal immigration agents often use to make arrests and which do not require a judge’s signature. “Administrative warrants issued by the executive branch to itself do not pass probable cause muster,” he wrote. “That is called the fox guarding the henhouse. The Constitution requires an independent judicial officer.”

             Biery noted Liam and his father may well end up facing deportation anyway due to what he called the “arcane” US immigration system – but “that result should occur through a more orderly and humane policy than currently in place.”

The judge finished his colorful opinion by quoting Benjamin Franklin’s description of the nascent nation at the 1787 Constitutional Convention: “Well, Dr. Franklin, what do we have?” “A republic, if you can keep it.”     



Adeola Adeosun (NEWSWEEK) notes, "Two federal immigration agents who fatally shot Alex Pretti in Minneapolis last month have been identified as 43-year-old Border Patrol agent Jesus Ochoa and 35-year-old Customs and Border Protection (CBP) officer Raymundo Gutierrez, according to government records viewed by ProPublica."

Andrew Stanton (NEWSWEEK) reports on his conversation with Dr. Aasma Shaukat who had been Alex's boss:

Shaukat told Newsweek that she hired Pretti as a research assistant at the Minneapolis VA in 2014, when he was looking to gain some experience in health care.

“He was very earnest and just very enthusiastic about contributing to patient care,” she said. “So we gave him a chance, we took him on. We trained him. He learned really well, he was a really valued team member.”

In 2019, Pretti became interested in going into nursing school while still working with Dr. Shaukat, who wrote a recommendation letter for him. During this time, she said he would bring “funny stories” to work from his side gig as a pizza delivery driver. He never expressed any “radical or crazy thoughts” and was “very honest and hard-working,” she added.

He returned to the same hospital, where he “rose the ranks in nursing all the way to his ICU position,” she said.

“That was really good for him and he literally just had his whole life ahead of him when this tragic event happened,” she said, describing him as a “good kid.”

Pretti found “deeper meaning” working in health care, particularly when it came to working with veterans, who are a more vulnerable population because of social and mental health challenges, she said.

He was always open about things he cared about, including the environment and helping his community, she said. Attending a peaceful protest was “very much like” him, as his community in south Minneapolis would have been the “epicenter” of what was happening, she added.


Friday, the Justice Dept released more from the Epstein files.  Adam Downer (DAILY BEAST) reports:

Elon Musk is now claiming the Epstein files are a “distraction” that “doesn’t matter” after he was busted begging to come to one of Jeffrey Epstein’s parties.

The 54-year-old billionaire had long been a vocal advocate for releasing the Epstein files and arresting the late sexual predator’s clients.

But after emails in which Musk planned to visit Epstein’s Island for the “wildest party” were exposed in Friday’s Epstein files release, Musk has changed his tune.

“What matters is not release of some subset of the Epstein files, but rather the prosecution of those who committed heinous crimes with Epstein,“ he wrote in an X post Saturday morning.

“When there is at least one arrest, some justice will have been done. If not, this is all performative. Nothing but a distraction,” he added.


Musk knows that corporate America has expanded as far as it's ever going to for him.  They've looked away at the drug use, they've taken him at his word that he learned the lesson about politics (something he is already demonstrating that he didn't learn) and now he's a part of the Epstein ring.  So he tries to down peddle it.   



Gabe Whisnant (NEWSWEEK) explains:

Billionaire Elon Musk exchanged emails with Jeffrey Epstein about visiting the financier’s private Caribbean island, according to newly released documents that include correspondence from 2012 and 2013.

The emails show Epstein discussing potential travel arrangements to Little Saint James, an island he owned in the U.S. Virgin Islands that later became the focus of numerous allegations of sexual abuse.


Musk is insisting that his e-mails are being misinterpreted.  At GIZMODO,  Mike Pearl writes:


Sorry but “misinterpreted”? Even if you do your absolute damndest to read this guy’s freshly released Epstein emails in a positive light, what you get is the story of a tech tycoon stating unambiguously that he wanted to attend an absolute rager on a sex criminal’s private island.

“What day/night will be the wildest party on your island?” Elon Musk asked Jeffrey Epstein on on Nov. 25, 2012. 

In 2019, Musk told Vanity Fair that in their past interactions, he had detected that Epstein was “obviously a creep.” Indeed, it wouldn’t have taken much sleuthing to pick up on this attribute of Epstein’s back in 2012. He already had a conviction on his record at the time for soliciting prostitution, and it was also widely reported in the media that the prostitution conviction stemmed from a generous plea bargain, and that the charges Epstein had been facing included sexual relations with minors.

So with that in mind, here’s what Musk and Epstein wrote as they attempted to make plans in 2012 for Musk to visit Epstein’s island with British actress Talulah Riley, Musk’s wife at the time (typos and other text issues are left in tact. I don’t want to be accused of misinterpreting):

Epstein: you are welcome to stay or just come for the day, plenty of rroom i will=send heli to get you

Musk: Do you have any parties planned? I’ve been working to the edge of sanity th=s year and so, once my kids head home after Christmas, I really want to hi= the party scene in St Barts or elsewhere and let loose. The invitation is=much appreciated, but a peaceful island experience is the opposite of what=l’m looking for.

Epstein: Understood, , I will see you on st Barth, the ratio on my island might m=ke Talilah uncomfortable

Musk: Ratio is not a problem for Talulah

It may be true that Musk declined one or more invitations to visit, but he also tried to make plans to visit multiple times. In addition to the aforementioned change, he emailed Epstein on December 14, 2013 saying he was going to be in the Virgin Islands “over the holidays,” and asked “Is there a good time to visit?” In my opinion it sort of undermines the inherent morality of rejecting offers to be taken to Epstein’s island if you also repeatedly attempt to visit Epstein’s island.


While Musk continues his efforts to lie and spin, Mike Stunson (FORBES) notes one person is already backing up the assertion Musk visited Epstein Island:


Musk’s estranged daughter, 21-year-old Vivian Wilson, wrote in a post on Threads her memory of visiting the region where Epstein’s island was located when she was younger: “There was this boat ride from St Vincent to St Barth’s I remember from when I was little. We used to visit around the holidays. I remember the sea being so dark at night.” She would have been around 9 at the time. 


Friday's release was over three million pages, however, everything has not been released yet Deputy AG Todd Blanche has announced this will be all that the government releases. Per The Epstein Files Transparency Act,  everything was supposed to have been released by December 19th.  This is the law passed by Congress and signed, November 19th, by Donald Chump.  


CNN notes at the top of their coverage:


The Justice Department released more than 3 million pages of files related to the investigation into Jeffrey Epstein today. The documents contain references to President Donald Trump and other powerful figures, including Elon Musk, Bill Clinton and a former Obama White House counsel.

• An FBI list of allegations related to Trump — many of which appear to have come from unverified tips — is among the new documents. The White House referred CNN to a Justice Department statement that called the claims “unfounded and false.” Trump has long denied wrongdoing in connection to Epstein.

• Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said the department has now completed its review of the Epstein files and that the White House had “no oversight” of the process.     


Despite the new disclosures, a group of survivors of Epstein’s alleged abuses said some of their alleged abusers “remain hidden and protected”.

A statement from 19 of the survivors, some using aliases or initials, said information about them still remained in the files, “while the men who abused us remain hidden and protected.” The letter demanded “the full release of the Epstein files” and that Attorney General Pam Bondi directly address the matter when she testifies before Congress next month.

 


Musk isn't the only one whose lies have been exposed by the latest release.  Nicholas Confessore (NEW YORK TIMES) notes:


On a podcast last year, Howard Lutnick, the secretary of commerce, described being so revolted by a mid-2000s visit to Mr. Epstein’s Manhattan mansion that he decided to “never be in a room with that disgusting person ever again.”

Mr. Lutnick’s disgust appeared to prove temporary. In 2012, he emailed with Mr. Epstein to arrange a visit with his wife and children to Mr. Epstein’s private island just before Christmas. An assistant to Mr. Epstein later forwarded Mr. Lutnick a message from Mr. Epstein: “Nice seeing you,” it said. (On Friday, Mr. Lutnick said that “I spent zero time with him.”)


Also exposed is Melania Chump.  Sarah Ewall-Wice (DAILY BEAST) notes:


A gushing email exchange between First Lady Melania Trump and Jeffrey Epstein’s accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell was included in the latest dump of Epstein files.

In the first message from 2002, Mrs. Trump praised a New York magazine article about Epstein and complemented the socialite now serving 20 years in prison for sex-trafficking.

“Dear G! Howe are you?” it starts. “Nice story about JE in NY mag. You look great in the picture.”

At the time, the first lady was still Melania Knauss and was just dating Trump.

The pair were captured in multiple pictures with Epstein and Maxwell around that time, but the email appears to be the first written communication between Mrs. Trump and Maxwell from the files.

 



In other Epstein news, Carl Gibson reports on questions regarding the convict's death:


Before he died in prison, convicted child predator Jeffrey Epstein was reportedly attacked in his cell, extorted by his cellmate and slipped a handwritten note into a book.

That's according to Miami Herald investigative journalist Julie K. Brown, who initially broke the story that led to the first arrests of Epstein and his chief accomplice, Ghislaine Maxwell. In a Thursday post to her Substack entitled "Why I don't believe Jeffrey Epstein Killed Himself (Part 2)," Brown delved into Bureau of Prisons records about an apparent suicide attempt that took place not long after he arrived at New York City's Metropolitan Corrections Center in the summer of 2019.

Brown alleged the Bureau of Prisons never fully investigated the suicide attempt, and asserted from available evidence that the convicted sex trafficker had instead been attacked by an inmate. She noted that child predators are at the bottom rung of the prison hierarchy, and that Epstein had a target on his back due to the volume of reporting on his crimes. Epstein's cellmate ["bunkie" in prison parlance], Nicholas Tartaglione — who Brown described as a "violent ex-cop-turned-drug-dealer — denied playing a role in the assault.

"Just 13 days after he arrived at MCC, he was found laying on the floor of his cell, with a piece of fabric around his neck," Brown wrote. "The very first story he told prison officials was that his cellmate tried to kill him."

However, Epstein later changed his story to say that he didn't remember the details of the attack. Eventually, an incident report attributed his injuries to "self-mutilation." Tartaglione was also accused of threatening to harm Epstein unless he paid him. Eventually, some details of the attack were apparently "expunged," according to Brown.


 Meanwhile Chump is mentioned throughout.  Many of the pages contain allegations of Chump with young women and girls.  Some of those pages were removed after being released yesterday.  Zachary Leeman (MEDIAITE) explains:

In a complaint made by a friend, the president was accused of forcing a 13-14-year-old to perform oral sex on him.

“[Redacted] reported an unidentified female friend who was forced to perform oral sex on President Trump approximately 35 years ago in NJ. The friend told Alexis that she was approximately 13-14 years old when this occurred, and the friend allegedly bit President Trump while performing oral sex. The friend was allegedly hit in the face after she laughed about biting President Trump. The friend said she was also abused by Epstein,” the complaint reads.

[. . .]

Another in Epstein’s orbit also made allegations of “sex trafficking” and murder. The unidentified person was following up on a tip given to the NYPD in which the person alleged they were raped at 13. The person also alleged Trump regularly paid them to perform sexual acts and claimed he was present when her newborn child was murdered.

“Complainant reported Donald Trump participated regularly in paying money to force her to perform sex acts with him and alleged Trump was present when her uncle murdered her newborn child,” notes on the complaint read.

According to the paperwork, there was “no contact made.”


By the way, THE NEW YORK TIMES will not be reporting on the 4,000+ pages about Donald Chump.  They say so in an article credited to "THE NEW YORK TIMES," "The New York Times is not describing the details of the unverified claims."  What is the paper of record ignoring?  


Donald Trump and his allies stayed connected to Jeffrey Epstein well after they claimed they had stopped communicating.

The president has long asserted that his close friendship with the child sex trafficker ended after the duo had a falling out over real estate in Palm Beach, ultimately nixing contact altogether after 2006, when a grand jury indicted Epstein on state charges related to prostitution. That same year, Trump banned Epstein from Mar-a-Lago (though Epstein publicly denied the finale of his membership at the time).

But documents published Friday amid the Justice Department’s larger rollout of another tranche of the Epstein files indicate that Trump’s narrative is far from the entire story.

An email out of the trove, issued by Epstein to an individual named William Riley, revealed that the sex trafficker was planning to call Trump as late as 2011.

“Before I call Trump, with regard vrginina ,, are there any other alternatives,” Epstein wrote on April 18, 2011.

It is not clear who Riley is, though a decorated Iraq War veteran known as William Sascha Riley was identified in November as another one of Epstein’s victims by Substack writer Lisa Noelle Voldeng. Riley claimed his adoptive father, William “Bill” Kyle Riley, worked as a pilot for Epstein and trafficked him to the global predator.

As it turns out, Trump’s friends had similarly malleable principles. In an interview with the New York Post podcast in October, Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick recalled an instance in 2005 when Epstein—who was at the time his Upper East Side neighbor—invited him to tour his infamous East 71st Street townhouse.


And what else is being ignored?  Farrah Tomazin  (THE DAILY BEAST) notes:
 


 


The following sites updated: