Bill Gates to appear before House Epstein panel on June 10
Published in News & Features
Tech billionaire Bill Gates will appear before the House panel investigating disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein on June 10, said a person familiar with the plans.
The Microsoft Corp. co-founder was among a group of prominent figures with ties to Epstein that House Oversight Committee Chair James Comer requested appear for transcribed interviews.
Gates has called his relationship with Epstein a “huge mistake” and has denied wrongdoing. A spokesperson for Gates said the billionaire never witnessed or participated in any of Epstein’s illegal activity but Gates is looking forward to answering the committee’s questions.
The New York Times reported in 2019 that Gates met with Epstein several times starting in 2011 and once stayed late at his New York townhouse. The former Microsoft chief has said they discussed a philanthropy project but that their meetings stopped after the likelihood of getting funding diminished.
Email correspondence between Epstein and Gates’ key science adviser, Boris Nikolic, includes notes on the attractiveness of women and discussion of Gates’s preferences and prospects with them, according to documents released by the Justice Department.
Others scheduled to appear before the committee next month include Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and Tova Noel, one of the prison guards on duty when Epstein died in July 2019. Lutnick is scheduled be interviewed by the committee on May 6 and Noel on May 18, according to the person familiar.
Lutnick has come under fire in recent weeks after documents released by the Justice Department revealed that the former chief executive officer of Cantor Fitzgerald LP visited Epstein’s island in 2012, years after Epstein’s conviction for the procurement of minors for prostitution.
The documents also included a photo of Epstein, Lutnick and three other men standing near an oceanside cliff, and what appear to be business agreements between the two men, who lived next door to each other in Manhattan. Another email to Epstein contained a resume for Lutnick’s nanny, though the Commerce secretary has denied providing that document himself.
The materials have not indicated any wrongdoing on Lutnick’s part, but did show that he previously incorrectly characterized the extent of his relationship with Epstein.
Noel was one of two Bureau of Prisons workers guarding Epstein the night he died. She was indicted for falsifying records to cover up her failure to conduct rounds at the prison, but avoided serving time by striking a deal with federal prosecutors. Noel fought the government’s request to release grand jury transcripts and an exhibit from the government’s case against her in compliance with the Epstein Files Transparency Act, but a federal judge ordered the documents to be released with redactions.
Spokespeople for Lutnick and an attorney for Noel didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment.
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With assistance from Erik Wasson, Jimmy Jenkins and Catherine Lucey.
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