| February 13, 2026 Greetings from Amsterdam, Much of the frenzied Jeffrey Epstein commentary over the past two weeks has focused on individual examples of moral depravity. But there’s a wider, more systemic story here. As Seva Gunitsky, a political scientist at the University of Toronto, has argued, the documents “suggest a reframing of Epstein’s case from one man’s crimes to transnational geopolitics.”Viewed through this lens, Epstein’s incredible collection of powerful and influential contacts, from tech billionaires to FSB officers, perfectly exemplifies a new transnational elite — one that has “built fortunes by moving money across jurisdictions, leveraging kompromat, and treating governments as service providers instead of sovereigns.”Epstein’s role shows how this class of operators has been enabled by willing Western partners. Our recent reporting offers three snapshots of how that works. Start with Senegal: the documents trace a years-long relationship between Epstein and Karim Wade, son of former President Abdoulaye Wade and once one of the country’s most powerful ministers. After Wade’s corruption conviction, his team sought help lobbying in Washington — and turned to Epstein for guidance.Then Venezuela: emails show Epstein buying bonds tied to PDVSA, the state oil company, on the advice of Francisco D’Agostino — a Chávez-era insider now wanted by Venezuelan authorities on money-laundering and criminal-association charges.Epstein’s social capital also paid dividends back in New York. Emails indicate he worked to secure employment at the International Peace Institute — a respected policy institution tied to the United Nations — for a Russian romantic partner. He may even have subsidized her pay.The commonality in these vignettes is not sex, and it’s not even ideology. It’s the indispensable role of powerful intermediaries who can turn money into legitimacy, access, and impunity — not to mention a powerful reminder of how much of this brokerage usually happens in the dark. The analysis above is a free preview of our upcoming OCCRP PRO membership, a new offering tailored to professionals who rely on our investigations for work in finance, law, compliance, risk management, policy, and related fields. Interested to learn more? Let us know and tell us what you need! Your feedback will directly shape the services we build.OCCRP Exclusive |
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Start with Senegal: the documents
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And it worked. Not because I suddenly became technical, but because I refused to let the insecurity win.
Think about that: The majority of successful people around you feel like frauds. Most of us do. The question isn’t whether you have imposter syndrome. It’s whether you’re using it in a healthy way.
Here’s a 2026 version of how to leverage your insecurity in an AI world:
Be honest — then get curious. My