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“At November 30, 2002, the Company had an approximate 40% equity interest in Liquid Funding, Ltd. (‘LFL’), a AAA-rated special purpose vehicle established to participate in the repurchase agreement and total return swap markets. A subsidiary of the Company acts as investment manager…”
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The Forbes.com article, posted in 2013, praised him as “one of the largest backers of cutting-edge science around the world” while making no mention of his criminal past. The National Review piece, from the same year, called him “a smart businessman” with a “passion for cutting-edge science.” The HuffPost article, from 2017, credited Mr. Epstein for “taking action to help a number of scientists thrive during the ‘Trump Era’,” a time of “anti-science policies and budget cuts.”The article on the Forbes website was attributed to Drew Hendricks, a contributing writer. As The Times revealed in an <a class="x5l" href="https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/13/nyregion/jeffrey-epstein-new-york-elite.html?module=inline" target="_blank" rel="noopener external">article[/url] last week, he was not the author of the piece. Instead, it was delivered to him by a public relations firm, and he said he was paid $600 to attach his byline and post it at <a class="x5l" href="http://forbes.com/" target="_blank" rel="noopener external">forbes.com[/url].
“All I knew was, this is a guy doing a science thing,” Hendricks said. “If I had known otherwise, I wouldn’t have done it.”'