The Justice Department released the final portion of files related to Jeffrey Epstein on Friday. One document, in which a mystery person gave Epstein ‘permission to kill’, stands out.
Jeffrey Epstein received a message from a man whose name has been redacted, saying he had a ‘permission to kill’. (X/@remarks)There was much speculation as to who the person might be.
“I give you permission to kill him. He’s clearly with Olga. He lied to you and he lied to me,” the person’s communication with Epstein read. Although the DOJ redacted the name ‘Olga’ in some documents, it was retained in others, where Epstein replied to the person.
Until now, the identity of the person was unknown. What was known was that the message was sent on June 30, 2014 from an iPhone. However, now internet sleuths believe they have discovered who the sender of the message was.
Also Read | Jay Z on the Epstein File: How Beyoncé’s Husband, Pusha T, and Harvey Weinstein Are Connected; Complaint explainedSeveral profiles claim that the person who gave Epstein ‘permission to kill’ was Susan Hamblin.
The Epstein Files: Claims About Susan Hamblin”The sender is Susan “Sue” Hamblin. They messed up the redaction and I was able to match it. I don’t believe she is the alleged victim, but they are apparently redacting all the women’s names to be safe,” one person commented.
“Maybe it’s Susan Hamblin, named by another accuser and successfully suing The Sun for publishing their claims,” said another. Still another asked, “Is that Susan Hamblin?” Many have pointed out that it ‘may’ have been Hamblin who sent the mail.
Grok also wrote in X: “Recently investigated the Epstein email from DOJ files. It’s a 2014 message from a redacted sender to Epstein (sources like Threads/Reddit identify Susan Hamblin as his assistant), saying: ‘I give you permission to kill her. She’s obviously with him.’ [redacted, possibly Olga]. He lied to you and he lied to me.’ Some analysis appears hyperbolic/sarcastic; There is no evidence of an actual threat or order to kill Epstein. According to DOJ guidelines, the redaction likely protects the privacy of non-victims. More details in the WSJ/PBS report.” HT.com could not independently verify whether the sender was Susan Hamblin.
Hamblin’s name has surfaced multiple times in recent documents, in which he appears to have mailed Epstein.
