Court filings containing more than 100 contact names linked to the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein were unsealed on Wednesday afternoon.
Over 900 pages of partially censored documents were released.
A great deal of the information has already been reported. Many of the people whose names were mentioned have not been accused of any misdeed.
The documents include a list of 185 people labeled anonymously as John or Jane Doe, beginning with J. Doe #3 and ending with J. Doe #187. Some of the names are mentioned twice.
A small number of people on the list are minors or sexual assault victims. The judge clarified that those names will not be revealed.
It was mentioned in the court record that the documents for the people in the 107th and 110th slots on the list will not be released right away. One had been given an extension until January 22 for her appeal regarding the release.
Over 900 pages of partially censored documents were released.
A great deal of the information has already been reported. Many of the people whose names were mentioned have not been accused of any misdeed.
The documents include a list of 185 people labeled anonymously as John or Jane Doe, beginning with J. Doe #3 and ending with J. Doe #187. Some of the names are mentioned twice.
A small number of people on the list are minors or sexual assault victims. The judge clarified that those names will not be revealed.
It was mentioned in the court record that the documents for the people in the 107th and 110th slots on the list will not be released right away. One had been given an extension until January 22 for her appeal regarding the release.
- 1/4/2024
- by Alessio Atria
- Uinterview
Director Sam Hobkinson’s Fear City: New York vs The Mafia details the historic investigation and prosecution of New York’s criminal Commission. The resulting convictions of the law enforcement actions marked an end of an era. New York was no longer under the thumb of mob bosses; businesses maintained control of their goods, manufacturing and trafficking; the thin blue line thickened.
As the documentary points out, the Mafia was untouchable when they controlled illegal street trade, but when they made offers which legitimate business couldn’t refuse, law enforcement stepped in and cleaned up. Fear City: New York vs The Mafia depicts this specific period in New York as a war zone. “The Bronx was burning every night,” Guardian Angel founder Curtis Sliwa says in the documentary.
While much of the day-to-day peril of city living has been exaggerated into legend, this is what drew a British...
As the documentary points out, the Mafia was untouchable when they controlled illegal street trade, but when they made offers which legitimate business couldn’t refuse, law enforcement stepped in and cleaned up. Fear City: New York vs The Mafia depicts this specific period in New York as a war zone. “The Bronx was burning every night,” Guardian Angel founder Curtis Sliwa says in the documentary.
While much of the day-to-day peril of city living has been exaggerated into legend, this is what drew a British...
- 7/28/2020
- by David Crow
- Den of Geek
Exclusive: Arliss Howard (Moneyball), Desmond Harrington (Dexter), Kelly Jenrette (The Handmaid’s Tale) and Ness Bautista (Sense8) are set as series regulars for season 2 of Spectrum Originals’ anthology series Manhunt, from Lionsgate Television. They join previously announced Jack Huston, Cameron Britton, Carla Gugino, Judith Light, Gethin Anthony and Jay O. Sanders.
Spectrum parent Charter Communications last year made a deal with Lionsgate for new seasons of the Manhunt anthology series whose first installment, Manhunt: Unabomber, ran on Discovery Channel.
Season 2, Manhunt: Lone Wolf, will chronicle one of the largest and most complex manhunts on U.S. soil — the search for the 1996 Atlanta Olympics Bomber, Eric Rudolph (Huston) — and the media firestorm that consumed the life of Richard Jewell (Britton) in its wake. The series is currently filming in Pittsburgh, Pa.
Howard plays Earl Embry, the top bomb expert in the Atf who has a depth of hands-on knowledge that nobody can rival.
Spectrum parent Charter Communications last year made a deal with Lionsgate for new seasons of the Manhunt anthology series whose first installment, Manhunt: Unabomber, ran on Discovery Channel.
Season 2, Manhunt: Lone Wolf, will chronicle one of the largest and most complex manhunts on U.S. soil — the search for the 1996 Atlanta Olympics Bomber, Eric Rudolph (Huston) — and the media firestorm that consumed the life of Richard Jewell (Britton) in its wake. The series is currently filming in Pittsburgh, Pa.
Howard plays Earl Embry, the top bomb expert in the Atf who has a depth of hands-on knowledge that nobody can rival.
- 6/13/2019
- by Denise Petski
- Deadline Film + TV
Few public figures have fallen as far and as fast as Joe Paterno did in 2011.
A college-football titan, he led Penn State’s team for 45 years, transforming a nascent athletic program into a gigantic money engine, an obscure regional school into a national brand, and central Pennsylvania’s Happy Valley from an economic backwater into a college sports capital. He also wielded rare intellectual authority: A graduate of Brown University, he once gave a lecture on the relationship between the “Aeneid” and football.
Two weeks after he earned his 409th victory, becoming the winningest Division I coach in college-football history, he was fired amid a child sex abuse scandal. He died two months later of lung cancer.
That Paterno’s final days resemble something from the classics isn’t lost on Al Pacino, who plays the coach in the new HBO biopic “Paterno,” and Barry Levinson, the film’s director.
A college-football titan, he led Penn State’s team for 45 years, transforming a nascent athletic program into a gigantic money engine, an obscure regional school into a national brand, and central Pennsylvania’s Happy Valley from an economic backwater into a college sports capital. He also wielded rare intellectual authority: A graduate of Brown University, he once gave a lecture on the relationship between the “Aeneid” and football.
Two weeks after he earned his 409th victory, becoming the winningest Division I coach in college-football history, he was fired amid a child sex abuse scandal. He died two months later of lung cancer.
That Paterno’s final days resemble something from the classics isn’t lost on Al Pacino, who plays the coach in the new HBO biopic “Paterno,” and Barry Levinson, the film’s director.
- 3/28/2018
- by Daniel Holloway
- Variety Film + TV
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