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24611582? ago

212 750 9895 What are you getting for this number? Epstein had property at spooky mansion at 71st Street New York, there is also Mysterious 66th Street NYC building at center of Maxwell's trafficking links, 9 E 71st St, New York, NY - New York Strategy Group. NES LLC is located at the address 9 E 71st St in New York, New York 10021. They can be contacted via phone at (212) 750-9895 for pricing, hours and directions. Jewelry Stores New York Ny, Catalog, Prices Phone: 212-750-9895. The Mansion Was Donated to the Roman Catholic Diocese of New York City. It Became a Convalescent Hospital, Then a Private School. The Museum of the City of New York features images of the building that was constructed beginning just before the Great Depression.

Macy’s heir Straus hired architect Horace Trumbauer to design a “40-room French Renaissance palace.” It was reported by blogger Tom Miller that “the Straus home was meant to reflect taste, elegance and wealth” and European antiques, fixtures indeed, “entire 18th-century rooms were purchased to be shipped to New York and installed in the new mansion.” In 1996, the New York Times wrote about the “majestic stone mansion at 9 East 71st Street.”

The Times wrote that Wexner paid $13.2 million for the house that he did not inhabit.

“Those curious to see the princely accommodations Mr. Wexner abandoned need look no further than the cover of last month’s Architectural Digest. When asked how long Mr. Wexner had occupied the property, Jeffrey Epstein, his protege and one of his financial advisers, replied, ‘Les never spent more than two months there.’ Thus the prorated cost of Mr. Wexner’s sejours would appear to have been in excess of a million dollars a day.”

In the ’96 story, the Times wrote that when “reached in Florida last week, Mr. Epstein said that the house was now his.”

It was officially deeded for $10 in 2011 from Wexner’s corporation to Epstein’s Maple, Inc. US Virgin Islands-based corporation according to New York City land records. Journalist and author Vicky Ward wrote that while meeting with Epstein at his mansion for a Vanity Fair piece, “the only book he’d left out for me to see was a paperback by the Marquis de Sade.”

Ward led her 2003 profile with a six-paragraph description of Epstein’s house, the city of New York’s reported largest private home that she called the “crown jewel of the city’s residential town houses.”

Ward wrote of the “15-foot-high oak door, huge arched windows, and nine floors” with black-suited “menservants” in not just a “rich person’s home, but a high-walled, eclectic, imperious fantasy that seems to have no boundaries.” The mansion, it should be noted, is flanked by two other homes owned by the very wealthy; two of whom are now in jail. According to Curbed, in 2007, in model Maximilia Cordero’s ultimately dismissed lawsuit against Epstein for rape “her lawyer included a description of what has by now become a legendary piece of puerile decor in chez Epstein: ‘[The] defendant gave plaintiff a tour of his mansion, showing her a huge crystal staircase with a huge crystal ball by the railing, ceiling chandeliers, a lounge room with red chairs, a statute [sic] of a dog with a statute [sic] of dog feces next to it.”

Now, in a case also about sexual assault, prosecutors are asking that the mansion be seized.

“As has been widely reported, the defendant is extraordinarily wealthy, and he owns and maintains luxury properties and residences around the world including in Manhattan …a multi story townhouse reported to be the largest single residence in all of Manhattan …which he owns through an LLC has been valued at $77 million …” https://voat.co/v/whatever/3910500/24607248