Epstein’s Fixer: The Strategy to Rebuild His Image at the World’s Most Exclusive Gathering

In 2011, three years after Jeffrey Epstein was convicted and arrested for trafficking minors, he was advised by Ian Osborne, the founder of the consultancy Osborne & Partners, to attend the Bilderberg meeting to revamp his image. A three-page proposal from the firm released in the Epstein files also suggested a “clean up” of Google search results to scrub reporting of Epstein’s pedophilia.

Osborne & Partners, a low-key reputation management firm, pitched to Epstein strategic ways to revitalize his name in the fallout of being a convicted child sex offender in 2009. The man behind the firm, Ian Osborne, has been described by The Telegraph as the “fixer to the elite,” and Epstein himself seemingly arranged degenerate sexual activities for Osborne.

In a June 2011 email, Osborne wrote Epstein explaining he had a plan: “I’ve reflected on the unique challenges and opportunities of your situation, and I am ready to propose what I believe to be the right strategy.” The next day, Epstein received a three-page action strategy.

“Much more is to be gained by increasing your profile among the international political class than the domestic U.S. political class,” the firm posited in their analysis. “In our view, you should be spending time with European, Middle Eastern, Asian and Latin American political and business leaders — some of which you of course already do on a daily basis but in a concerted way through such gatherings as … Bilderberg and the BRICS Summit.”

Osborne explained that Epstein’s efforts must “not appear calculated,” but that he should establish himself as a pioneer in select “media, political, and philanthropic circles.” And, according to Osborne & Partners, a top priority for the pedophile should be getting into the Bilderberg meeting.

Bilderberg, a secret annual gathering of global elites including bankers, so-called journalists, and politicians, exists to shape policy and advance the construction of the New World Order, despite ostensibly being simply a “discussion” group. On their website, the meetings are painted as non-partisan and possessing no will. “There is no desired outcome, there is no closing statement, there are no resolutions proposed or votes taken, and the Meeting does not support any political party or viewpoint,” they stress. But past attendees have revealed the opposite to be true.

For example, the former editor-in-chief of Observer, who attended Bilderberg, shared that the “[Bilderberg conference] is one of the key meetings of the year…. [T]he consensus established is the backdrop against which policy is made worldwide.”

Attendance for the gatherings includes a who’s who of global elites and, often, future leaders who participate in Bilderberg as part of a vetting process for the Insiders. Indeed, the little-known governor of Arkansas, Bill Clinton, attended Bilderberg a year before becoming president. In 2008, freshman Senator Barack Obama went as well. Across the pond, Tony Blair, the former British prime minister, attended the meeting, too, shortly before ascending to power.

Corroborating the notion of elites conspiring behind closed doors to plan policy, former NATO secretary-general and Bilderberger Willy Claes revealed the formula for the meetings, explaining that a report is curated on the presentations delivered and dispersed among attendees. “The participants are then obviously considered to use this report in setting their policies in the environments in which they affect,” he revealed.

In a nutshell, Bilderberg is an instrumental component of the global elite’s influence network to form, manipulate, and concentrate power to achieve their goal of global governance.

In fact, the group just met in Washington, D.C., drawing multiple figures from U.S. President Donald Trump’s second administration, including Secretary of the Interior Doug Burgum, Secretary of the Army Daniel Driscoll, and U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer. Big Tech also showed up in full force. Peter Thiel, CEO of Palantir — the CIA-seeded AI data-gathering behemoth — is on the steering committee, and attendees included the CEO of Anduril Industries, Brian Schimpf, and Alexandr Wang, chief AI officer for Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta.

Being engaged in the Deep State apparatus would not have been a new venture for Epstein. He worked extensively with the Rothschild banking dynasty — truly, the premier financiers for the Insiders — and boasted membership in Deep State powerhouses such as the Council on Foreign Relations and Trilateral Commission.

In the three-page reputation-rebuild plan prepared by Osborne & Partners, the firm connects Bilderberg to David Rockefeller’s Trilateral Commission: “I see that you are part of the Trilateral Commission and this is in a similar vein. The advantage offered by these gatherings over private meetings is that it demonstrates vividly to all the other opinion leaders the unique position you occupy among the international business elite.”

In addition to attending Insider meetings like Bilderberg, Epstein was advised by Osborne to emphasize his philanthropic endeavors, focusing on the “less fashionable but most important disciplines” of science and technology. Epstein’s efforts to advance transhumanism, eugenics, and the creation of “designer” babies have been reported. Philanthropy in this space would be easy, Osborne argued, since Epstein possessed a “special rapport” with a “number of outstanding scientists.”

Epstein and Osborne had a close relationship. Osborne visited Epstein’s infamous Little Saint James island in 2012, DOJ files reveal. Epstein also arranged for Osborne depraved sexual activities. In a disturbing email chain, a woman wrote to Epstein, “So Ian thanked me, probably should thank you.” Epstein responded, “Did you do Ian?” She confirmed, crudely detailing the encounter.

In a separate email conversation, a woman emails Epstein asking, “What would you suggest me to do with Ian tonight?” “Give him everything,” Epstein retorted, “and right before you leave. say .. Jeffrey deserves a thank you note.”

The Epstein files show Osborne and Epstein working together, advising each other on business affairs, and making connections for one another. In November 2011, Epstein wrote to Osborne asking, “can you set up a telephone call with peter thiel?” Osborne responded, “Yes definitely. I will call Peter today w/ background.” Twelve days later, Osborne told Epstein, “I have a meeting with Peter Thiel in an hour and will speak to him about you.”

Since the Department of Justice’s release of millions of files on the disgraced financier, Osborne has apologized for his connection to Epstein. “I wholeheartedly regret that I ever met or had any association whatsoever with Epstein,” he said. “I never witnessed, nor was aware of, the repellent and illegal behaviour by him. I am forever sorry for all the people who suffered by him. It was a serious error of judgment and one I bitterly regret.”

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