MikeDamone
Well-known poster
A 21-year-old college dropout walks into Manhattan's most elite prep school. They hand him a teaching job. Nobody asks how.
Jeffrey Epstein didn't come from money.
Born 1953 in Brooklyn. Father was a groundskeeper for the city parks department. Mother was a homemaker. They lived in Sea Gate, a gated community on Coney Island that sounds fancier than it was. Working class Jewish neighborhood. Modest circumstances.
The kid was smart. Scary smart. Started playing piano at five. Skipped two grades. Graduated Lafayette High School at 16 in 1969.
Here's where the documented record gets interesting.
Summer 1967, a 14-year-old Epstein attends a summer program at Interlochen Center for the Arts in Michigan. Playing bassoon. This is the earliest institutional record we have of him outside Brooklyn public schools.
After high school, he enrolls at Cooper Union. Studies there until 1971. Transfers to NYU's Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences. Leaves in June 1974.
No degree.
Three months later, in September 1974, a 21-year-old college dropout with no teaching credentials walks into the Dalton School on Manhattan's Upper East Side and starts teaching physics and mathematics.
Dalton isn't just any school. This is where the children of Robert Redford and Joel Grey attend. This is Manhattan's elite. Tuition that would make most families choke.
And they hire a kid from Coney Island who never finished college.
The official record says he was commended for being "lively, interesting, and uniquely gifted in presenting material." He made $12,000 a year teaching the children of celebrities and financiers.
Two years later, in 1976, he's dismissed for "poor performance."
But by then the connection had already been made.
At Dalton, a parent of one of his students approached him at an art gallery opening. Asked if he'd considered working on Wall Street. Epstein later admitted he didn't even know where Wall Street was.
That parent connected him to Alan Greenberg at Bear Stearns. In his interview, Epstein admitted he didn't know what a stock or bond was. Greenberg hired him anyway, sensing a "sea change" toward quantitative valuation.
Four years later, Epstein was the youngest limited partner at Bear Stearns.
By 1982, he had his own firm. Managing billion-dollar fortunes. Requiring total control, power of attorney, and a flat fee to do whatever he thought necessary.
From Brooklyn groundskeeper's son to managing the money of people whose names you'd recognize.
The origin story isn't mysterious because we don't have records. It's mysterious because the records we do have don't add up.
How does a 21-year-old without a degree get hired at one of the most exclusive schools in Manhattan?
Who made that introduction?
What was the actual hiring process?
These aren't conspiracy questions. They're basic credentialing questions that any HR department would ask.
The documentation exists. It's scattered across institutional records, early profiles, and court documents that most people never dig into.
TheWebb (dot) ai (not a sponsor) is making that research publicly accessible now.
The sources are there. The timeline is verifiable.
The question isn't what happened.
The question is who opened the doors.
Jeffrey Epstein didn't come from money.
Born 1953 in Brooklyn. Father was a groundskeeper for the city parks department. Mother was a homemaker. They lived in Sea Gate, a gated community on Coney Island that sounds fancier than it was. Working class Jewish neighborhood. Modest circumstances.
The kid was smart. Scary smart. Started playing piano at five. Skipped two grades. Graduated Lafayette High School at 16 in 1969.
Here's where the documented record gets interesting.
Summer 1967, a 14-year-old Epstein attends a summer program at Interlochen Center for the Arts in Michigan. Playing bassoon. This is the earliest institutional record we have of him outside Brooklyn public schools.
After high school, he enrolls at Cooper Union. Studies there until 1971. Transfers to NYU's Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences. Leaves in June 1974.
No degree.
Three months later, in September 1974, a 21-year-old college dropout with no teaching credentials walks into the Dalton School on Manhattan's Upper East Side and starts teaching physics and mathematics.
Dalton isn't just any school. This is where the children of Robert Redford and Joel Grey attend. This is Manhattan's elite. Tuition that would make most families choke.
And they hire a kid from Coney Island who never finished college.
The official record says he was commended for being "lively, interesting, and uniquely gifted in presenting material." He made $12,000 a year teaching the children of celebrities and financiers.
Two years later, in 1976, he's dismissed for "poor performance."
But by then the connection had already been made.
At Dalton, a parent of one of his students approached him at an art gallery opening. Asked if he'd considered working on Wall Street. Epstein later admitted he didn't even know where Wall Street was.
That parent connected him to Alan Greenberg at Bear Stearns. In his interview, Epstein admitted he didn't know what a stock or bond was. Greenberg hired him anyway, sensing a "sea change" toward quantitative valuation.
Four years later, Epstein was the youngest limited partner at Bear Stearns.
By 1982, he had his own firm. Managing billion-dollar fortunes. Requiring total control, power of attorney, and a flat fee to do whatever he thought necessary.
From Brooklyn groundskeeper's son to managing the money of people whose names you'd recognize.
The origin story isn't mysterious because we don't have records. It's mysterious because the records we do have don't add up.
How does a 21-year-old without a degree get hired at one of the most exclusive schools in Manhattan?
Who made that introduction?
What was the actual hiring process?
These aren't conspiracy questions. They're basic credentialing questions that any HR department would ask.
The documentation exists. It's scattered across institutional records, early profiles, and court documents that most people never dig into.
TheWebb (dot) ai (not a sponsor) is making that research publicly accessible now.
The sources are there. The timeline is verifiable.
The question isn't what happened.
The question is who opened the doors.