Epstein files: Germany on high alert

The scandal surrounding US sex offender Jeffrey Epstein is rocking European countries. In Germany, journalists are combing through the files, and politicians are pushing for investigations.

The US Department of Justice has released around three million documents relating to the Epstein scandalImage: Jon Elswick/AP Photo/picture alliance

The German government says it is closely monitoring the evaluation of the so-called Epstein files. “We are watching what is coming to light in other countries and how it is affecting politics there,” said government spokesman Stefan Kornelius at a press conference.

Kornelius stressed that if the documents reveal any criminal offense committed by German nationals, the country’s law enforcement agencies would take action.

“The federal government is not an investigative authority,” the spokesman explained, adding that he is “not currently aware of any criminal proceedings.”

Are Germans mentioned in the Epstein files?

Former German Chancellor Angela Merkel is mentioned in the published documents dozens of times; for example, in email correspondence between Jeffrey Epstein and Steve Bannon, the former chief strategist to US President Donald Trump. Both men make disparaging remarks about Merkel and express their desire to see her fail politically.

Another German name in the Epstein files is that of former German Defense Secretary Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg’s ex-wife, now known as Stephanie von Bismarck. She appears twice, but only on a list of customers of a bank where Epstein also had an account. The accounts are not related to each other.

Reporters for German news magazine Der Spiegel found a copy of a press card seemingly issued by the German Union of Journalists Ver.di for Epstein’s accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell. Ver.di has since described it as a forgery, and reserves the right to take legal action.

German politicians demand investigation

Several German lawmakers have argued that there should be a systematic evaluation of the files. They want to know whether political or economic influence was exerted in Germany through Epstein’s network.

Konstantin von Notz of the opposition Green Party says the German government must provide information on the extent to which German intelligence services and other security agencies were aware of Epstein’s actions.

Notz, the Green Party’s deputy leader in Bundestag, toldthe Handelsblatt newspaper he wants to know whether the German authorities knew of the “exploitative, criminal, or pedo-criminal networks,” as well as Epstein’s international connections.

Sebastian Fiedler, domestic policy spokesman for the parliamentary group of the center-left Social Democratic Party (SPD) in the Bundestag, referred to speculation over a possible European intelligence dimension to the case. He pointed to a suspicion expressed by Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk, who spoke of an Russian influence operation.

“Given the numerous interconnections within European power circles, it cannot be ruled out that interconnections could also arise in Germany,” Fiedler told the Handelsblatt.

Fiedler said the Epstein files showed a form of “serious organized crime” that had infiltrated institutions, business and culture across national borders.

Source : https://www.dw.com/en/epstein-files-germany-on-high-alert/a-75898626

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