When Jeffrey Epstein’s notorious Manhattan townhouse at 9 East 71st Street was finally sold in 2021, the buyer turned out to be Michael D. Daffey, a former Goldman Sachs executive. The property had been listed for $88 million but sold for a significantly reduced $51 million, a discount that drew sharp attention. Daffey didn’t just buy a lavish piece of real estate; he bought a structure infamous as the hub of Epstein’s operations, one where investigators uncovered photos, safes full of incriminating materials, and where survivors said abuse occurred. Acquiring a property so saturated with scandal inevitably raises questions—not about direct involvement, but about the motivations and awareness of anyone willing to step into that history for a deal.
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