13 Oct, 2020 19:26
Financial behemoth Leon Black of Apollo Global Management is under fire for $75 million in questionable deals with infamous pedophile Jeffrey Epstein as well as socializing and dining frequently with Epstein at his New York townhouse and storied private island.
Black has come forward to try to explain himself. But do his excuses bear scrutiny? RT America’s John Huddy reports. Then legal and media analyst Lionel and former UK MP George Galloway join Rick Sanchez to weigh in.
A Wall Street tycoon is taking a leave of absence from his fund a week after an explosive lawsuit accused his son of raping a former employee. Wall Street Tycoon is a business simulation game where you’re the CEO of a new investment company. Your job is to grow the company, hire employees, and manage the business!
We examine the tenuous ceasefire between Armenia and Azerbaijan and the limited fighting continuing in the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh.
We also hear comments by Armenian President Armen Sarkissian in an RT exclusive interview as well as Leyla Abdullayeva, a spokesperson for Azerbaijan’s foreign ministry.
We also hear comments by Armenian President Armen Sarkissian in an RT exclusive interview as well as Leyla Abdullayeva, a spokesperson for Azerbaijan’s foreign ministry.
RT America’s Trinity Chavez reports on an “unexplained illness” in a volunteer patient that led Johnson & Johnson to suspend its COVID-19 vaccine trials.
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Eclipse casino review. Plus, RT America’s Ben Swann reports on the increased surveillance and invasion of privacy that has come by the mass transition to telecommuting that has come with the pandemic-induced lockdowns and tightened public health measures across the US.
The family of James Evans, the former chairman of the Union Pacific railroad empire, has put their waterfront estate in East Hampton on the market for $60 million.
Evans, a lawyer who died at 94 in 2015, bought the 6.7-acre property at 32 Windmill Lane in 1986 and built a home on it, his daughter, Carol Jepperson, told the Wall Street Journal. While the family often used the property as a gathering place when Evans was alive, since his passing, Jepperson said they have visited less often, prompting the decision to sell.
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The 5,500-square-foot home, which court filings show is currently owned by a trust in Evans’ name, has five bedrooms, six bathrooms and a large living room with cathedral ceilings. Outside is a 50-foot heated pool, 300 feet of private beach and a separate guest cottage with three bedrooms, two-and-a-half bathrooms and its own pool.
Behind the Hedges noted that the Evans estate is two separate parcels, with 5.4 acres being on the water and the remaining 1.3 acres inland. Frank Newbold, who recently appeared on The Real Deal‘s ranking of top Hamptons luxury brokers, and Valerie Smith of Sotheby’s International Realty have the listing.
Newbold told the Journal that current zoning allows for a new owner to build a 12,500-square-foot home on the larger parcel and a 6,000-square-foot house on the inland parcel. The outlet noted the potential to pursue a teardown and the property’s location near East Hampton’s exclusive Further Lane makes it one of the pricier homes to come on the market in recent years. [WSJ]— Aidan Gardiner