The Headlines - How America’s Largest Bank Helped Jeffrey Epstein, and a Show of Resistance in D.C.
Episode Date: September 8, 2025Plus, why you’re wrong about your Zodiac sign.On Today’s Episode:How JPMorgan Enabled the Crimes of Jeffrey Epstein, by David Enrich, Matthew Goldstein and Jessica Silver-GreenbergRussia Unleashes... Largest Drone Assault of War, Setting Government Building Ablaze, by Andrew E. KramerWhat We Know About the Hyundai-LG Plant Immigration Raid in Georgia, by Chris HippensteelGrand Juries in D.C. Reject Wave of Charges Under Trump’s Crackdown, by Alan FeuerAnthropic Agrees to Pay $1.5 Billion to Settle Lawsuit With Book Authors, by Cade MetzWhy Your Zodiac Sign Is Out of Date, by Aatish Bhatia, Laura Bult, Sutton Raphael, Stephanie Swart and Dion LeeTune in every weekend morning, and tell us what you think at: theheadlines@nytimes.com.Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Also, for more podcasts and narrated articles, download The New York Times app at nytimes.com/app. Unlock full access to New York Times podcasts and explore everything from politics to pop culture. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Also, for more podcasts and narrated articles, download The New York Times app at nytimes.com/app.
Transcript
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From the New York Times, it's the headlines.
I'm Tracy Mumford.
Today's Monday, September 8th.
Here's what we're covered.
A new investigation from the Times, just out this morning,
looks at the close relationship between America's leading bank, J.P. Morgan,
and the convicted sex offender, Jeffrey Epstein.
Some elements of this have become public over the years.
The bank agreed to pay almost 300.
million dollars to Epstein's victims back in 2023 for ignoring warnings about him. But Times
reporters combed through more than 13,000 pages of legal and financial records to understand
the full extent of the bank's involvement. What they found is that J.P. Morgan spent years
supporting and profiting from Epstein, while repeatedly ignoring red flags and the concerns
of some of their own employees. A few of their takeaways. The bank
was crucial for Epstein as he carried out his sex trafficking operation. In all, J.P. Morgan
processed more than 4,700 transactions, totaling more than $1.1 billion for him, including payments
to his victims. J.P. Morgan also allowed Epstein to withdraw tens of thousands of dollars in cash a
month, amounts that should have set off internal alarms. The Times also found that the bank
opened accounts for Epstein's victims and assistance, sometimes with the bank.
without conducting proper due diligence.
In one case, at Epstein's request,
the bank agreed to open accounts for two young women
without actually speaking to either of them.
At the same time, Epstein was making money and connections for the bank.
He helped them orchestrate a key hedge fund acquisition
and introduced bank executives to men who would become lucrative clients,
including the co-founder of Google, Sergey Brin.
At one point in 2011, Epstein was called in for a meeting
at the bank's headquarters in Manhattan.
The executives were weighing all of this,
both his illicit behavior,
he'd pleaded guilty a few years earlier
to soliciting sex with a minor,
and his benefit to the bank.
In that meeting, Epstein promised
the bank's general counsel
that he'd, quote,
turned over a new leaf.
He rattled off the names of prominent figures
who he said could vouch for his character.
Go talk to Bill Gates about me, he said.
The general counsel ultimately recommended
that J.P. Morgan should cut ties with Epstein. But he did not insist on it, and he did not
escalate the issue. So Epstein was allowed to stay. It wasn't until two years later that the
bank decided to kick Epstein out, under increasing pressure from federal regulators for failing
to report suspicious activities to the government. For the full investigation, including
how one of J.P. Morgan's highest-ranking executives made trips to Epstein's private
Island and his ranch in New Mexico, go to NYTimes.com.
In Ukraine yesterday, Russia unleashed its largest drone assault to date,
launching more than 800 exploding drones and decoys across the country.
At least five people were killed, and in Kiev, flames leaped from the windows of a government
building near Parliament and the president's office.
It was the first time a building in the city's heavily.
guarded government district has been damaged since the war began.
Firefighters fought the flames from a helicopter.
The drone barrage marked the latest attack in a relentless offensive that's continued
and even ramped up recently, despite the Trump administration's efforts to mediate peace talks.
Speaking to reporters on Sunday, President Trump said he was prepared to increase sanctions on Russia.
for failing to reach a ceasefire deal.
Though Trump's previous threats to punish Russia
have been largely empty,
with deadlines, he said, coming and going without consequence.
Yesterday, the South Korean government announced
that it's sending a chartered plane to the U.S.
to pick up hundreds of South Korean workers
who were caught up in an immigration raid last week.
The workers were detained Thursday
at an electric vehicle,
battery plant that's under construction near Savannah, Georgia. The plant is owned by two South
Korean companies, LG Energy Solution, and Hyundai. The U.S. government called it the largest ever
raid on a single work site, saying 475 people were arrested, most of them South Korean citizens
who were allegedly living and working in the U.S. illegally. The raid has underscored competing
tensions inside the Trump administration. Officials want to crack down on immigration, even as they
want to boost domestic manufacturing, especially of crucial technologies like batteries.
Industry experts say that because the U.S. is new to battery production, for example,
companies have decided to bring in experienced engineers and technicians from overseas.
For the moment, the raid could scare off those kinds of skilled workers from coming to the U.S.,
which could slow construction on new high-tech projects and drive up costs.
In Washington, D.C., it's now been nearly a month since President Trump launched his show of force in the city,
taking control of the police department and deploying the National Guard.
It's led to a flurry of arrests and charges from prosecutors.
But as the cases have been brought to grand juries, the grand juries have been rejecting many of them,
and what appears to be a show of resistance by D.C. residents who are refusing to indict their neighbors.
While grand jury proceedings are secret, making it impossible to know exactly what they're thinking,
it's extremely rare for jurors to reject cases from the outset like they've been doing.
One former U.S. attorney told the Times she'd only seen that happen once or twice in 20 years,
and that she guessed the jurors are, quote, seeing prosecutorial overreach and they don't want to be part of it.
Because Trump has deployed so many federal agents in D.C., many of the defendants are getting charged with federal felonies,
for otherwise relatively minor offences. And many of the cases that grand juries have rejected
have then been downgraded or dismissed by prosecutors, a kind of acknowledgement that they were
overcharged to begin with. The most prominent example of that, the former Justice Department
employee who threw a sub-sandwich at a federal agent and was charged with felony assault. After a
grand jury refused to indict him, his charges were dropped down to a misdemeanor.
One of the leading AI companies in the world, Anthropic, has agreed to pay a landmark settlement after a judge found it had illegally downloaded and stored millions of copyrighted books.
To build chatbots and other services, AI companies have had to use massive amounts of data to train their models, and it sparked a lot of questions about where they're getting that data in the first place.
In Anthropics case, the judge ruled.
that using books for that kind of training
was within the bounds of fair use
under the law, as long as they were
legally acquired. For example,
at one point the company bought physical books
in bulk from publishers
and scanned them so they could use them for training.
But the judge also found
that the company had illegally acquired
millions of pirated books
from online libraries, effectively
stealing them. Now, the company
has agreed to pay $3,000
per work to half a million
authors, a $1.5 billion settlement that's the largest in the history of U.S. copyright cases.
It's not immediately clear what implications the settlement might have for the dozens of other
lawsuits that copyright holders have brought against AI companies, though experts say it could
pave the way for more of them to pay rights holders, either through licensing fees or future
settlements.
And finally,
The zodiac sign is Leo.
We're known to be very loyal, very powerful.
Arias, you're the first son of the zodiac.
You're literally walking around.
We can all feel your energy, okay?
Whether or not you have ever checked your horoscope,
whether or not you believe in that kind of stuff at all,
you probably still know your zodiac sign.
Gemini is outgoing and flaky.
Cancer is loyal and moody.
And as it turns out, you are probably wrong.
Here's why.
The 12 zodiac signs were originally calculated 2,000-plus years ago,
based on whichever constellation was behind the sun on your birth date.
But things have shifted.
The earth wobbles in its rotation, changing up our view of the stars degree by degree in a way that builds up over time.
So if you were born today, September 8th, happy birthday, you probably always thought you were a Virgo.
2,000 years ago, that was right.
But this year, the actual constellation behind the sun today is Leo.
Sorry to break that to you.
There are also other factors at play.
For one thing, the zodiac system functions as if each of the key constellations is the same size, but they're not.
Some spend more time behind the sun than others, making Virgo season longer than cancer, for example.
Also, the Babylonians, who set all of this up and thus are to blame for all of this, left out a 13th constellation, Ophiuchus.
They went with a nice round number of 12, but this whole whole.
whole time, there have been Ophiukins out there walking among us.
To find out what sign you actually are by new modern calculations, you can follow the link
to the Times coverage in our show notes.
Personally, from a Libra, who is apparently now a Virgo, I don't even know what to do with
this information.
Those are the headlines.
Today on the Daily, details about what life has been like on the ground in Washington, D.C.,
since President Trump deployed the National Guard.
You can listen to that in the New York Times app
or wherever you get your podcasts.
I'm Tracy Mumford.
We'll be back tomorrow.
