Located just a short flight away from one of his vacation homes in New York City, Montreal was often on the late American sex offender Jeffrey Epsteinâs radar.
Though itâs unclear whether Epstein visited Quebec after he was convicted in 2008 for soliciting sex from a minor, among other prostitution charges, and was registered as a sex offender, the disgraced financier didnât shy away from planning trips to its biggest city.
Epsteinâs assistant twice reserved a room for him at the Ritz-Carlton in July 2014 when he tried to catch the Nasty Show at Montrealâs Just for Laughs Festival, before ultimately cancelling, according to emails released by the U.S. Department of Justice last month.
Many of the hundreds of times Montreal and Quebec are mentioned in the so-called Epstein files are largely insignificant.
One person writes to Epstein saying theyâre in Montreal to learn French and hope they âdonât pick up the Quebecois accent.â In another email exchange, Epstein qualifies Montreal as the second best place to learn French and enjoy singledom, after Saint-Barthélemy in the Caribbean. Â
Since the release of the files, prominent people â from the Clintons to university professors â have faced scrutiny over â and have had to defend â their association with Epstein, be it personal or business, especially after his 2008 guilty plea.
Here are some Quebecers who have found themselves in that position.
4 ways Quebec shows up in the Epstein files
Montreal crypto entrepreneur and angel investor Austin Hill notably reached out to and met with Epstein several times over four years, including at the multimillionaireâs private island, Little St. James, in April 2014. According to emails, Hill and his group stayed at an off-island hotel during that visit.
The two men first met a month prior at the Fairmount Pacific Rim in Vancouver, after which Epstein invested $50,000 in Hillâs cryptocurrency then-startup Blockstream through a venture fund.
Over the next few years, according to the files, Hill reached out seeking Epsteinâs advice and connections. In January 2015, as news of then-prince Andrewâs friendship with Epstein began circulating, Hill wrote Epstein apologizing for âinterrupting in what Iâm sure is a crazy media storm for you & your teamâ to ask for his advice and counsel on âa few things both business, Bitcoin, personal & esoteric mind games that we play.â
The previous month, Virginia Giuffre, one of Epsteinâs accusers who has since died by suicide, alleged in a Florida court that she was trafficked and forced to have sex with Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor when she was 17.
On Thursday, Mountbatten-Windson was arrested on suspicion of misconduct in public office for his connection to Epstein. He was released from custody the same day under investigation, police said, meaning he has neither been charged nor exonerated. He has previously denied all wrongdoing.
Hill and Epsteinâs correspondence, at least as far as the Epstein files go, ends in 2018 when Hill suggests they set up âsome secure communication.â At that point in time, they were in serious discussions to create a â[S]haria compliant coinâ for Muslim clients.
Hill could not be reached by CBC News for comment, but he told the Montreal Gazette earlier this month that he condemned Epsteinâs crimes and regretted âany associationâ with him.
Another Quebecer whose name comes up more than once in Epsteinâs inbox is businessman and Cirque du Soleil founder Guy Laliberté.Â
The emails started in 2011 and, over the years, included a Christmas card and an invite to a charity event where Laliberté called Epstein one of his âdear friends.âÂ
A spokesperson for Laliberté, Annie Dongois, told CBC News the emails are ânot really personalâ and are more so âmass mailing emails.âÂ
In 2018, Laliberté also tried to sell Epstein two of his villas in Ibiza, according to the files, but the sale didnât go forward. Dongois said the email with that proposal was crafted by Lalibertéâs communications team and sent to about 25 people who could afford it, essentially.
Lalibertéâs appearance in the files has also been reported in Le Journal de Montréal and La Presse.
Dongois said the two men didnât know each other personally beyond a handshake here and there at social events in New York, and that Laliberté has never been to Epsteinâs home.
â[Laliberté] has a very, like, heavy address book. So Epstein was in his address book and he received the mass mailing Christmas cards and a few communications that he sends to all his contacts,â said Dongois.Â
As for the âdear friendsâ reference, Dongois says that email was also crafted by Lalibertéâs team and sent to thousands of people.
Montreal also comes up in the Epstein files so often due to the many visits Sultan Ahmed Bin Sulayem paid the city. The Dubai tycoon previously headed the portuary terminal operator DP World, which partners on projects with Quebecâs pension fund manager, La Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec (CDPQ).
The sultan announced his resignation from the company last Friday after several emails â many of which contained explicit content â linked him with Epstein.
In November 2016, Bin Sulayem told Epstein of his âbig day in Canadaâ which took place in Montreal, after which DP World and CDPQ announced the launch of their $5-billion investment platform. Bin Sulayem flew to Epsteinâs private island right after finalizing the deal with the CDPQ.
The correspondence between Epstein and Bin Sulayem included crude jokes, links to profiles on Seeking Arrangements, a website known for connecting people with so-called âsugar daddies,â a poem about Brazilian women, and the pricing for an explicit massage the sultan said he received while in Tokyo.
Bin Sulayem also initiated the transfer of a masseuse, who worked at Epsteinâs private spa, to a spa in Turkey âso she gains better experience.â
After the messages between the sultan and Epstein emerged, the CDPQ paused âadditional capital deployment alongsideâ DP World and demanded the company âtake the necessary actions.â
âThe company took the appropriate measures. We will move quickly to work with DP Worldâs new leadership to continue our partnership on port projects around the world,â a spokesperson for the CDPQ, Jean-Benoît Houde, told CBC News in a statement.
The Port of Montreal says it is also continuing its work in light of Bin Sulayemâs departure.
If you or someone you know is struggling, hereâs where to look for help:
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