This is only part of it, see the link for the rest, which talks about emails, with further reference in the report to Barclays and JP Morgan.
Just goes to show once again all politicians cannot be trusted and certainly only have their own interests at heart - this all after the financial crash, which ****ed everyone over, so still no lessons learned.
Saturday 31 January 2026 20:05, UK
Peter Mandelson told Jeffrey Epstein he was "trying hard" to change government policy on bankers' bonuses at his request, months after the convicted sex trafficker had paid thousands of pounds to the then UK business secretary's husband.
Emails released by the US Department of Justice (DoJ) on Friday shed new light on the closeness of the relationship between the disgraced financier and Lord Mandelson, who was
sacked as British ambassador to Washington last year.
The documents include correspondence in September 2009 between
Epstein and
Lord Mandelson's husband, Reinaldo Avila da Silva, who
asked the financier to pay him £10,000 to fund an osteopathy course and other expenses.
Epstein responds "I will wire your loan amount immediate'y" [sic].
Emails released by the US Department of Justice shed new light on the closeness of the relationship between Jeffrey Epstein and former UK business secretary Peter Mandelson, who was sacked as British ambassador to Washington last year.
news.sky.com
A few days later, Mr da Silva, who married Lord Mandelson in 2023, replied "thank you for the money which arrived in my account this morning".
Epstein was released from prison in July 2009, having pleaded guilty to trafficking a minor.
In separate emails, exchanged in December 2009, Lord Mandelson, then business secretary in Gordon Brown's government, appears to agree to try to change government policy on taxing bankers' bonuses.
Coming just 18 months after the great financial crash and subsequent state rescue of banks, the subject was highly contentious.
On 9 December 2009, the then chancellor Alistair Darling announced a 50% "super tax" on bonuses, intended to prevent pay being inflated by taxpayer-funded bailouts.