Confidential documents revealed by Congress show something strange: an email from Jeffrey Epstein dated September 19, 2014, containing a list of names of world leaders. Among them: Peter Thiel, Larry Summers, Bill Burns… and in the middle a strange name: “Satoshi (Bitcoin)”.
The timing is very suspicious:
September 8: Satoshi's email was hacked - yes, the real email he used to build Bitcoin.
September 19: Satoshi's name appears on Epstein's list with world leaders.
This is not a coincidence.
In March 2014, Newsweek magazine announced that it had found Satoshi: Dorian Nakamoto, a 65-year-old former physicist living in California with his mother. The traits are perfect - but there is a problem: the man is broke, unemployed for 10 years, suffers from a stroke, and cannot afford the internet.
When the journalists surprised him, he said something vague about his previous work. Newsweek thought it was a confession. But a day later, the real Satoshi account - silent for 5 years - posted a single message: “I am not Dorian Nakamoto.”
The media destroyed Dorian's life anyway.
Epstein was in the middle:
Donated $750,000 to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to support Bitcoin developers.
Organized meetings about cryptocurrencies at his home in Manhattan
A connection between crypto figures, intelligence agents, and financial officials.
Sent text messages to Steve Bannon in 2018 about cryptocurrency tax policy
Was “Satoshi” in the mail Dorian? Or Craig Wright, the Australian fraud who later claimed to be Satoshi? Or someone else who used the hacked accounts?
No one knows.
What we know: Epstein was building bridges between the world of Bitcoin and power. In September 2014, something happened in the shadows. The name Satoshi appeared in a place it should never have been.
The code works regardless of who wrote it. But history can sometimes be more exciting than the code itself.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
Epstein and Bitcoin: a mysterious correlation in 2014
Confidential documents revealed by Congress show something strange: an email from Jeffrey Epstein dated September 19, 2014, containing a list of names of world leaders. Among them: Peter Thiel, Larry Summers, Bill Burns… and in the middle a strange name: “Satoshi (Bitcoin)”.
The timing is very suspicious:
September 8: Satoshi's email was hacked - yes, the real email he used to build Bitcoin.
September 19: Satoshi's name appears on Epstein's list with world leaders.
This is not a coincidence.
In March 2014, Newsweek magazine announced that it had found Satoshi: Dorian Nakamoto, a 65-year-old former physicist living in California with his mother. The traits are perfect - but there is a problem: the man is broke, unemployed for 10 years, suffers from a stroke, and cannot afford the internet.
When the journalists surprised him, he said something vague about his previous work. Newsweek thought it was a confession. But a day later, the real Satoshi account - silent for 5 years - posted a single message: “I am not Dorian Nakamoto.”
The media destroyed Dorian's life anyway.
Epstein was in the middle:
Was “Satoshi” in the mail Dorian? Or Craig Wright, the Australian fraud who later claimed to be Satoshi? Or someone else who used the hacked accounts?
No one knows.
What we know: Epstein was building bridges between the world of Bitcoin and power. In September 2014, something happened in the shadows. The name Satoshi appeared in a place it should never have been.
The code works regardless of who wrote it. But history can sometimes be more exciting than the code itself.