News
Why did
Jeffrey Epstein build a temple on his private island?
By J.K.
Trotter
Temple-like
building on Jeffrey Epstein's private island
Jeffrey
Epstein's private Caribbean island features a mysterious building that
resembles a temple Axiom Images
Jul 10,
2019, 10:32 PM GMT+2
https://www.businessinsider.com/jeffrey-epstein-private-island-temple-2019-7
The new
charges against Jeffrey Epstein have renewed questions about his private
Caribbean island, which features a building that resembles a religious temple.
The
structure was built sometime between 2009 and 2013, but it's unclear what it's
used for.
The
building's strange appearance has piqued the interest of online conspiracy
theorists.
A
contractor and engineer who spoke with INSIDER highlighted an odd architectural
detail: The medieval-era lock on the front door appears designed to keep people
inside.
The
federal charges against Jeffrey Epstein, unsealed on Monday morning in New York
City, open the latest chapter in the very public campaign to bring the
financier to justice. They also underscore how little is known about his life,
including the source of his wealth, and how what is known doesn't quite add up.
For instance: Is that really a temple on his private island? And to what?
The main
residence and compound occupies the northeast point, and a pair of guest houses
occupy the northwest and southeast points. The southwest point, however,
features a very different kind of building:
There's a
lot going on here. The base is painted with broad, vivid blue horizontal
stripes, and supports a large, golden dome. The entrance consists of an arched,
seemingly wooden door equipped with black metal hardware. The sides appear to
be cut with large windows, including a full-length one in the rear. You can see
the back of the structure in a high-definition video captured in 2015 by Axiom,
which produces and sells aerial photography:
The front
is flanked by statues painted in gold; one of them appears to be the
trident-wielding Poseidon, the Greek god of the sea, while two others look like
birds perched on the corners of the roof. It is surrounded by a line of palm
trees and a terrace with a labyrinth motif. Finally, the exterior seems to
incorporate an optical illusion, to create the impression that the exterior
windows and door are set within carved flanges.
It
strongly resembles a temple, though of which sort remains elusive. Epstein is
Jewish, and it is possible that he wanted his own private synagogue. But the
statuary would be out of place at such a temple, given the Old Testament's
prohibition on graven images. Though the cubic base and dome call to mind
Islamic architecture, Poseidon would likewise be an odd choice for a mosque.
Churches, of course, tend to feature crosses.
Locals
have suggested the building houses a "music room"
One clue
appeared in an Associated Press story, published earlier today, about Epstein's
life on and around the island. Here's the relevant passage:
Epstein
built a stone mansion with cream-colored walls and a bright turquoise roof
surrounded by several other structures including the maids' quarters and a
massive, square-shaped white building on one end of the island. Workers told
each other it was a music room fitted with a grand piano and acoustic walls.
Its gold dome flew off during the deadly 2017 hurricane season.
While
this explanation is somewhat believable — Epstein is a classically-trained
pianist — the wording suggests it is more of a rumor than a commonly-known
fact. Either way, it's not exactly clear why Epstein would position a
"music room" so far away from every other structure on the island.
The
second claim — "its gold dome flew off during the deadly 2017 hurricane
season" — is more supported. Google Earth satellites clearly captured the
dome on August 10, 2017, but it's not seen at all in photographs taken on
September 7, 2017, or in any subsequent image. A pair of substantial
hurricanes, Irma and Maria, struck the U.S. Virgin Islands between those two
dates.
The
"temple" has several strange features, including a door designed to
prevent people from leaving
Certain
features of the "temple" raise even more questions. When INSIDER
consulted James Both, a contractor and engineer based in Chicago, he first
pointed to the wooden door. "It's styled like what you might see on a
castle, with what appears to be a reinforcing lock bar across the face,"
he said. "What makes it peculiar is that if you wanted to keep people out,
the bar would be placed inside the building, [but the] locking bar appears to
be placed on the outside ... as if it were intended to lock people in."
Downhill
from the structure, at the end of a service path that branches from the main
road leading to the building, lies what appears to be a smaller structure or
entrance. Here's what it currently looks like on Apple Maps (notice the lack of
a dome):
The smaller structure is significant if only
because it could theoretically offer a second method of accessing or leaving
the larger building, which in turn would suggest the presence of a hidden
structure underneath it.
This possibility has gained some currency among
online conspiracy theorists, some of whom believe Epstein erected the building
to serve as a secluded facility for abusing children. Others have floated the
hypothesis that it conceals an elevator shaft, which in turn accesses a
subterranean lair where the same abuse occurred. Both groups have referred to
the building as a "temple."
There is some evidence that the larger building
and the smaller structure are related to one another. According to historical
satellite imagery made available by Google Earth, both were constructed
sometime between 2009 and 2013.
In August 2009, nothing existed on the southwest
corner of the island:
By February 2013, however, both structures (and
newly widened paths leading to them) were clearly visible from above:
But Both, the Chicago contractor and engineer,
said the smaller structure looked less like a secret entrance and more like a
cistern for storing or treating water, a necessity for bringing plumbing to the
more remote parts of the island. Another possibility, he added, was "a
small caretaker's shack which might include equipment for maintaining the
property."
As for a secret elevator and lair: "It is
absolutely possible to install a dwelling and elevator underneath the
structure." The main caveat, however, was privacy: "If an elevator
was built there, [there] would most likely be a record with the vendor who
installed the elevator, as they typically require yearly maintenance and
inspection. ... A simple stairwell would be a better option if someone wanted
to conceal their activities at the location."
All of the attention hasn't been uniformly
conspiratorial. In 2017, the Twitter user The War Economy assembled what is
likely the most comprehensive resource about Little St. James, including the
identities of several architects who helped design the island's buildings.
However, those architects provided their services long before the temple-like
building first appeared.
INSIDER contacted Epstein's personal attorney as
well as the Department of Public Works for the U.S. Virgin Islands to glean
more information about the building's purpose, but neither responded by
presstime.

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