Before the private jets, the island, and the proximity to presidents and princes, Epstein was a teacher. In the mid-1970s, he taught mathematics and physics at the Dalton School in New York, one of the city’s most prestigious private institutions. He came from a working-class family in Brooklyn and had never completed a college degree. He fabricated academic credentials to secure the teaching position, and his classroom performance left little impression. Dalton administrators asked him to leave after the academic year. By any conventional measure, this should have marked the limit of his upward mobility. Instead, it marked the moment when social access began to substitute for merit.
Epstein Saga: How a school teacher with fake degrees became so powerful
Published 2 hours ago
Source: timesofindia.indiatimes.com
Related Articles from timesofindia.indiatimes.com
1 hour ago
Shocking! Following WWE retirement; John Cena beats Cristiano Ronaldo
1 hour ago
Shilpa Shetty personality rights: Bombay High Court orders AI content removal
1 hour ago
'40kg of explosives used': Shah on Red Fort blast; sends strong msg to all DGPs
1 hour ago
Watch: Mufti snaps at scribe over Kashmiri language; takes jab at Stalin
2 hours ago
Grim roll call of 2025: Indian students who lost their lives this year while studying abroad
2 hours ago