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Meet the high-profile Emirati business leader lawmakers are linking to Epstein


Jeffrey Epstein and Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem, Group CEO of DP World.

House Oversight Committee Democrats

U.S. officials made new disclosures from the Epstein files on Monday, naming who they believe was the recipient behind a disturbing email sent by the deceased financier and sex criminal Jeffrey Epstein, in which he referenced a supposed “torture video.”

That name is Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem, one of the Emirates’ most powerful business figures, who, for years, maintained a relationship with Epstein, with the communications often including explicit content, according to documents recently released by the U.S. Justice Department.

The latest revelation comes after Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky. and Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif. reviewed unredacted documents at the Justice Department on Monday.

Massie posted a screenshot of the email on the social media platform X. In the email, Epstein wrote to a redacted recipient: “where are you? Are you ok, I loved the torture video.”  The reply stated: “I am in china I will be in the US 2nd week of May.”

Canada pension fund halts future deals with DP World after Epstein fallout

Alongside the screenshot, Massie wrote that, “a sultan seems to have sent this,” and called on the DOJ to make the information public.

That caught the attention of Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, who responded to Massie on X, stating the redaction protected personally identifiable information in an email address. He added that Sulayem’s name appeared unredacted elsewhere in the released files and linked to a document containing his name.

Massie later said Blanche had “tacitly admitted that Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem was the sender of the torture video.”

CNBC sought comment from Sulayem through DP World, where he serves as chairman and CEO, but did not receive a response. Sulayem has not been accused of any criminal wrongdoing. It is also unclear exactly what the referenced “torture video” was, and whether it had actually been sent from Sulayem to Epstein.

Authorities have stressed that a mention in the Epstein files does not indicate evidence of wrongdoing nor prove that the name was part of a purported client list or blackmail scheme.

However, the email adds yet another thread to a tapestry of years of communications between Sulayem and Epstein, which referenced everything from business deals, politics to sex.

A most trusted friend

The Epstein files, especially following the latest releases, have shed new light on how the deceased sex criminal networked and fraternized with influential figures in politics and business.

Yet amongst the many names prominently featured, Sulayem stands out, not only for his level of intimacy with Epstein, but for his prominence and sway in both the political and global business realms.

In his home city of Dubai, Sulayem is regarded as a leading business figure, coming from one of the Emirate’s main families. His father was an advisor to the ruling Al Maktoum family and Sulayem himself played a key role in the ascendance of Dubai as an economic hub.

File picture showing Emirati Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashed al-Maktum (C), DP World chairman Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem (L) and the chairman of Emaar projects chief Mohammad Ali al-Abbar attending a golf tournament in the Gulf emirate of Dubai on March 7, 2004.

Nasser Younes | Afp | Getty Images

Sulayem oversaw the growth of Dubai’s Jebel Ali port into a major deep-water shipping hub and the creation of DP World, a logistics empire that now spans the globe and oversees ports that handle a tenth of the world’s container trade.

He also led Nakheel Properties, a Dubai government-owned developer behind large artificial island projects, though he was replaced amid a major board restructuring following Dubai World’s debt crisis during the 2008 financial crisis.

His prominent leadership roles made him an important representative of Dubai’s economy amongst both the leadership in the UAE and the international community. Sulayem appeared regularly in international forums, including the World Economic Forum in Davos, often rubbing shoulders with politicians and giving speaking engagements.

However, emails released by the DOJ suggest that Epstein saw a very different side of the Sultan — and in him, a friend and confidant, trusted enough to engage in high-stakes discussions of business and sex.

A search of the name “Sulayem” on the DOJ’s Epstein library yields thousands of results, many of which appear to be email exchanges between the two from around 2007 through 2019, long after the financier was convicted of soliciting prostitution from a minor in 2008.

The DOJ’s file release shows that Epstein once referred to Sulayem as a “close personal friend” he had known for 8 years. He also described Sulayem as one of his most trusted friends in other writings. 

In the world…



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