Jeffrey Epstein attended Interlochen fine arts preparatory school in 1967, and the school acknowledges this due to his later donations and involvement. However, the school denies that William Barr, who was twice the US attorney general, attended the camp in 1967, despite a picture showing a boy resembling Barr. Epstein became a major supporter of Interlochen, donating $500,000 for the construction of the Jeffrey Epstein Scholarship Lodge on campus. He also hosted soirees for Interlochen alumni at his New York townhouse and preyed on Interlochen minors. At Epstein's trial, "Jane," an Interlochen camp alumni, testified that she met Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell at the summer camp in 1994, when she was 13, and they groomed her for sexual abuse that lasted over five years. On July 6, 2019, Epstein was arrested, and two days later, Barr seemingly recused himself from the Epstein case. Barr had three conflicts of interest in the Epstein case, including his tenure at Kirkland and Ellis, which represented Epstein, and his father hiring Epstein to teach at the prestigious Dalton School in New York City. Barr's father, Donald, was the headmaster of the school when he hired Epstein, who was extremely unqualified for the position. Barr had three solid reasons to recuse himself from the Epstein case, but he chose not to. The pictures from the 1967 Interlochen Art Camp directory show Epstein on page 63 and a boy resembling Barr on page 68.
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