[GRADE A2 — EFTA01317367 (FedEx invoice from Epstein's office files)]
On January 28, 2002, Jeffrey E. Epstein's office at 457 Madison Avenue, 4th Floor, New York, received a FedEx invoice (Invoice #4-110-24438, Account #1144-2081-6) for three international priority shipments. Three packages, three destinations, one world:
Shipment 1 — The offshore trust (picked up Jan 23, 2002)
Shipment 2 — Montreal (picked up Jan 24, 2002)
Shipment 3 — The island (dropped off Jan 26, 2002)
Total invoice: $212.53. Three packages. An offshore trust in the Virgin Islands, a billionaire in Montreal, and a private island — all on one bill.
Miles Alexander — the Little St James recipient — is one of the most revelatory figures in our Neo4j graph. Across 11 House Oversight documents (014280 through 026359), he co-appeared with: [all GRADE A1 — House Oversight]
He was senior island staff — and received the same FedEx invoice as Lawrence Stroll.
Eric Gany — sender on Shipment 1 — appears in 4 House Oversight documents, co-appeared with R. Alexander Acosta (the prosecutor who gave Epstein the 2008 Non-Prosecution Agreement), traveled to the FBI and the Grand Jury Room in West Palm Beach. [GRADE A1 — graph (House Oversight); GRADE D — role interpretation]
Jeanne Brennan — Financial Trust Company recipient — sent at least one email in Epstein's email system (JmailEmail, star_count: 10). Financial Trust Company is confirmed in the graph at the exact USVI address from the FedEx invoice. [GRADE A2 — Epstein email system]
WHAT THIS SHOWS AND DOES NOT SHOW: The FedEx invoice documents that Epstein's office sent a 4-lb package to Stroll's Montreal address. It does not reveal what was inside the package or why it was sent. FedEx packages between wealthy associates are routine; the evidentiary weight comes from the pattern (three destinations on one invoice: offshore trust, Montreal billionaire, private island) and from corroboration with other documents. Standing alone, a single FedEx shipment is unremarkable.