[GRADE A2/B — Multiple House Oversight documents]
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_022367 contains the complete resume of Jack J. Grynberg (1932–2021), a Denver-based oil and gas billionaire. The resume, dated July 2014, describes Grynberg as founder and 76% stockholder of Oceanic Exploration Company, a public company that operated in Peru (among other countries) for oil, gas, and mineral exploration from 1969 to 1976.
The Barak-Grynberg-Epstein connection is documented in released emails: in October 2014, Barak emailed Epstein seeking his opinion on a proposed sale of Grynberg's GADECO LLC energy company (25% stake for $400M or 100% for $1.6B). Epstein responded negatively, and Barak subsequently "softly killed" the deal. The presence of Grynberg's resume in Epstein's files, combined with the documented advisory relationship, establishes a network pathway connecting Epstein to Peru-linked energy operations.
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_013460 and HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028781 contain an article about Jim Yong Kim (Obama's World Bank nominee) that Boris Nikolic forwarded to Epstein on March 23, 2012. The article extensively discusses Kim's work fighting multi-drug-resistant tuberculosis in Peru. Nikolic — Bill Gates's science advisor and named in Epstein's last will as backup executor — forwarded this to Epstein in the context of World Bank leadership discussions.
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_014410 contains financial analysis sent to Epstein mentioning the November 2016 APEC Summit in Lima as a market-moving event. The summit, hosted by President Pedro Pablo Kuczynski, brought together heads of state including Xi Jinping, Barack Obama, Vladimir Putin, Shinzo Abe, and Justin Trudeau. Ehud Barak's "on flights to Peru" email (EFTA02670455) dates to November 2, 2016 — two weeks before the summit.
WHAT THIS SHOWS AND DOES NOT SHOW: These documents establish that Peru appeared repeatedly in Epstein's information ecosystem through multiple channels: energy sector deals (Grynberg), global health policy (Kim/Nikolic), financial markets (APEC), and ports infrastructure (bin Sulayem). They do NOT establish that Epstein had direct business operations in Peru or that these connections were used for illegal purposes. The pattern suggests Peru was relevant to Epstein's network as a nexus of political access, natural resource extraction, and international commerce.