Jerry Kennedy poses for a portrait at the Mercury Records studio Michael Ochs Archive/Getty

Michael Ochs Archive/Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • Jerry Kennedy, a Nashville producer who also played guitar for Tammy Wynette and Roy Orbison, has died at age 85

  • The late musician spent a few weeks in a Franklin comfort center before he died after being diagnosed with congestive heart failure, according to his son, Gordon Kennedy

  • "You just have to turn on the radio and you'll hear his fingerprints everywhere," Gordon said of his late father

Jerry Kennedy, a Nashville producer who also played guitar forTammy WynetteandRoy Orbison, has died. He was 85.

"The musician sits on one side of the glass. The producer sits on the other. My father sat on both in this world," Jerry's son,Gordon Kennedy, wrote in a Sunday, Feb. 15,Instagram tributealongside a throwback photo of his late father. "Scripture tells us we only see through a smoky glass this side of heaven. I imagine my father sitting on this side and last Wednesday, hearing a voice on the other side saying 'come on in and listen.' "

Gordon, who is a multi-Grammy Award-winning songwriter and record producer himself, confirmed toThe New York Timesthat his father died after being diagnosed with congestive heart failure. He also toldThe Tennesseanthat Jerry spent a few weeks in a Franklin comfort care facility before he died on Wednesday, Feb. 11.

In the days after his father's death, Gordon recalled toThe Tennesseanthat someone approached him at a funeral home, offering to make him a piece of jewelry with his father's fingerprint to ensure his legacy would be preserved.

Leroy Van Dyke and Jerry Kennedy Joe Rudis / The Tennessean via Imagn

Joe Rudis / The Tennessean via Imagn

"I just said, 'You just have to turn on the radio and you'll hear his fingerprints everywhere,' " he remembered responding. "And they'll be there forever. We've got them in a much more significant way than a necklace. You can hear his fingerprints."

Indeed, Jerry played a role in shaping the music made in Nashville throughout the 1960s and 1970s, featuring his iconic fretwork in hits by Tammy Wynette, Roy Orbison, Roger Miller and many more. He also co-wroteEric Clapton's Grammy Award-winning single, "Change the World," in 1996.

Jerry Kennedy poses for a portrait at the Mercury Records studio Michael Ochs Archive/Getty

Michael Ochs Archive/Getty

Even in the days leading up to his father's death, Gordon recalled someone in the facility turning on the classic country music channel, where Jerry's music was often featured.

"There were days where I remember walking towards his room and I hear music coming out of his room and it was Tom T. Hall's 'Fox on the Run,' from the bluegrass album they did," he toldThe Tennessean. "It was a different song every day. We would hear 'I'll Go To My Grave Loving You' by the Statler Brothers or a Tammy Wynette song he played on. I was just amazed at how frequent it was."

Beyond working on hit songs likeElvis Presley's "Good Luck Charm" and Leroy Van Dyke's "Walk on By," Jerry, who signed a recording contract with RCA as a child, later went on to start his own company: JK Productions.

In addition to Gordon, the late musician is survived by his wife, Dolores Dea-Kennedy, and his two younger sons, Bryan and Shelby. He also has three grandchildren, two great-grandchildren and his two sisters, Barbara Blaylock and Kathy Price.

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Jerry Kennedy as a child; Gordon Kennedy with his dad's guitar Nicole Hester/The Tennessean via Imagn

Nicole Hester/The Tennessean via Imagn

Noting that all of Jerry's children were with him on the day that he died, Gordon went on to recall hearing Jeannie C. Riley's 1968 song "Harper Valley PTA," on which Jerry played dobro, in the hours before his death.

"That was on the day he passed away," he said. "There was just a constant reminder even while we were sitting with him for this handful of weeks, that this stuff is going to stay on a loop forever."

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Jerry Kennedy, Nashville Producer and Guitarist for Tammy Wynette and Roy Orbison, Dies at 85

Michael Ochs Archive/Getty NEED TO KNOW Jerry Kennedy, a Nashville producer who also played guitar for Tammy Wynette and Roy Orbison, ha...
Halle Berry says directors still refused to cast her after Oscar win and reveals advice she gave to Cynthia Erivo

AddHalle Berryto the list of stars who don't feel like winning an Oscar changed their career necessarily for the better.

Entertainment Weekly Best Actress winner Halle Berry, backstage at the 74th Annual Academy Awards in 2002 Getty

TheCrime 101star recently opened up toThe Cutabout her historic win for Best Actress for her performance inMonster's Ball. The win was the first, and remains the only, one for a Black woman in the category.

"That Oscar didn't necessarily change the course of my career," Berry told the outlet. "After I won it, I thought there was going to be, like, a script truck showing up outside my front door. While I was wildly proud of it, I was still Black that next morning. Directors were still saying, 'If we put a Black woman in this role, what does this mean for the whole story? Do I have to cast a Black man? Then it's a Black movie. Black movies don't sell overseas.'"

In the same interview, Berry also revealed that she once advised fellow starCynthia Erivo— who has twice been nominated in the category for her roles inHarrietandWicked— not to place any real weight on winning an Oscar.

Cynthia Erivo at the 97th Oscars in 2025  Gilbert Flores/Penske Media via Getty

Gilbert Flores/Penske Media via Getty

"You goddamn deserve it, but I don't know that it's going to change your life," she said she told Erivo. "It cannot be the validation for what you do, right?"

Berry previously toldMarie Clairein 2024how disappointed she was that her historic moment didn't have more of a snowball effect for the industry, saying she's "eternally miffed that no Black woman has come behind me for that Best Actress Oscar. I'm continually saddened by that year after year. And it's certainly not because there has been nobody deserving."

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TheCatwomanstar is one of several actresses to open up about how winning an Academy Award didn't necessarily have the intended career effect. Melissa Leo, who won Best Supporting Actress forThe Fighterback in 2011,shared her brutally honestthoughts about her win, including that she believes it has, in fact, had a negative impact on her career.

"Winning an Oscar has not been good for me or my career," she said recently in a reader Q&A withThe Guardian, adding, "I didn't dream of it, I never wanted it, and I had a much better career before I won."

And Marcia Gay Harden, who won Best Supporting Actress for the 2000 moviePollock, famously told theLos Angeles Timesin 2003that the award was "disastrous on a professional level" for her.

"Suddenly the parts you're offered and the money become smaller. There's no logic to it," she added.

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

Halle Berry says directors still refused to cast her after Oscar win and reveals advice she gave to Cynthia Erivo

AddHalle Berryto the list of stars who don't feel like winning an Oscar changed their career necessarily for the bet...
'This is a Wake-up Call': Why Savannah Guthrie's Mom Nancy's Terrifying 'Abduction' Could Drastically Change Morning Television

Savannah Guthrie's mother's abduction is already having a chilling effect on how network starsshow off their familiesto viewers,RadarOnline.comcan reveal.

Radar Online Nancy Guthrie was featured in a November 2025 'Today' segment.TODAY/YouTube

Nancy Guthrie, 84, wasprominently featuredin a Tucson, Arizona, hometown visit segment theTodayco-host did in November 2025. She remains missing 15 days after anarmed intruderforcibly took her from her home on February 1.

Family Tie-In Segments 'Pulled'

Nancy Guthrie made several appearances on 'Today' over the years.NBC

"There were at least three family tie-ins pulled this week," one senior morning producer revealed to Hollywood insiderRob Shuter, who wrote about it onSubstack. "It suddenly feels different."

Not only isNBCcurtailing segments featuring family members of its talent, butABCandCBShave also "paused similar pieces featuring" the children and parents of their big-bucks anchors.

"No one wants to blur the line between storytelling and exposure right now," a source spilled.

'An Industry-Wide Recalibration'

Savannah Guthrie regularly shared content featuring her mom on her Instagram page before her abduction.@savannahguthrie/Instagram

It's not just the big three networks but cable TV outlets who are also pressing pause on showing off the families of their stars. It's an industry-wide recalibration," a media executive told Shuter. "When real life becomes frightening, the 'we're one big family' model feels riskier."

Pieces focusing on the family of top talent are meant to draw in the audience and make them feel as if they're part of the family.

It's also been used over the years to help viewers gain insight into their favorite talent, especially on the all-important morning shows watched by both parents and children as they get ready to start their days.

Nancy Guthrie's Abduction Is a 'Wake Up Call' For Morning Show Stars

Access to moring show stars' families is likely to be curtailed in the wake of Nancy Guthrie's abduction.TODAY/YouTube

Shuter notes while "connection" was the goal, it also "invites vulnerability."

"This is a wake-up call," the insider explained about Nancy's mysterious abduction after she had been featured onTodayover the years.

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"The human touch isn't going away – but the access might," they explained about how the relatives of top talent appearing on social media and in televised segments could be scaled back.

Savannah took viewers back to Tucson in a November 2026 "Homecoming" segment, a six-minute love-letter to the town she grew up in and how it shaped her.

"I'm proud when I say I'm from Tucson, Arizona. I grew up there, went to college there. My mom still lives there," she gushed at the time to viewers before the piece rolled.

"I want to go home to show you everything from the giants of the desert to the people who raised me," Savannah revealed about the piece, which included her mom and her sister, Annie.

'Today' Viewers Knew Where Nancy Guthrie Lived

Savannah Guthrie's mom described why she loved living in Tucson during Today's 'Homecoming' segment.TODAY/YouTube

Savannah brought viewers along as she returned to the University of Arizona campus, where she attended college, and to her former sorority house.

But she saved the most heartwarming moments for last, ending the visit by having her mom and sister join her for lunch at a beloved Mexican restaurant where they had shared so many meals in the past.

Savannah made it clear that both her mother and sister still lived in Tucson while asking Nancy why she decided to raise her family in Southern Arizona.

"The air, the quality of life. It's laid back and gentle. I like to watch the javelinas eat my plants," Nancy described her peaceful desert life.

She was abducted from her home in the city's Catalina Foothills area by a masked gunman, and fifteen days later, there has been no sign of the ailing grandmother.

Despite a massive search by the Pima County Sheriff's Department and the FBI, her disappearanceremains a complete mystery.

'This is a Wake-up Call': Why Savannah Guthrie's Mom Nancy's Terrifying 'Abduction' Could Drastically Change Morning Television

Savannah Guthrie's mother's abduction is already having a chilling effect on how network starsshow off their fam...
US increases military pressure on Iran ahead of high-stakes talks

The US military is continuing asignificant buildupof air and naval assets in the Middle East ahead of planned talks with Iran in Geneva on Tuesday. The pieces are being moved into place both to intimidate Tehran and to have options to strike inside the country should negotiations over its nuclear program fail, multiple sources familiar with the matter told CNN.

CNN The aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln and other vessels sail in formation in the Arabian Sea, on February 6, 2026. - Petty Officer 1st Class Jesse Mo/US Navy

US Air Force assets based in the United Kingdom, including refueling tankers and fighter jets, are being repositioned closer to the Middle East, according to sources familiar with the movements.

The US is also continuing to flow air defense systems to the region, according to a US official, and several US military units deployed in the region that were expected to rotate out in the coming weeks have had their orders extended, said one source familiar with the matter. Dozens of US military cargo planes have transported equipment from the US to Jordan, Bahrain and Saudi Arabia in recent weeks, according to flight-tracking data.

On Friday evening, multiple fighter aircraft were also given diplomatic clearance to enter Jordanian airspace, according toopen-source air traffic communications. Satellite images show 12 US F-15 attack planes have been positioned at Jordan's Muwaffaq Salti Air Base since January 25.

More broadly, open-source flight data reveals there have been over 250 US cargo flights into the region.

President Donald Trump has been threatening military action against Iran for weeks, beginning last month when he warned Iranian leaders that he was prepared to order an attack if the government did not stop killing protesters. And on Friday, he said he believes regime change "would be the best thing that could happen" in Iran.

The buildup of military assets and emphasis by Trump and senior members of the administration that regime change is preferable has the region on edge and increases the stakes for Tuesday's talks, which the president said Monday he will be "indirectly" involved in. The Switzerland talks are expected to be led by Trump's envoy, Steve Witkoff, and his son-in-law, Jared Kushner, on the US side, with Iran represented by Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi.

'No one knows' who would take over

But the administration still does not appear to have a clear understanding of what would come next if it removed the Iranian regime, according to two sources familiar with the matter. Secretary of State Marco Rubio echoed this during a congressional hearing late last month, telling lawmakers that "no one knows" who would take over if the regime fell.

The likely alternatives could be even more problematic for the US and its allies, sources said. In the short term, the hard-line Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps would likely fill any leadership void, the US intelligence community believes, according to sources.

The IRGC "is definitely prominent and functions above the standard military bureaucracy, but it is hard to predict exactly what would happen in a regime collapse scenario," said one source familiar with recent US intelligence reporting on the matter.

The US also lacks clear insight into the IRGC's hierarchy following the US assassination of Iran's most powerful military commander, Maj. Gen. Qasem Soleimani, during Trump's first term.

Whereas US intelligence officials had a very good understanding of the power dynamics in Venezuela before the US captured then-President Nicolás Maduro last month, they lack the same insight into who, if anyone, would constitute a viable replacement for Iran's supreme leader, sources said.

Multiple sources said there were legitimate reasons to consider kinetic action several weeks ago at the height of the Iranian protests. At that point, there was a small window of time when US strikes could have potentially tipped the balance in favor of the opposition, providing momentum for Iranians to overthrow their government organically.

Iranian protesters gather around burning cars during a protest in Tehran on January 8, 2026. - Aghasht/Middle East Images/AFP/Getty Images

Those sources now wonder whether Trump "missed the moment" and question whether military strikes weeks later would accomplish what they could have last month.

At the time, however, US military assets were concentrated in the Caribbean rather than the Middle East, limiting the administration's options and worrying the Israelis, who were concerned they would be left exposed if Iran were to retaliate by attacking them with ballistic missiles.

Since then, Trump has shifted his rationale for a potential attack, framing it around Iran's reluctance to stop enriching uranium for its nuclear program.

"I think they'll be successful," Trump said Friday of the upcoming talks. "If they're not, it's going to be a very bad day for Iran."

Unlike last month, the US now has the USS Abraham Lincoln carrier strike group in the region, the USS Gerald Ford carrier strike group on the way, and fighter jet squadrons and tankers being rapidly repositioned.

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"In case we don't make a deal, we'll need it," Trump said Friday, when asked why the Ford was headed to the region.

Aircraft launch from the flight deck of the USS Gerald R. Ford, in the Caribbean Sea, on February 3, 2026. - Petty Officer 2nd Class Mariano /US Navy

The buildup gives the US military extensive strike options should Trump order an attack. Guided-missile destroyers steaming with the carriers, for example, can carry dozens of Tomahawk cruise missiles with a range of 1,000 miles and wielding 1,000-pound conventional warheads. US Navy carrier strike groups usually operate with an attack submarine that can also launch Tomahawks. F-35 and F-15E fighter jets can carry an array of guided bombs and air-to-surface missiles.

Among the potential targets for strikes are the headquarters of the IRGC and other military installations beyond Iranian nuclear sites, according to multiple sources. There is also some discussion about the US and Israel conducting joint operations, the sources said. Those could resemble Operation Midnight Hammer last summer, when the US struck Iranian nuclear sites toward the end of the 12-day Israel-Iran war, they added.

'It's hard to do a deal with Iran'

Trump said over the weekend that the US "doesn't want any enrichment," indicating that he will not settle for a deal that allows even low-level uranium enrichment by Iran. Given Iran's position that enrichment is its right, sources said there may not be space for negotiation.

But the sources also noted that hard-line positions going into negotiations can always change.

There are also other ways the Iranian government could try to ward off a US attack, including with economic incentives. During multiple rounds of US-Iran talks last year, there were discussions about possible business deals that could be struck in conjunction with a nuclear agreement, including granting the US privileged access to developing Iran's oil, gas and rare earths resources, one source said. That topic is expected to be raised again, this person added.

The head of the United Nations nuclear watchdog, Rafael Grossi, met with Araghchi in Geneva on Monday for what both described as "in-depth technical discussions," as preparations intensify for the crucial nuclear negotiations Tuesday.

In public remarks, Rubio has maintained that Trump prefers a diplomatic resolution. But he has also repeatedly stressed that such a deal will be difficult.

"Iran ultimately is governed and its decisions are governed by Shia clerics — radical Shia clerics, okay? These people make policy decisions on the basis of pure theology. That's how they make their decisions. So, it's hard to do a deal with Iran," Rubio said at a press conference in Budapest, Hungary, on Monday.

Asked Sunday whether the administration would inform Congress if it decides to attack Iran or attempt to remove Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Rubio would not commit.

"We'll follow whatever the law is on it, and it depends on the circumstance it would lead to. But right now, we're talking about negotiations," he said at a press conference in Slovakia.

"If that changes, it'll be obvious to everyone. And obviously, whatever the law requires us to do, we'll do," he added.

Regional allies including the Arab states in the Persian Gulf are deeply concerned that US military action could destabilize the region. They have lobbied for holding off on military action to give diplomacy more time, according to sources familiar with the talks.

"Everybody is pushing against a strike," said a diplomat from the region. This person added that Israel is the only regional player that has been urging the US to attack.

Iran, meanwhile, held further military exercises less than 24 hours ahead of the Geneva talks. On Monday, Iran's official Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting reported that the IRGC had launched a "valiant defense" of three Iranian islands by land, air and sea that are the subject of a longtime border dispute between Iran and the United Arab Emirates.

According to the report, IRGC drones are positioned at Iran's southernmost point, ready to confront any aggressors.

Iran's armed forces chief of staff, Maj. Gen. Abdolrahim Mousavi, warned Sunday that "Trump should know that he would be entering a confrontation that gives harsh lessons, the outcome of which would ensure that he no longer bellows threats around the world," according to state-run Press TV.

This story was updated with additional developments.

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US increases military pressure on Iran ahead of high-stakes talks

The US military is continuing asignificant buildupof air and naval assets in the Middle East ahead of planned talks with...
New Mexico approves comprehensive probe of Epstein's Zorro Ranch

By Erica Stapleton and Andrew Hay

Reuters Zorro Ranch, one of the properties of financier Jeffrey Epstein, is seen in an aerial view near Stanley, New Mexico, U.S., July 15, 2019. REUTERS/Drone Base FILE PHOTO: Jeffrey Epstein is seen in this image released by the Department of Justice in Washington, D.C., U.S., on December 19, 2025 as part of a new trove of documents from its investigations into the late financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. U.S. Justice Department/Handout via REUTERS

Zorro Ranch is seen in an aerial view near Stanley, New Mexico

SANTA FE, Feb 16 (Reuters) - New Mexico lawmakers on Monday passed legislation to launch what they said was the first full investigation into what happened at Zorro Ranch, where the late U.S. sex offender Jeffrey Epstein is accused of trafficking and sexually assaulting girls and women.

A bipartisan committee will seek testimony from survivors of alleged sexual abuse at the ranch, located about 30 miles south of Santa Fe, the state capital. Legislators ‌are also urging local residents to testify.

Epstein died in what was ruled a suicide in a New York jail in 2019 while facing federal sex trafficking charges.

The so-called truth commission, comprising four lawmakers, seeks to identify ranch guests and state officials ‌who may have known what was going on at the 7,600-acre property, or taken part in alleged sexual abuse in its hacienda-style mansion and guest houses.

The Democratic-led investigation adds to political pressure to uncover Epstein's crimes that has become a major challenge for President Donald Trump, weeks after the Justice Department released millions of Epstein-related files that ​shed new light on activities at the ranch.

The files reveal ties between Epstein and two former Democratic governors and an attorney general of New Mexico.

The legislation, which passed New Mexico's House of Representatives by a unanimous vote, could pose risks to any additional politicians linked to Epstein in the Democratic-run state, as well as scientists, investors and other high-profile individuals who visited the ranch.

The $2.5 million investigation, which has subpoena power, aims to close gaps in New Mexico law that may have allowed Epstein to operate in the state. The committee starts work on Tuesday, and will deliver interim findings in July and a final report by year-end.

"He was basically doing anything he wanted in this state without any accountability whatsoever," said New Mexico state Representative Andrea Romero, a Democrat, who co-sponsored the initiative.

Testimony to the committee could be used for future prosecutions, she said.

Victim advocates applauded the move, saying Zorro ‌Ranch had been overlooked by federal investigations that focused on Epstein's Caribbean island and New York ⁠townhouse.

"Many of the survivors had experiences in New Mexico, and as we've learned, you know, there were local politicians and other people that were aware of what was happening in New Mexico," said attorney Sigrid McCawley, whose law firm has represented hundreds of Epstein survivors.

They include the late Virginia Giuffre, who was abused many times at the ranch, she said.

The U.S. Department of Justice passed a request for comment to the FBI. ⁠The FBI declined comment.

EPSTEIN OPERATED AT THE RANCH FOR DECADES

Several civil suits accuse Epstein of sexually assaulting girls at Zorro Ranch. He was never charged for the alleged offenses.

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Romero said there was no record of federal law enforcement searching what was known locally as "the playboy ranch" where Epstein is accused of sexually abusing a 16-year-old girl as early as 1996.

Former New Mexico Attorney General Hector Balderas launched a probe in 2019 that was put on hold at the request of federal prosecutors to avoid "parallel investigation," he said in a statement.

New Mexico Attorney General Raul Torrez has assigned a special agent to probe allegations that ​may ​come through the truth commission, spokesperson Lauren Rodriguez said.

A state house committee rejected accompanying legislation to extend New Mexico's statute of limitations for childhood sexual assault to ​allow civil actions by Epstein survivors, said state Representative Marianna Anaya, who co-sponsored the legislation to create ‌the truth commission. The legislation raised concerns about increased insurance costs for public institutions facing abuse lawsuits, Anaya said.

Epstein bought the ranch in 1993 from Bruce King, a three-time New Mexico Democratic governor who died in 2009. Epstein's estate sold the property in 2023 to Texas businessman and politician Don Huffines, according to the Santa Fe New Mexican. Huffines is prepared to cooperate with any law enforcement investigation of the ranch, the newspaper reported on Monday, citing his spokesperson.

Epstein flew in guests and "masseuses" to the ranch, and hired local massage therapists to work there, ranch manager Brice Gordon told the FBI in 2007, according to a report in the Epstein files.

In an unsealed 2016 court deposition, Giuffre testified Epstein's partner Ghislaine Maxwell told her to give the late former New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson a "massage" at the ranch. In Giuffre's memoir, she said an instruction from Maxwell to provide a "massage" meant a victim should provide a sexual encounter to an abuser.

Richardson's representative Madeleine Mahoney in a 2019 statement said Giuffre's allegations were "completely false."

Gordon told the FBI that most of the masseuses Epstein used at the ranch were hired locally through the ‌spa Ten Thousand Waves, a Santa Fe institution, or by referrals.

Spa spokesperson Sara Bean said in a phone interview last Tuesday that Ten Thousand Waves neither ​provided nor referred masseuses to Zorro Ranch.

In the documentary "Surviving Jeffrey Epstein," former Santa Fe massage therapist Rachel Benavidez accused Epstein of sexual abuse when she was hired ​to work at the ranch.

Investment consultant Joshua Ramo said on Sunday he visited the ranch once for a 2014 lunch on ​behalf of professors from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard University, who were present. Ramo, at the time CEO of consulting firm Kissinger Associates, said he and Epstein met with business figures and scientists around 14 times ‌in New York between 2013 and 2016.

"I deferred to the due diligence of the institutions involved, assuming ​that his presence signaled he had been appropriately vetted," Ramo, in a ​statement, said of his ranch visit and other meetings with Epstein. "I feel a deep sense of grief for the survivors of his crimes."

Emails show Epstein contacted Ramo in 2015 to tell him he was going to Ten Thousand Waves, suggesting they meet for lunch in Santa Fe. Ramo responded, "I assumed we were meeting at the pink bottom ranch." Ramo, who is currently CEO of consulting firm Sornay LLC, said he had no recollection of that comment, or whether the two met that day.

Over the years, ​Epstein contributed to the political campaigns of New Mexico Democrats such as Richardson and King's son Gary ‌King, a former New Mexico attorney general. When contributions were reported in the press, the men pledged to either return the money, or give it to charity.

Gary King flew on a plane chartered by Epstein when he was running ​for New Mexico governor in 2014, according to emails in the Epstein files. Epstein said he would cover around half the cost of the $22,000 charter and King would pay the rest. King did not respond to a request for ​comment.

(Reporting by Erica Stapleton in New Mexico and Florida, reporting by Andrew Hay in New Mexico; editing by Donna Bryson and Diane Craft)

New Mexico approves comprehensive probe of Epstein’s Zorro Ranch

By Erica Stapleton and Andrew Hay Zorro Ranch is seen in an aerial view near Stanley, New Mexico SANTA FE,...

 

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