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Officials confirm death of Jeffrey Epstein mentor Hoffenberg

Steven Hoffenberg was sentenced in 1997 to 20 years in prison for one of the country's largest Ponzi schemes.
Credit: AP Photo/Alex Brandon, File
FILE- Steven Hoffenberg talks with the media outside U.S. Bankruptcy Court, in New York, March 19, 1993. Connecticut authorities on Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022, were working to confirm that convicted Ponzi schemer and Jeffrey Epstein mentor Hoffenberg was the person found dead in an apartment earlier this week. Lt. Justin Stanko, of Derby police, said Thursday that evidence at the scene all pointed to the person being Hoffenberg. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, File)

HARTFORD, Conn. — Medical examiners confirmed Friday that convicted Ponzi schemer and Jeffrey Epstein mentor Steven Hoffenberg was the person found dead in a Derby apartment earlier this week.

Hoffenberg, 77, is believed to have died at least seven days before his body was found Tuesday by police, who responded to a request to check on his welfare.

"They were able to look in through the window and they saw a body on the ground which prompted them to force entry," said Derby police Lt. Justin Stanko.

He had to be identified through dental records because of the decomposition of his body, police said.

His cause of death is pending toxicology test results. An autopsy showed no signs of trauma, and there were no indications of a struggle or forced entry at the apartment, officials said.

Neighbors told FOX61 they had no idea that it was Hoffenberg who was living in the multi-family home.

"He was very often, Steve was coming in or out of his apartment. Just to take off in his car and come back. And I just, as a rule, say hi to people and he would nod his head but you could tell that he did not want to chit chat," said Judy Szewczyk of Derby.

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Epstein, the disgraced financier who killed himself in a New York jail in 2019 while awaiting trial on allegations he sexually abused dozens of girls, worked for Hoffenberg's bill collection company, Towers Financial Corp., in the late 1980s, when prosecutors said the Ponzi scheme began.

Hoffenberg, who once tried buying the New York Post, was busted in one of the country's largest frauds. He admitted he swindled thousands of investors out of $460 million and was sentenced in 1997 to 20 years in prison. He claimed Epstein was actually the architect of the scheme, but Epstein was never charged.

He was released from federal custody in 2013, according to the U.S. Bureau of Prisons. It was not immediately clear how he ended up living in a small apartment in a multifamily home in Derby, about 12 miles (19 kilometers) northeast of Bridgeport.

Gary Baise, one of Hoffenberg's friends and lawyers and a former acting deputy U.S. attorney general, said Hoffenberg and Epstein had a “special relationship” and Hoffenberg said Epstein was the smartest person he knew when it came to money.

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Baise said Hoffenberg also was very intelligent, which may have contributed to his downfall.

“He was too smart for his own good,” Baise said in a phone interview Friday. “He thought he could get away with his Ponzi scheme but he could not. He did not have self-control. He always thought he was smarter than the next guy and that was one of his problems. ... But he was a good man.”

Baise, who said he had not had contact with Hoffenberg for several months, said he wasn't surprised by his death because Hoffenberg did not appear to be taking good care of himself.

Police in Derby was asked to do a welfare check on Hoffenberg on Tuesday by a private investigator for a woman who identified herself as close to Hoffenberg and a sexual abuse victim of Epstein's, Stanko said.

"She hadn’t heard from him in a couple of days and he thought it was irregular because she heard from him every day," he said.

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Hoffenberg briefly took over the New York Post in 1993 while bidding to own it. The Post reported that Hoffenberg funded the paper for three months and rescued it from bankruptcy. His efforts to buy the paper were derailed by civil fraud allegations by the Securities and Exchange Commission that led to the criminal prosecution of the Ponzi case.

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