Nytimes Angle: Files Show ‘Use Dr. Eva’ Link Between Epstein, Dubin and Mount Sinai Coat-Rack Delivery

Nytimes Angle: Files Show ‘Use Dr. Eva’ Link Between Epstein, Dubin and Mount Sinai Coat-Rack Delivery

Newly cited files outline a small but revealing exchange weeks after the April 2011 ribbon-cutting for the Dubin Breast Center: Dr. Eva Andersson-Dubin asked for a coat rack from Jeffrey Epstein’s home for the new wing at Mount Sinai Hospital, and his staff arranged a painted duplicate to be delivered to the center on Fifth Avenue; the nyt imes keyword appears here as part of the broader record of coverage.

Nytimes framing of the 'Use Dr. Eva' headline

The phrase 'Use Dr. Eva' is central to the files that document the interaction between Dr. Eva Andersson-Dubin and Epstein. Those same files include an exchange in which Andersson-Dubin, identified in the files as a respected physician and the wife of billionaire hedge fund manager Glenn Dubin, thanked Epstein after the coat rack arrived at the Dubin Breast Center.

Timeline: April ribbon-cutting to May 18, 2011 message

The sequence in the files begins with a ribbon-cutting ceremony for the Dubin Breast Center in April 2011. Weeks after that ceremony, Dr. Eva Andersson-Dubin noticed a coat rack at Epstein's home that she wanted for her new wing at Mount Sinai Hospital. On May 18, 2011, she sent a message to Epstein confirming receipt of the item and expressing gratitude.

How the coat rack was replicated and delivered

The files describe Epstein’s staff locating a duplicate of the coat rack, having it painted white to match the color Andersson-Dubin preferred, and arranging for delivery by Epstein's chauffeur to the breast-cancer treatment center on Fifth Avenue. The delivery was made to the Dubin Breast Center entrance, where the coat rack was placed.

Andersson-Dubin’s May 18, 2011 note

In a message dated May 18, 2011, Andersson-Dubin wrote to Epstein: she confirmed that the coat rack had arrived the previous day, that it was sitting in the entrance of the Dubin Breast Center and that it looked "amazing, " closing with an emphatic expression of thanks. The files identify her both as a respected physician and as the wife of Glenn Dubin, described in the record as a billionaire hedge fund manager.

Contextual headlines and adjacent coverage

The material including the 'Use Dr. Eva' headline exists alongside other headlines that address medical figures connected to Epstein, notably a headline titled "The Doctors Who Helped Epstein Keep His ‘Girls’ in Shape. " The juxtaposition of the coat-rack episode with those other headlines is part of the broader record of exchanges captured in these files, and the nyt imes term appears within the keyword set linked to that coverage.

What the exchange reveals and what remains unclear

The files register a personal request and a staffed response: an identified wish for a specific furnishing, a matching duplicate produced and painted, and a chauffeur delivery to a named breast-cancer treatment center on Fifth Avenue. Details not present in the provided material are unclear in the provided context, and no additional claims are made beyond the recorded exchange and the headlines included in the files.

As the archive of documents is examined alongside the headlines referenced here, the coat-rack episode remains a concrete instance within a set of interactions documented in the same material that produced the 'Use Dr. Eva' phrasing and the adjacent headlines about medical figures connected to Epstein.