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Donald Trump Jr.’s Christmas Eve engagement to Palm Beach socialite Bettina Anderson lit up Mar‑a‑Lago and MAGA social media feeds but it has also dragged a familiar ghost back into the Trump orbit: Jeffrey Epstein.
Behind the polished engagement announcements and heartfelt social media posts lies a troubling narrative. Bettina Anderson’s late father, Harry Loy Anderson Jr., a banker, once vouched for Jeffrey Epstein, describing him as a man of “highest integrity” while Epstein was establishing his tax haven in the Virgin Islands. This revelation raises concerns about the connections surrounding the Trump family.
Donald Trump Jr. recently proposed to Bettina Anderson during a Christmas Eve gathering at Mar-a-Lago, which she described as “the most unforgettable weekend,” feeling like “the luckiest girl in the world.” Reports have painted her as a prominent Palm Beach socialite with deep local connections and family ties.
However, these reports have largely overlooked Bettina Anderson’s family history. Her father, Harry Loy Anderson Jr., was a notable banker in Palm Beach and a long-time associate of Epstein, who facilitated Epstein’s integration into the financial and political circles of the Virgin Islands.
Independent researcher Jason Powers highlights that Anderson was part of the elite banking circles that played a role in Epstein’s tax maneuvers in the U.S. Virgin Islands, a place where Epstein gained significant tax advantages while developing his notorious Little St. James estate.
A recent investigation by The New York Times delves into how “respectable” professionals assisted Epstein in securing lucrative deals and lenient oversight. Among these professionals was Harry Loy Anderson Jr. The report reveals that in 1999, Anderson wrote to the U.S. Virgin Islands Industrial Development Commission to endorse Epstein’s application for substantial tax breaks.
In his letter, Anderson assured officials of Epstein’s “excellent reputation in our community” and portrayed him as “a gentleman of the highest integrity,” effectively acting as a character reference for Epstein, who was seeking to leverage the territory’s favorable tax regime. The Times also notes that Palm Beach National Bank, associated with Anderson, managed Epstein’s accounts for about eight years, during which he transferred funds through entities now linked to fraudulent activities.
Banker Father Called Epstein a ‘Gentleman of the Highest Integrity’
A recent New York Times investigation into Epstein’s money scams details how “respectable” professionals helped him lock in lucrative deals and friendly oversight. Among them was Harry Loy Anderson Jr. The Times reports that in 1999, Anderson wrote to the U.S. Virgin Islands Industrial Development Commission to support Epstein’s bid for massive tax incentives.
In that letter, Anderson told officials that Epstein “enjoys an excellent reputation in our community” and described him as “a gentleman of the highest integrity,” effectively serving as a character witness while Epstein sought to route his operations through the territory’s generous tax program. The Times notes that Palm Beach National Bank, long associated with Anderson, held Epstein’s accounts for roughly eight years as he moved money through various entities now linked to fraud and abuse.
Kim Iversen, in her breakdown of the “respectable people” who vouched for Epstein, points directly at Anderson. She says Anderson “absolutely knew what Jeffrey Epstein was up to,” arguing that his bank was “being used to pay off a lot of the women” and to keep the machine running behind a facade of legitimacy.
Epstein’s Web and the Trump Orbit
Iversen poses the question few in legacy media will touch: why do so many “top echelon” political and financial figures keep intersecting with Epstein’s network? She notes that Anderson’s letter did not simply praise Epstein’s manners; it helped secure a tax deal that underwrote his Virgin Islands empire. “They were helping him get that tax haven on Little St. James,” she argues, pointing to how bankers, lawyers and fixers turned a blind eye in exchange for fees and access.
Powers’ Substack piece, “The Ghost of Epstein Past,” digs further into Loy Anderson’s career, tracing his roots back to Bear Stearns, where Epstein first emerged as a rising operator. Powers suggests that Anderson stood at a crossroads of old‑line Wall Street and the Palm Beach power scene, making him an ideal validator for Epstein’s transition into Caribbean deal‑making.
Against that backdrop, Don Jr.’s engagement does more than add another glamorous face to the Trump family tree. It connects the former first son to a household whose patriarch helped keep Epstein afloat at a critical moment. While there is no evidence Bettina Anderson herself had any involvement with Epstein, the symbolism is hard to ignore for a movement that campaigned on “draining the swamp.”
Epstein’s Shadow Over ‘America First’
Iversen warns her viewers that this pattern—polished insiders quietly smoothing the path for predators like Epstein, then reappearing at the edges of political dynasties—should worry anyone who still takes “America First” seriously.
The concern is not that Don Jr. is personally tied to Epstein’s crimes, but that the same elite circles that once protected and enriched Epstein continue to supply spouses, donors, advisers and validators to the political class. In this view, Harry Loy Anderson Jr.’s glowing praise of Epstein—calling him a man of “highest integrity” with an “excellent reputation”—was not an isolated lapse in judgment but part of a culture that prioritizes connections and tax breaks over victims and the rule of law.
As Bettina Anderson steps into the Trump inner circle, that culture edges closer to the heart of MAGA. If the movement is serious about confronting the legacy of Epstein and the system that enabled him, it will have to ask hard questions about why so many of those “respectable people” keep resurfacing next to the Trumps—and whether “America First” still means anything when the ghosts of Epstein’s bankers are sitting at the family table.
The post Don Trump Jr. Engages Epstein‑Tied Banker’s Heiress Whose Father Praised Pedophile as ‘Man of Highest Integrity’ appeared first on National File.