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Steven Hoffenberg, Epstein mentor and one-time New York Post manager, found dead

Steven Hoffenberg, the disgraced businessman and longtime mentor of Jeffrey Epstein, was found dead Tuesday when Connecticut police discovered his rotting corpse during a wellness check, The Post has learned.

Authorities discovered Hoffenberg, who spent 18 years in prison for running a half-billion-dollar Ponzi scheme, dead in his home around 8 p.m. Tuesday. It is not clear exactly when he died.

Police had been called to the 77-year-old’s home in Derby, Conn., at the request of a friend.

Steven Hoffenberg was found dead in his Derby, Connecticut, home by police during a wellness check. Photo by Melissa Bunni Elian for The Washington Post via Getty Images
Steven Hoffenberg, who once acted as manager of The Post, is escorted by FBI agents in a Little Rock, Ark., parking garage after turning himself in to authorities in 1996. Associated Press
Hoffenberg’s home in Derby, Connecticut. Douglas Healey
His body was rotting inside the home. Douglas Healey

No cause of death has been revealed, but police said there were no immediate signs of trauma to his body.

“Every indication is that it is Mr. Hoffenberg,” a Derby Police Department spokesman said. “There’s nothing to suggest that it isn’t. We believe it’s him. We’re just waiting for dental records.”

In a statement posted to Facebook, police said the body was found “in a state where a visual identification could not be made.”

Hoffenberg, who was once Epstein’s boss, might have been the link to his mysterious fortune.

Hoffenberg had claimed that Epstein was his accomplice in a Ponzi scheme he ran through his Towers Financial Corp.

Hoffenberg in 1993. Michael Schwartz/NY Post
Steven Hoffenberg meets with Mayor Dinkins and his staff in 1993 during his time with The Post. Michael Schwartz/NY Post

He pleaded guilty to the scheme in 1995 and was sentenced to 20 years in prison. While Hoffenberg sat locked up, Epstein was allegedly raping teenage girls with the help of his now-convicted madam, Ghislaine Maxwell.

Tower investors have claimed in an August 2018 lawsuit that Epstein “knowingly and intentionally utilized funds he fraudulently diverted and obtained from this massive Ponzi scheme for his own personal use to support a lavish lifestyle.”

“He was my colleague daily, seven days a week,” he said of Epstein in a 2019 interview in Quartz.

Hoffenberg was briefly the court-appointed manager of The Post from January to March 1993, rescuing the newspaper from bankruptcy. The news was announced with an iconic Post cover that said “Last-minute deal saves The Paper…Hoffenberg Saves The Post,” calling him the paper’s “white knight.”

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Hoffenberg Press Corf -- Steve Hoffenberg Confronts New York press. February 01, 1993. (Photo by Don Halasy/New York Post Archives /(c) NYP Holdings, Inc. via Getty Images)
Hoffenberg confronts the New York press in February 1993. Don Halasy/NY Post
Steve Hoffenberg. March 18, 1993.
Hoffenberg briefly funded The Post from January-March 1993, rescuing it from bankruptcy.Michael Schwartz/NY Post
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But the staff ultimately rebelled against Hoffenberg, and the paper was briefly handed over to Abe Hirschfeld before being bought for a second time by Rupert Murdoch, the current owner.

A former Trump Tower resident, Hoffenberg was an early backer of Donald Trump’s 2016 presidential bid, but withdrew his support. 

He became a born-again Christian in prison, he told Quartz.