Home Happening Now New billionaire “Epstein” accused of sexually targeting minors

New billionaire “Epstein” accused of sexually targeting minors

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A billionaire who is being compared to Jeffrey Epstein has been accused by 39 women of sexually exploiting them when most were minors.

(Video credit: CTV News)

The youngest alleged victim claimed she was only 11 years old at the time she was abused.

Canadian billionaire Robert Miller appears to be a recluse who is getting a lot of unwanted attention over the charges.

“There are no more than half a dozen known photos of the Montreal businessman, and for decades his penchant for privacy has bordered on solitude. Despite overseeing a $5 billion company, he has granted few interviews Toronto sun reported

“The 80-year-old founder of Future Electronics no doubt finds the current focus on his alleged sexual proclivities deeply upsetting,” the news continued.

(Video credit: The Fifth Estate)

As with Epstein, dozens of women are now coming forward against Miller, accusing him of setting them up.

“Miller is the subject of a class-action lawsuit seeking nearly $200 million on behalf of 39 women who say he sexually exploited them when nearly all were minors. The youngest alleged victim claimed she was only 11 when she began having sex with the mogul,” the Toronto Sun reported.

The woman, who was allegedly just 11 when she was groomed, claims she was given alcohol and drugs before she was expected to have sex with the billionaire. In return, he says he received an envelope full of money and other gifts.

Four more names were added to the lawsuit last week. The stories sound eerily similar to each other.

“The billionaire denies any wrongdoing, and his lawyer told Radio-Canada in March that he is ill and suffers from Parkinson’s disease,” the outlet noted about the man many call Canada’s Jeffrey Epstein.

“Unlike Epstein, sources told the Sun, the girls were allegedly almost exclusively for Miller’s pleasure, while Epstein offered his girls to other wealthy men who shared his penchant for young flesh,” he said. Toronto sun reported in a separate piece.

Miller was the founder of Future Electronics, which was born in 1968. As home computers became a big thing, the company grew in value and the Canadian became a billionaire. At one point, the company was the third largest electronics retailer in the world.

He has clearly stayed out of the public eye and has been successful so far. The only time he made headlines was when he and his wife, Margaret Antonier, divorced in 2006. They had been married for 37 years and had two children.

Miller’s wife was a former radio ad saleswoman who is now a real estate developer in Florida. He accused her of having an illicit affair with a former Fortune CFO named Robert Roop. The mogul also claimed he stole $10 million from his Sunshine State real estate company.

His estranged wife dropped several bombshells during the divorce proceedings.

“In Florida court records, Antonier’s legal eagles alleged that Miller was responsible for ‘horrific wrongdoing’ and ‘unlawful acts,'” the Tronto Sun wrote.

“Their lawyers charged that they split because of “activities of Mr. Miller that they are so offensive that he has insisted that the [divorce] procedures [in Montreal] be sealed,’” the outlet added.

Florida courts have also sealed the alleged charges. Antonier’s legal team called her ex-husband’s allegations of theft and fraud “blatant and false.”

Despite the divorce drama, Miller claimed the split was “amicable.” The fight for his $2 billion fortune looked anything but that according to the media.

He obviously also has an interest in cryonics.

“From a 2010 QMI story: “It is supposed to support the Alcor Life Extension Foundation, an Arizona-based organization that promotes cryonics, the science of freezing bodies; then stores them in special aluminum containers, with the intention of restoring life when the technology becomes available. available,” wrote the Toronto Sun.

“An aide told The Wall Street Journal that the billionaire was even setting up a ‘revitalization trust.'” According to QMI, the “trust” is a legal means of supporting himself and his piles of cash holdings and frozen until the technology is available to resurrect him,” the news outlet said.

Future Electronics was tentatively sold to a Taiwanese company for $5 billion last September. The deal is not expected to be finalized until 2024.

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