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CELEB RATIN G

OVE R

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 2026

50

YE A R S

O F

IN DE PE N D E N T

ST U D E NT

J O U R NA L I S M

THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER AT BOSTON UNIVERSITY

YEAR LVI. VOLUME B. ISSUE II

researchers Epstein’s ties to academia BU link late-stage

How Epstein ingratiated himself within the faculty ranks CTE to dementia at universities in Boston, including at Harvard, MIT SCIENCE BY BRIAN CHAN

Business and Science Editor

Gianna Horcher | Graphics Co-Editor

CITY

BY ELIZABETH MEHLER City Co-Editor

GRACE WHINNERY Associate City Editor

AND ISABELLE ZHANG

J

City Co-Editor

effrey Epstein faced reputational ruin after pleading guilty to soliciting a minor for prostitution in 2008 and later registering as a sex offender. While he formerly purported to be a Wall Street mogul, emails released by the U.S. Department of Justice show how, after his conviction, Epstein sought to reestablish himself as a generous philanthropist with a

personal interest in science by donating to and establishing relationships with many of Boston’s leading academic minds. High-profile scientists and academics spun in Epstein’s orbit for years, even after he was convicted of sex crimes. Many of the academics he regularly corresponded with have extensive ties to Bostonarea universities, most notably Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. In 2019, Steve Bannon, a right wing strategist and former aide of President Donald Trump, wrote an email that appeared to summarize Epstein’s enduring public relations strategy. “First we need to push back on the lies; then crush the pedo/trafficking narrative; then rebuild your image as a philanthropist,” Bannon wrote to Epstein.

That strategy appeared successful for over a decade, as many prominent academics referred to him as a financier in emails and later said they were not aware of his criminal conviction. Boston University COM Dean Mariette DiChristina, who corresponded with Epstein in 2014 and 2015 as editor-in-chief of Scientific American, referred to Epstein in an email as a “financier who has supported the work of many Nobel laureates,” according to DOJ documents. DiChristina did not acknowledge or make reference to Epstein’s 2008 conviction in any of her email correspondence. In a statement made on “behalf” of DiChristina, BU Spokesperson Colin Riley wrote, “it was often part of her role at Scientific American

Continued on page 11

BU student wins lawsuit against Newbury Street art studio owner CITY BY GABRIELLA BETHONEY DFP Writer

A Boston University student went viral on TikTok recently for winning a lawsuit against the owner of Rainbows Pottery Studio, a make-your-own pottery store on Newbury Street. Ethan Stoehr, a senior in the College of Arts and Sciences who worked at Rainbows Pottery in 2024, told The Daily Free Press that studio owner Allison Carroll sued him in July 2024 after accusing him of failing to return a check. After he won the lawsuit, Stoehr said Carroll sent him several GIFs mocking him and “alluding to [his] homosexuality” while

her daughter, Maggie Carroll, called him homophobic slurs in text messages. “She should probably be investigated by some sort of authority for civil rights violations, abusive workplace and refusing to pay people for the work they’ve done,” Stoehr said. Allison Carroll, reached by phone Wednesday, said Stoehr didn’t appreciate the “opportunity” he had while working at Rainbows Pottery, and that he “abused” the opportunity. She said Stoher should “focus on his bright future” instead of rehashing the lawsuit. Stoehr shared his experiences with Rainbows Pottery in a viral Jan. 2025 TikTok — along with other users — after the studio went viral when a customer criticized it for employing a registered Level 3 sex offender

while hosting children’s programs and women-focused events. One person said in an interview with The Daily Free Press that the employee, Andrew Perez Giampa, 33, of Dorchester, attempted to give them alcohol in the store while they were underage. Another said Giampa threatened to “rape and kill” her. Giampa was either convicted or adjudicated of indecent assault and battery of a 14-yearold or older person in Oct. 2024, according to Massachusetts’ Sex Offender Registry. Court records indicate that Giampa pleaded guilty to that offense in 2017. Carroll said in a later removed TikTok video that Giampa “doesn’t currently work here and hasn’t for a while.” Carroll said Wednesday that she would not comment on Giampa, or on allegations that underage

Some of the traditionally associated symptoms of chronic traumatic encephalopathy — a degenerative brain disease most attributed with football and other contact sports — include depression, aggressive behavior, memory loss and even suicidal thoughts. But a recent study from Boston University’s CTE Center just added another feature to the list: dementia. The study, the “largest of its kind,” according to the researchers, analyzed the brains of 614 donors. It found that people with late-stage CTE were about four times more likely to develop dementia. “This was the first study where we were able to isolate cases from our brain bank that just had CTE pathology,” postdoctoral researcher and co-author of the study Jenna Groh said. CTE is a neurodegenerative disease thought to be caused by repeated head impacts. It is thought to progress over years and decades in four stages, each one bringing the patient more and more severe symptoms. Currently, there is no cure or way to diagnose the disease in living patients. The only way to confirm CTE is by analyzing a person’s brain after death. According to Groh, CTE and dementia are so difficult to link together because dementia’s symptoms, such as personality shifts, can only be detected while the patient is alive. CTE, on the other hand, can only be diagnosed after death. Brains with CTE often have other disorders too, that can make it hard to tell what exactly caused the dementia in the first place, Grah said. “[The brain donors] oftentimes don’t just have CTE pathology alone. They’ll have Alzheimer’s disease, copathology, Parkinson’s disease or Lewy Body disease,” she said. “There’s lots of other causes of dementia.” To retroactively diagnose dementia,

Continued on page 5 patrons were served drinks in her store. A BU freshman, who asked to stay anonymous for their personal safety, said in an interview that they met Giampa in December of 2025 while browsing through Rainbows Pottery’s outdoor sidewalk kiosk. They described Giampa as “persistent” and having a “really weird vibe.” “I thought that we were the only ones who had this weird experience,” they said after seeing individuals post on TikTok their experiences with Rainbows Pottery. “It was kind of comforting to hear that others also experienced weird vibes, and I stopped second-guessing my interpretation of it.” Stoehr said Giampa repeatedly messaged a friend of his and “wouldn’t stop asking to

Continued on page 3

CAMPUS PAGE 2

FEATURES PAGE 4

OPINION PAGE 8

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Colleges amplify student burnout through hustle culture | Editorial

DANIEL GARBER | DFP PHOTOGRAPHER

SUMMER LAROSE | PHOTO CO-EDITOR

Melissa Lemieux | Graphics Co-Editor


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