five victims, 17 people that they talked to, they talked to one of his former house workers who said that epstein ordered him to send a dozen roses to a local high school for one of these girls. when you look at that type of information, what they were able to develop about some of the people that worked for him, i think the idea of possible further prosecutions is certainly possible although i don t think we ll hear about that today. so earlier we had julie brown from the miami herald in terrific reporting. yeah. actually started the whole thing, i would think, in terms of the public. she had over 80 8-0 80 young girls, young women, who were subjected to this depravity by this guy. you have seen the tape from the warrant, from the search warrant, the search warrant in jeffrey epstein s home on the upper east side palm beach, actually. what was on the tape?
organizing in darden starting as the first full service company. they own capitol grille, olive garden, red lobster. workers ingarden, red lobster. workers are standing up more than we ve seen in the last decade. yes, there s tremendous fear, but at this moment, we re seeing tremendous opportunity and also workers really coming forward feeling very empowered by seeing other workers across the country stand up. a lot of these issues you write about in your book. people can check that out. i was proud of you taking on some high-class restaurants in new york city. the front house workers tend to be white and the behind the kitchen door workers tend to be brown. when they try to move up, a lot of times the door closes for them. there s pretty severe
have to really be conscious. they re going to a place where they can, indeed, without going overboard, speak a language of support for collective bargaining and trade unionism that i think could be very, very vital, not just in the north, but in the south. they better do it. i would love to hear saladine tell us a couple stories of what workers are facing because i have a piece coming out in al jazeera english tomorrow where house workers in southern california and i want to give this guy a voice, he s 61 years old and what he does is unload all the craft that people buy at walmart. he works from midnight until 8:00 in the morning and makes 8.$8.50 an hour and gets no benefits. no access to clean drinking water. we re talking about southern california, the largest port in the country. he barely gets a break. they cannot even mention the word union. his hours have been cut so much that he is not able to pay his