
I first came across the name “Rahman Hosain” when I put the surname “Engstrom” into the DOJ search bar, looking for references to Royce Engstrom, the former President of the University of Montana, and finding Hosain’s partner, Alicia Engstrom, instead. When I went looking for more context I found the financial flop of Hosain’s tech company, Jawbone, and an unhappy investor, Jeffrey Epstein. Interesting.
The Forbes article that provided this context first discusses one of Epstein’s most important tech connections, Peter Thiel, and Valar Ventures, which I mentioned in this post about Missoula’s Mayor, Andrea Davis, and her globalist tendencies, which publicly emerged when she eagerly traveled to Harvard to get her Mayoral marching orders.
One of Epstein’s earliest and most prolific correspondents in tech was PayPal founder and Founders Fund investor Peter Thiel. Epstein swapped scores of emails with the conservative investor dating back to 2014, and the pair appear to have met for meals at least eight times through 2017, according to emails in the DOJ archive. Epstein floated invitations for dinner with academic Noam Chomsky, director Woody Allen and former Norwegian diplomat Terje Rød-Larsen over email, and offered intros to the likes of former Israeli prime minister Ehud Barak and former Russian deputy economy minister Sergey Belyakov, the emails show. On multiple occasions, Epstein invited Thiel to his island. “Im always free to do as i please,” Epstein wrote in 2014. “would you prefer to visit the island or i can meet in ny.” Thiel’s spokesperson Jeremiah Hall said Thiel never traveled to the island and did not comment further on the billionaire venture capitalist’s dealings with Epstein.
The Founders Fund is why Peter Thiel, Sam Altman and Elon Musk were in Montana last June, just north of Missoula, which I covered here. I also wrote about Andrew Farkas, another Epstein-connected man with deep pockets, enjoying the same geography as the PayPal Mafia, and his potential connection to a guy by the name of Klaus von Stutterheim, a Berlin-born banker from New York who moved to Montana to ride horses and tell Missoula County voters what Democrat to vote for.
So far I am the ONLY ONE to have publicly connected Klaus von Stutterheim to what I believe was, at the time, a local Democrat influence operation tied to the wider world of Epstein influence in Big Sky Country.
Further down in the Forbes piece we learn about the company Jawbone and how this surveillance tech went belly up:
The files indicate that Epstein also backed Jawbone, the failed fitness tracker and headset company, which went under in 2017. Investment documents released by the DOJ, which call him a “major investor,” indicate he lost his full investment of $10 million. In a tense August 2018 email exchange with cofounder and CEO Hosain Rahman, Epstein demanded a settlement. “It is simple,” he wrote. “The obligation is yours. If you had a current net worth of over 100 million I would without a doubt use my resources to recover the monies that you received from me.”
Rahman replied, “I absolutely acknowledge that I made mistakes while running the last business. I have learned a ton of painful lessons from those mistakes. Those mistakes were never intentional and I don’t agree that I misled you about your prior investment.” Rahman didn’t respond to a request for comment.
No comment, Rahman? Why not? Were you too busy hanging out with the kind of celebrities, like Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce, who enjoy hanging out at the Yellowstone Club?

Because buying a house at this infamous resort is exactly what Rahman Hosain did, we will find out, with money lavished on his tech-vision by JP Morgan and other investors, like Jeffrey Epstein.
First, here’s what the good times were like for Hosain, Gates, and anyone else enjoying those Yellowstone “boat parties”:

Yes, things must have been looking GREAT in 2012. The tech pal of the Bodnars, Jim Messina, had just helped Obama get reelected, a Pritzker was selected as “commerce” secretary, and life was good for child-fucking psychopaths. Then Jawbone took a massive face-plant, which this Axios piece details:
Last week’s news of Jawbone filing for Chapter 7 bankruptcy was met with a collective shrug from most in Silicon Valley, likely because the company’s failure took absolutely no one by surprise. But many of its investors are quietly fuming. Some because they’ve been unable to get information from Jawbone about the liquidation plans, or if Jawbone co-founder and CEO Hosain Rahman plans to bid on some of the assets for his new startup (which also will focus in some way on healthcare wearables). Some just because of the size of the loss and frustration over what they believe was profligate spending on things like private jets while the company struggled to meet its product delivery goals.
The article continues by describing the litigation that JP Morgan initiated when it became clear Jawbone was finished. Here’s the part (screenshot) about the bank’s loan to Rahman and Engstrom for the Yellowstone Club property.

When you read this Axios article it’s important to note that it was written in 2017, so of course there is “fascination” that Rahman “hasn’t become a Silicon Valley pariah”. In 2026 we know better, or at least we SHOULD.
If we DON’T know better, why would that be? Perhaps because legacy media in Montana stopped at the dinosaur dude, Jack Horner, while some Great Falls Facebook page puts out AI-written slop while shit-talking “conspiracy blog posts”.

Perhaps “The Weekly Bust” can help us understand why the globalist child-fuckers felt it was finally the right time to release the files. What I realized, after reading their slop, is that human cognition has become SO FUCKED by an over-reliance on large language models, the combined effect of legacy media silence and whatever The Weekly Bust thinks they’re doing ensures NOTHING substantive will happen to address how poisoned our entire system has become by the depraved appetites of wealth and power.
I went to the Facebook Page to interact with these geniuses and here’s a little peek into what we can expect from “alt-media” in Montana:

No wonder people with money move to places like Montana to establish their fiefdoms, our local populations are woefully disadvantaged when it comes to understanding the depth of what we’re dealing with. Sigh.
Thanks for reading!














