Yale University says a prominent computer science professor will not teach classes while it reviews his conduct, after newly released documents show he sent Jeffrey Epstein an email describing an undergraduate as a good-looking blonde while recommending her for a job.
Messages between David Gelernter — who made headlines in 1993 when he was wounded by a mail explosive sent by ''Unabomber'' Theodore Kaczynski — and the late, disgraced financier were among the trove of Epstein-related documents released by the U.S. Justice Department in late January. The documents show Gelernter and Epstein corresponding on a variety of topics including business and art.
In an email to Epstein in October 2011 — several years after Epstein pleaded guilty to soliciting prostitution from an underage girl — Gelernter wrote that he had an ''editoress'' in mind for a job — a Yale senior whom he described as a "v small good-looking blonde.''
Gelernter defended that message in an email last week to Jeffrey Brock, dean of Yale's School of Engineering & Applied Science, according to the Yale Daily News, which reported that Gelernter also forwarded the email to the student newspaper.
He noted that Epstein was ''obsessed with girls'' — ''like every other unmarried billionaire in Manhattan; in fact, like every other heterosex male'' — and he was keeping ''the potential boss's habits in mind.''
''So long as I said nothing that dishonored her in any conceivable way, I'd have told him more or less what he wanted," Gelernter wrote to Brock, the paper reported. ''She was smart, charming & gorgeous. Ought I to have suppressed that info? Never!''
He added: "I'm very glad I wrote the note.''
Students in Gelernter's computer science class were notified that he would not be teaching on Tuesday.