The entire released contents of the Epstein Files are online. For better or for worse, there are zero hits in the government database for "wemic," "urmahlullu," or "liontaur."
Thank goodness, no results on "cayzle" or on my fairly rare real last name.
There are, however, a number of "centaur" hits ...
Those include references to brands with "centaur" in the name, like Centaur Communications, Centaur Gaming (a gambling firm), and the Atlas-Centaur U.S. expendable launch vehicle.
There are lists of artworks appraised in about 20 or so duplicative spreadsheets, with an entry labeled "BARYE. ANTOINE-LOUIE Thesee combattant le Centaur Bienor." That seems to be a reference to this artwork at the Met. But considering the piece was given to the Met in 1885, hard to see how anybody could value it as if it belonged to them. Multiple copies? But supposedly offered at Christie's in 2016 and valued at $10,000.
There's a catalog for defunct furniture retailer Dot & Bo, offering a "CENTAUR CHAIR AND OTTOMAN." Images were not available in the government PDF. Redacted or something I guess — just broken, most likely.
There's a mention of a human-car hybrid as a "car centaur" in a PDF book, Engineering General Intelligence!
I also searched for "sphinx," finding upwards of 250 returns. The overwhelmingly vast number of those were references to the Order of the Golden Sphinx, a donation arm for the Hasty Pudding Institute of Harvard. Epstein contributed $50,000 a year for multiple years in the late 2010s. There were also a handful of other sphinx hits: "speech-to-text (Sphinx) engines" in a 2013 research proposal for the Epstein Foundation; a reference to a book titled The Nuclear Sphinx of Tehran; a couple hits on the "Sphinx Organization," a non-profit helping young Black and Latino classical musicians. In a couple political newsletters, there are sphinx references, like this one: "Alito sits like a sphinx: his face gives away nothing," quoting a 2014 New Yorker article.
This being the Epstein Files, I suppose I can't be surprised at a bit of nastiness. I searched for "sagittary" and came up with a spammish email sent to jeevacation@gmail.com, with the subject: "I'd never hurt you! Not like other girls." Sender was redacted. It included links like this one:
http://179.63.80.214/nonmember/491920695/sagittary/1487303626/
pultaceous/sulphurous/aW1hZ2VzinBocD9pbWFnZT1mkalfZW1haWxz
L2J5X3RIbXBsYXRIX2IkLzUzMzglizUzMzg2NTg5NjViMjNkZWZh
MS8yMThjMGNjN2UyZmMucG5n.png
Emphasis mine.
This link does not work; in fact, none of the links in that email work now, nor does the raw IP address alone, nor did the Wayback Machine capture anything. Considering that's a png it's linking to, I'm glad I'm not seeing this. I don't mind the odd topless liontaur art now and then, but I imagine this would have linked to something a little more than somewhat unpleasant.
Also, if it is spam, why was the sender redacted? And why are the links using raw IP addresses? That seems skeevy. I'm guessing the "sagittary" part is a random word used in the sender's file structure. Note that Gemini says, "The IP address 179.63.80.214 is a public IPv4 address that belongs to a block of addresses managed by the LACNIC (Latin America and Caribbean Network Information Centre) registry. Most geolocation databases place this IP in Curacao (specifically Willemstad), a Dutch Caribbean island. It is registered to E-Commerce Monitoring S.R.L. (which often operates under the brand NetVerify or similar data/security services)."
The text of the message included this: "Sex request It couId be one time thing or regula activity if it' an :) "
Skeevy. Ugh.
I got five hits on "Sagittarius," all related to astrology, nothing worth detailing.
I also searched for "lion," but with over 11,000 hits, from "Lion King" to "mil=lion," but, well, that's too many to bother with. And I'm not searching for cat, kitten, or other feline terms that start with p and end with y. Enough is too much.