EFTA00015823.pdf

141 KB

Extraction Summary

8
People
11
Organizations
4
Locations
2
Events
2
Relationships
5
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Legal correspondence (letter from u.s. attorney)
File Size: 141 KB
Summary

A letter from the U.S. Attorney's Office (SDNY) to Ghislaine Maxwell's defense team regarding 16 evidence discs labeled as 'Epstein Encase Files.' The government identified these discs as containing a forensic image of a computer seized from Epstein's Palm Beach residence in 2005. However, the government concluded that the original warrant authorized seizure but not the search of the computer's contents, and thus they lack the lawful authority to review the files or allow the defense to access them.

People (8)

Name Role Context
Audrey Strauss United States Attorney
Sender of the letter representing the US Government.
Christian Everdell Defense Counsel
Recipient, Cohen & Gresser LLP.
Mark Cohen Defense Counsel
Recipient, Cohen & Gresser LLP.
Laura Menninger Defense Counsel
Recipient, Haddon, Morgan and Foreman, P.C.
Jeffrey Pagliuca Defense Counsel
Recipient, Haddon, Morgan and Foreman, P.C.
Bobbi Sternheim Defense Counsel
Recipient, Law Offices of Bobbi C. Sternheim.
Ghislaine Maxwell Defendant
Subject of the case (United States v. Ghislaine Maxwell).
Jeffrey Epstein Deceased Subject of Investigation
Source of the seized computer/discs discussed in the letter.

Timeline (2 events)

2005
Seizure of a computer from Jeffrey Epstein's residence in Palm Beach, Florida by the Palm Beach Police Department.
Palm Beach, Florida
2020-10-20
Discovery production date mentioned regarding the 2005 search warrant.
N/A

Relationships (2)

Ghislaine Maxwell Attorney-Client Christian Everdell
Everdell is addressed as counsel in United States v. Ghislaine Maxwell.
Jeffrey Epstein Legal Entity Epstein Estate
Mention of Epstein's estate asserting privilege.

Key Quotes (5)

"The Government does not believe it has a lawful basis to review the forensic image of the Epstein Computer contained on the Discs."
Source
EFTA00015823.pdf
Quote #1
"The Discs appear to contain a forensic image of a computer seized from Jeffrey Epstein's residence in Palm Beach, Florida... in or about 2005 (the 'Epstein Computer')."
Source
EFTA00015823.pdf
Quote #2
"While that warrant appears to have authorized the seizure of electronic devices, it does not appear to have authorized a search of the content of such devices."
Source
EFTA00015823.pdf
Quote #3
"The Government cannot permit you to review the contents of the Discs."
Source
EFTA00015823.pdf
Quote #4
"Epstein's estate has repeatedly informed the Government that it is unwilling to waive any attorney-client privileges"
Source
EFTA00015823.pdf
Quote #5

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (4,314 characters)

U.S. Department of Justice
United States Attorney
Southern District of New York
The Silvio J. Mollo Building
One Saint Andrew's Plaza
New York, New York 10007
April 9, 2021
BY ELECTRONIC MAIL
Christian Everdell, Esq.
Mark Cohen, Esq.
Cohen & Gresser LLP
800 Third Avenue
New York, NY 10022
Laura Menninger, Esq.
Jeffrey Pagliuca, Esq.
Haddon, Morgan and Foreman, P.C.
150 East Tenth Avenue
Denver, CO 80203
Bobbi Sternheim, Esq.
Law Offices of Bobbi C. Sternheim
33 West 19th Street-4th Fl.
New York, NY 10007
Re: United States v. Ghislaine Maxwell, 20 Cr. 330 (AJN)
Dear Counsel:
The Government writes regarding your request to review sixteen (16) discs in the possession of the Federal Bureau of Investigation ("FBI") as part of the file previously maintained by the FBI's Palm Beach Resident Agency (the "FBI Florida Office") during its investigation of Jeffrey Epstein under evidence number 1B8, Subitem 8 (the "Discs"). As noted in the evidence log previously provided to you, the Discs are described in the FBI's evidence system as follows:
(16) DVD-R discs with printed labels reading, "Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office Case # 05-250067 Epstein Encase Files Palm Beach PD DVD-R for General VERBATIM DVD Computer Crimes Unit." Each disc is also respectively labeled, "Disk 1 of 16," "Disk 2 of 16," etc.
When the FBI's New York Office first received the FBI Florida Office's file regarding its investigation of Jeffrey Epstein, the agents working on this case attempted to review all electronic media contained in that file, including the Discs. During that review, the case agents were unable to open any files contained on the Discs and believed that the files were inoperable.
Page 2
In preparing for defense counsel in this case to review all physical evidence in the FBI Florida Office's file, the Government tried to access the content of these Discs and was similarly unable to open those files. However, the Government recognized that the file extensions and sizes of those files appeared to be consistent with those of a forensic image of an electronic device. With the help of an FBI computer specialist, the Government has learned that the Discs appear to contain a forensic image of a computer seized from Jeffrey Epstein's residence in Palm Beach, Florida by the Palm Beach Police Department during the execution of a search warrant in or about 2005 (the "Epstein Computer").
The Government has reviewed the 2005 search warrant obtained by the Palm Beach Police Department, which was previously produced to you in a discovery production dated October 20, 2020. While that warrant appears to have authorized the seizure of electronic devices, it does not appear to have authorized a search of the content of such devices. Moreover, the Government is not aware of any further warrant obtained by local or federal authorities as part of the prior Florida Investigation that would authorize a review of the contents of the Epstein Computer. Nor has this Office obtained a warrant for the Epstein Computer. Accordingly, the Government does not believe it has a lawful basis to review the forensic image of the Epstein Computer contained on the Discs. Moreover, and given, among other things, the passage of time since the Epstein Computer was seized in 2005, the Government does not intend to obtain a warrant to search the Epstein Computer or otherwise review or make use of its contents. As such, because the Government lacks authority to review their contents, the Discs are not discoverable in this case, and the Government cannot permit you to review the contents of the Discs.1
Very truly yours,
AUDREY STRAUSS
United States Attorney
by [REDACTED SIGNATURE BLOCK]
Assistant United States Attorneys
1 In this respect, the Government is also mindful of the fact that Epstein's estate has repeatedly informed the Government that it is unwilling to waive any attorney-client privileges in connection devices seized from Epstein during this investigation. As a result, even assuming the Government had the authority to review the contents of the Discs, the Government would have to first conduct a privilege review before producing any non-privileged material to you. However, because the Government has no lawful authority to search the contents, it cannot conduct such a review.

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