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1010 KB

Extraction Summary

6
People
3
Organizations
0
Locations
3
Events
5
Relationships
3
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Legal document
File Size: 1010 KB
Summary

This legal document is an excerpt from a report by the Office of Professional Responsibility (OPR) analyzing the Non-Prosecution Agreement (NPA) in the Jeffrey Epstein case. The OPR concludes that U.S. Attorney Acosta did not violate any clear standards or commit professional misconduct by resolving the federal investigation through the NPA, which required Epstein to plead to state charges. The report affirms that Acosta had the authority to make this decision and that the attorneys involved exercised sufficient competence and diligence.

People (6)

Name Role Context
Acosta U.S. Attorney
Mentioned throughout as the U.S. Attorney who had discretion and authority to resolve the Epstein case through a non-...
Epstein Subject of investigation
The individual whose federal investigation was resolved by a non-prosecution agreement, requiring him to plead guilty...
Sloman
Mentioned in footnote 206 as an individual whose compliance with professional ethics standards was considered by OPR.
Menchel
Mentioned in footnote 206 as an individual whose compliance with professional ethics standards was considered by OPR.
Lourie
Mentioned in footnote 206 as an individual whose compliance with professional ethics standards was considered by OPR.
Villafaña
Mentioned in footnote 206 as an individual whose compliance with professional ethics standards was considered by OPR.

Organizations (3)

Name Type Context
OPR government agency
The Office of Professional Responsibility, which conducted the analysis and concluded that Acosta did not commit prof...
Department government agency
Refers to the Department of Justice, whose policies and rules were considered by OPR in its analysis.
USAO government agency
U.S. Attorney's Office, mentioned in footnote 206 in the context of its investigation of Epstein.

Timeline (3 events)

The Office of Professional Responsibility (OPR) investigated whether U.S. Attorney Acosta's handling of the Epstein case, specifically the Non-Prosecution Agreement (NPA), violated any clear standards or constituted professional misconduct.
A Non-Prosecution Agreement (NPA) was approved by Acosta to resolve the federal investigation into Epstein. The agreement required Epstein to plead guilty to state charges and receive an 18-month sentence.
OPR concluded that Acosta did not commit professional misconduct and had the authority to approve the NPA with Epstein.

Relationships (5)

Acosta professional Epstein
Acosta, as U.S. Attorney, made the decision to resolve the federal investigation into Epstein through a Non-Prosecution Agreement (NPA).
Acosta professional Sloman
Both were subjects of an OPR review concerning their professional conduct in the Epstein case, suggesting they were colleagues or worked on the case together.
Acosta professional Menchel
Both were subjects of an OPR review concerning their professional conduct in the Epstein case, suggesting they were colleagues or worked on the case together.
Acosta professional Lourie
Both were subjects of an OPR review concerning their professional conduct in the Epstein case, suggesting they were colleagues or worked on the case together.
Acosta professional Villafaña
Both were subjects of an OPR review concerning their professional conduct in the Epstein case, suggesting they were colleagues or worked on the case together.

Key Quotes (3)

"potential co-conspirators"
Source
— Unnamed (quoted from the NPA provision) (Describing the unidentified individuals whom the NPA declined to prosecute.)
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Quote #1
"to press for every advantage that might be realized for a client."
Source
— FRPC 4-1.3 (comment) (A quote from the Federal Rules of Professional Conduct comment, cited in footnote 206 to explain that diligence does not require attorneys to take every possible advantage.)
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Quote #2
"zeal"
Source
— FRPC (Used in footnote 206 to describe the requirement of diligence for an attorney advocating for a client.)
DOJ-OGR-00021337.jpg
Quote #3

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (3,936 characters)

Case 22-1426, Document 77, 06/29/2023, 3536038, Page165 of 258
SA-163
Case 1:20-cr-00330-AJN Document 204-3 Filed 04/16/21 Page 163 of 348
agreement that did not require Epstein’s cooperation nor did the USAM require Acosta to obtain Departmental approval before doing so.
C. The NPA’s Individual Provisions Did Not Violate Any Clear and Unambiguous Standards
Although Acosta, as U.S. Attorney, had discretion generally to resolve the case through a non-prosecution agreement that deferred prosecution to the state, OPR also considered whether a clear and unambiguous standard governed any of the individual provisions of the NPA. Specifically, OPR examined Acosta’s decision to permit Epstein to resolve the federal investigation by pleading guilty to state charges of solicitation of minors to engage in prostitution and solicitation to prostitution, with a joint, binding recommendation for an 18-month sentence of incarceration. Because, as noted above, OPR found no clear guidance applicable to non-prosecution agreements not involving cooperation, OPR examined Departmental policies relating to plea offers to assess the propriety of the NPA’s charge and sentence requirements. OPR also examined the provision declining to prosecute Epstein’s unidentified “potential co-conspirators,” to determine whether that provision violated Departmental policy regarding grants of immunity. Finally, OPR considered whether there was a clear and unambiguous obligation under the Department’s policy regarding the deportation of criminal aliens, which would have required further action to be taken against the two Epstein assistants who were foreign nationals.
After considering the applicable rules and policies, OPR finds that Acosta’s decision to resolve the federal investigation through the NPA did not violate any clear and unambiguous standards and that Acosta had the authority to resolve the federal investigation through a state plea and through the terms that he chose. Accordingly, OPR concludes that Acosta did not commit professional misconduct in developing, negotiating, or approving the NPA, nor did the other subjects who implemented his decisions with respect to the resolution.206
1. Acosta Had Authority to Approve an Agreement That Required Epstein to Plead to Offenses Resulting in an 18-Month Term of Incarceration
Federal prosecutors have discretion to resolve a pending case or investigation through a plea agreement, including a plea that calls for the imposition of a specific, predetermined sentence. USAM §§ 9-27.330, 9-27.400; see also Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 11(c)(1).
206 OPR also considered whether Acosta, Sloman, Menchel, Lourie, or Villafaña failed to comply with professional ethics standards requiring that attorneys exercise competence and diligence in their representation of a client. Attorneys have a duty to provide competent, diligent representation to their clients, which generally requires the legal knowledge, skill, thoroughness, and preparation reasonably necessary for the representation. See, e.g., FRPC 4-1.1, 4-1.3. The requirement of diligence obligates an attorney to exercise “zeal” in advocating for the client, but does not require the attorney “to press for every advantage that might be realized for a client.” See FRPC 4-1.3 (comment). Although OPR criticizes certain decisions made during the USAO’s investigation of Epstein, those decisions, even if flawed, did not violate the standard requiring the exercise of competence or diligence. The subjects exhibited sufficient knowledge, skill, preparation, thoroughness, and zeal during the federal investigation and the NPA negotiations to satisfy the general standards established by the professional responsibility rules. An attorney may attain a flawed result but still exercise sufficient competence and diligence throughout the representation to meet the requirements of the standard.
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