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1.59 MB

Extraction Summary

4
People
1
Organizations
8
Locations
2
Events
2
Relationships
4
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Legal filing / court document page
File Size: 1.59 MB
Summary

This page from a legal document details statements by Alfredo Rodriguez, a household employee of Jeffrey Epstein, regarding underage girls visiting Epstein's mansion for "massages." It describes a journal Rodriguez took from Epstein's computer, dubbed "The Holy Grail," which listed names of alleged abuse victims and acquaintances, and mentions Rodriguez's subsequent criminal charge for attempting to sell this evidence.

Organizations (1)

Timeline (2 events)

Rodriguez Deposition
U.S. v. Rodriguez (Criminal Complaint)

Relationships (2)

from to

Key Quotes (4)

"purported “massages”"
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Quote #1
"“The Journal” or “Holy Grail”"
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Quote #2
"make him “disappear”"
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Quote #3
"“insurance policy”"
Source
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Quote #4

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (1,821 characters)

15. One of Mr. Epstein’s household employees, Mr. Alfredo Rodriguez, saw
numerous underage girls coming into Epstein’s mansion for purported “massages.” See
Rodriguez Depo. at 242-44 (Deposition Attachment #8). Rodriguez was aware that “sex toys”
and vibrators were found in Epstein’s bedroom after the purported massages. Id. at 223-28.
Rodriguez thought what Epstein was doing was wrong, given the extreme youth of the girls he
saw. Id. at 230-31..
16. Alfredo Rodriguez took a journal from Epstein’s computer that reflected many of
the names of underage females Epstein abused across the country and the world, including
locations such as Michigan, California, West Palm Beach, New York, New Mexico, and Paris,
France. See Journal (hereinafter “The Journal” or “Holy Grail”) (Exhibit “F”) (identifying,
among other Epstein acquaintances, females that Rodriguez believes were underage under the
heading labeled "Massages").
17. Rodriguez was later charged in a criminal complaint with obstruction of justice in
connection with trying to obtain $50,000 from civil attorneys pursuing civil sexual assault cases
against Epstein as payment for producing the book to the attorneys. See Criminal Complaint at
2, U.S. v. Rodriguez, No. 9:10-CR-80015-KAM (S.D. Fla. 2010) (Exhibit “G”). Rodriguez
stated he needed money because the journal was his “property” and that he was afraid that
Jeffrey Epstein would make him “disappear” unless he had an “insurance policy” (i.e., the
journal). Id. at 3. Because of the importance of the information in the journal to the civil cases,
Mr. Rodriguez called it “The Holy Grail.”
18. In the “Holy Grail” or “The Journal,” among the many names listed (along with
the abused girls) are some of the people that Epstein alleges in his Complaint had “no connection
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