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1.68 MB

Extraction Summary

8
People
4
Organizations
2
Locations
2
Events
3
Relationships
4
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Book excerpt (evidentiary exhibit)
File Size: 1.68 MB
Summary

This document is an excerpt from the book 'Filthy Rich' (pages 204-205), marked as a House Oversight exhibit. It details the preferential and 'highly irregular' treatment Jeffrey Epstein received while incarcerated at the Stockade between 2008 and 2009, contrasting it with other inmates like John Goodman. The text highlights US Attorney Alexander Acosta's admission that the state custody arrangement undermined the purpose of the jail sentence, and notes that taxpayers subsidized Epstein's stay.

People (8)

Name Role Context
Jeffrey Epstein Inmate
Subject of the text regarding his unusual treatment in jail.
Ric Bradshaw Sheriff
Sheriff overseeing the Stockade; denied preferential treatment but noted visits were not conjugal.
Alexander Acosta US Attorney
Negotiated Epstein's plea deal; later criticized the jail treatment as 'highly irregular' and undermining the sentence.
Arnold Prosperi Fraudster/Disbarred Lawyer
Mentioned as a disbarred lawyer and financial fraudster whose sentence was commuted by Clinton; context suggests a co...
Bill Clinton Former President
Commuted Arnold Prosperi's sentence on his last day in office.
John Goodman Polo Mogul/Inmate
Used as a comparison for jail treatment; convicted of killing someone while drunk driving, placed under house arrest.
Sarah Kellen Associate
Partial name '...a Kellen' mentioned as visiting Epstein in jail.
Igor 'Houdini' Zinoviev Artist/Associate
Partial name 'Igor "Houdini" Zino-' mentioned in the text.

Organizations (4)

Name Type Context
US Attorney's Office
Represented by Acosta.
House Oversight Committee
Document source (stamp).
State of Florida
Jurisdiction regarding prison confinement.
Federal Authorities
Contrasted with state authorities regarding prison management.

Timeline (2 events)

2008–July 21, 2009
Jeffrey Epstein's incarceration period at the Stockade.
The Stockade, Florida
January 19, 2001
Bill Clinton commuted Arnold Prosperi's prison sentence (implied date 'day before Clinton left office').
Washington D.C.

Locations (2)

Location Context
Jail facility where Epstein was held.
State jurisdiction for the prison.

Relationships (3)

Alexander Acosta Legal/Prosecutorial Jeffrey Epstein
Acosta negotiated Epstein's unusual agreement with the government.
Bill Clinton Political/Legal Arnold Prosperi
Clinton commuted Prosperi's sentence.
Sarah Kellen Associate/Visitor Jeffrey Epstein
Kellen visited Epstein in jail.

Key Quotes (4)

"Epstein appears to have received highly unusual treatment while in jail"
Source
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Quote #1
"without doubt, the treatment that he received while in state custody undermined the purpose of a jail sentence."
Source
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Quote #2
"Sheriff Bradshaw wants to be clear: none of these visits was conjugal."
Source
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Quote #3
"Epstein’s stay at the Stockade was subsidized by taxpayers."
Source
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Quote #4

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (1,364 characters)

CHAPTER 54
2008–July 21, 2009
[Left Page - Text Cut Off]
...ic Bradshaw, the treatment Jeffrey
...e Stockade was not preferential. By
...'t wrong.
...o mogul John Goodman killed a
...lrunk. He was convicted but was
...under house arrest while his appeal
...was allowed visitors. But Goodman's
...Jeffrey Epstein's.
...d to have visited Epstein in jail more
...a Kellen also visited Epstein in the
...l artist named Igor "Houdini" Zino-
...was a disbarred lawyer and financial
204
[Right Page]
FILTHY RICH
fraudster named Arnold Prosperi, whose own prison sentence had been commuted by Bill Clinton on the day before Clinton left office.
Sheriff Bradshaw wants to be clear: none of these visits was conjugal.
But even US attorney Acosta, who negotiated Epstein’s unusual agreement with the government, would say that Epstein’s arrangement was highly irregular.
“Epstein appears to have received highly unusual treatment while in jail,” Acosta would say in a letter addressed to the general public. “Although the terms of confinement in a state prison are a matter appropriately left to the state of Florida and not federal authorities, without doubt, the treatment that he received while in state custody undermined the purpose of a jail sentence.”
And, of course, Epstein’s stay at the Stockade was subsidized by taxpayers.
205
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_022013

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