DOJ-OGR-00023115.tif

63 KB

Extraction Summary

8
People
2
Organizations
0
Locations
5
Events
6
Relationships
8
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Report excerpt / legal document
File Size: 63 KB
Summary

This document details ongoing negotiations and disagreements surrounding a federal plea agreement for Mr. Epstein in September 2007. It highlights the involvement of Assistant State Attorney Villafaña, who communicated with Belohlavek and sent revised agreements to Lefkowitz, and Acosta, who provided feedback on the USAO's 'hybrid' plea agreement to Lourie, emphasizing the trial team's support is crucial. A key point of contention was the change in offense description from solicitation of minors to forcing adults into prostitution, which made the agreement unacceptable to Villafaña.

People (8)

Name Role Context
Mr. Epstein Subject of legal proceedings
Accused of federal conspiracy charge, negotiations for plea agreement
Villafaña Assistant State Attorney
Emailed Belohlavek, sent revised plea agreement to Lefkowitz, received email from Lourie
Belohlavek Recipient of email from Villafaña
Informed about the status of the plea agreement
Acosta Legal professional involved in plea agreement
Sent thoughts to Lourie about USAO plea agreement, told Lourie he didn't typically sign plea agreements, explained OP...
Lourie Recipient of thoughts from Acosta, sender of email to Villafaña
Received proposed federal plea agreement from Acosta, forwarded email to Villafaña, noted defense preference for stat...
Lefkowitz Recipient of email/draft from Villafaña
Received proposed email (from an unnamed person) detailing objectionable provisions, received revised plea agreement ...
Alex Unknown, possibly a colleague or involved party
Referred to by Lourie as having 'good changes'
Jay Recipient of final changes
To receive the final plea agreement

Organizations (2)

Name Type Context
USAO
United States Attorney's Office, proposed a 'hybrid' federal plea agreement, had standard federal plea agreement lang...
OPR
Office of Professional Responsibility, where Acosta was interviewed

Timeline (5 events)

Negotiations regarding Mr. Epstein's plea agreement, lasting seven weeks, described as 'spinning our wheels'.
Acosta provided 'thoughts' on the USAO's proposed 'hybrid' federal plea agreement to Lourie.
Lourie forwarded an email with suggestions (Alex's changes) to Villafaña, instructing her to incorporate them and send the final version to Jay.
Villafaña sent a revised plea agreement to Lefkowitz and advised him about the controlling NPA if the defense preferred a state plea.
September 20, 2007
Villafaña emailed Assistant State Attorney Belohlavek regarding the status of the federal plea agreement and arraignment deadline.

Relationships (6)

Mr. Epstein involved in legal negotiations Lefkowitz
Her proposed email to Lefkowitz detailed all of the objectionable provisions in his draft, and concluded, 'If you or your client insists on these, there can be no plea agreement.'
Villafaña communicated via email Belohlavek
Villafaña emailed Assistant State Attorney Belohlavek and informed her
Acosta communicated thoughts/received plea agreement Lourie
Acosta sent Lourie '[s]ome thoughts' about the USAO version of the proposed 'hybrid' federal plea agreement he had received from Lourie
Lourie forwarded email Villafaña
Lourie forwarded the email to Villafaña
Villafaña sent revised plea agreement Lefkowitz
When Villafaña sent the revised plea agreement to Lefkowitz later that afternoon
Acosta worked under/involved with U.S. Attorney
documents such as plea agreements to be signed by an AUSA under the name of the U.S. Attorney

Key Quotes (8)

""If you or your client insists on these, there can be no plea agreement.""
Source
DOJ-OGR-00023115.tif
Quote #1
""Our deadline is Monday evening for a signed agreement and arraignment in the federal system. At this time, things don't look promising anyway, but I will keep you posted.""
Source
DOJ-OGR-00023115.tif
Quote #2
""In their latest draft, they changed what they agreed to plead to in the state from solicitation of minors for prostitution (a registrable offense) to forcing adults into prostitution (a non-registrable offense). We will not budge on this issue, so it is looking unlikely that we will reach a mutually acceptable agreement.""
Source
DOJ-OGR-00023115.tif
Quote #3
""it seems very straightforward" and "we are not changing our standard charging language" for the defense."
Source
DOJ-OGR-00023115.tif
Quote #4
""this should not be the first""
Source
DOJ-OGR-00023115.tif
Quote #5
""the USAO 'should only go forward if the trial team supports and signs this agreement.'""
Source
DOJ-OGR-00023115.tif
Quote #6
""I think Alex's changes are all good ones. Please try to incorporate his suggestions, change the signature block to your name and send as final to Jay.""
Source
DOJ-OGR-00023115.tif
Quote #7
""if it's something they don't feel comfortable with we . . . shouldn't go forward with it.""
Source
DOJ-OGR-00023115.tif
Quote #8

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (3,048 characters)

everything, but I really do not think that Mr. Epstein is going to engage in serious negotiations until he sees the Indictment and shows up in mag [federal magistrate judge] court." She suggested charging Epstein on a federal conspiracy charge, and if he refused to plead to that offense, superseding with additional charges and going to trial. She complained that after seven weeks of negotiations, "we are just spinning our wheels." Her proposed email to Lefkowitz detailed all of the objectionable provisions in his draft, and concluded, "If you or your client insists on these, there can be no plea agreement."
H. Acosta Edits the Federal Plea Agreement, and Villafaña Sends a Final Version to the Defense
The next day, Thursday, September 20, 2007, Villafaña emailed Assistant State Attorney Belohlavek and informed her:
Our deadline is Monday evening for a signed agreement and arraignment in the federal system. At this time, things don't look promising anyway, but I will keep you posted. In their latest draft, they changed what they agreed to plead to in the state from solicitation of minors for prostitution (a registrable offense) to forcing adults into prostitution (a non-registrable offense). We will not budge on this issue, so it is looking unlikely that we will reach a mutually acceptable agreement. If that changes, I will let you know.
Acosta sent Lourie "[s]ome thoughts" about the USAO version of the proposed "hybrid" federal plea agreement he had received from Lourie the evening before, commenting that "it seems very straightforward" and "we are not changing our standard charging language" for the defense. 120 Noting that the draft was prepared for his signature, Acosta told Lourie that he did not typically sign plea agreements and "this should not be the first," adding that the USAO "should only go forward if the trial team supports and signs this agreement."121 Lourie forwarded the email to Villafaña with a transmittal message simply reading, "I think Alex's changes are all good ones. Please try to incorporate his suggestions, change the signature block to your name and send as final to Jay." Lourie also noted to Acosta and Villafaña that he believed the defense would want to go back to the initial offer of a state plea with a non-prosecution agreement. When Villafaña sent the revised plea agreement to Lefkowitz later that afternoon, she advised him that if the defense wanted to return to the original offer of a state plea only, the draft NPA she had sent to him on September 17, 2007, would control.
120 The USAO had standard federal plea agreement language, from which this "hybrid" plea agreement had substantially diverged.
121 The standard procedure was for documents such as plea agreements to be signed by an AUSA under the name of the U.S. Attorney. In his OPR interview, Acosta further explained that wanted to give "the trial team" an opportunity to voice any objections because "if it's something they don't feel comfortable with we . . . shouldn't go forward with it."
77
DOJ-OGR-00023115

Discussion 0

Sign in to join the discussion

No comments yet

Be the first to share your thoughts on this epstein document