| Date | Event Type | Description | Location | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| N/A | N/A | Dinner on Caribbean islands with Presidents | Caribbean islands | View |
This document appears to be page 28 of a memoir or manuscript draft (header date 4.2.12) stamped by the House Oversight Committee. The text, written in the first person (likely by Alan Dershowitz given the biographical details regarding Boro Park, law/teaching, and Martha's Vineyard), recounts the author's childhood in a 'funny neighborhood' surrounded by future comedians like Jackie Mason and Buddy Hackett. It details his experiences working in the Catskills (Borscht Belt) hotels and his current social life on Martha's Vineyard exchanging jokes with celebrities like Harold Ramis and Larry David.
This document, labeled 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_012391,' lists historical precedents of U.S. Presidents from 1876 to 1990 using signing statements to challenge the constitutionality of 'legislative veto' provisions in various acts. Presidents including Kennedy, Nixon, Reagan, and Grant are cited as having declared they would not be bound by such provisions, treating them as non-binding requests or nullities. The document appears to be legal or historical research compiled for a government body, but its content does not contain any information related to Jeffrey Epstein.
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