FBI

Organization
Mentions
5131
Relationships
326
Events
710
Documents
2372
Also known as:
FBI (Federal Bureau of Investigation) FBI National Academy FBI Human Resources FBI Tampa FBI Albuquerque FBI San Juan FBI ICRC Winchester VA FBI Miami Field Office FBI New York Division FBI Criminal Investigative Division FBI New York FBI ICRC FBI C-20 FBI Counter Terrorism Task Force FBI Jacksonville FBI Lab FBI Jacksonville Field Office FBI Newark FBI Jacksonville Division FBI Evidence Response Team FBINET FBI NY FBI CART FBI Richmond Division FBI-New York FBI Victim Services Division FBI Victim Services NY FBI FBINY (FBI New York) FBI Baltimore/Delaware Seattle FBI FBINY FBI-Miami Office FBI/DOJ FBI Boston FBI-NY FBI-NY Sex Crimes Squad FBI (implied by mention of '302s') NY FBI (New York Field Office) FBI Los Angeles Federal Bureau of Intelligence (FBI) FBINET (FBI Network) DO (likely Director's Office or similar FBI division) FBI - New York Office FBI (Implied by 'Agent') Bureau (FBI) FBI - New York City FBI HQ FBI (implied by reference to '302') DOJ/FBI FBIHQ/CID FBI NY EC4 FBI (implied by reference to '302s') NYO (FBI New York Office) FBI (implied by case file format) FBI Denver Division FBI / Federal Agents FBI (Implied by reference to 'SA' - Special Agent, or internal office agents) FBI Victim Assistance FBIHQ FBI New York Office (NYO) FBI Denver Office FBI Atlanta Division FBI Victim Services program FBI Headquarters FBI New York (FBINY) FBI NY ECU FBI NY CART (Computer Analysis and Response Team) Inspection Division (FBI) FBI NY CART (Computer Analysis Response Team) FBI's FBI, New York

Relationship Network

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Interactive Network: Click nodes or edges to highlight connections and view details with action buttons. Drag nodes to reposition. Node size indicates connection count. Line color shows relationship strength: red (8-10), orange (6-7), yellow (4-5), gray (weak). Use legend and help buttons in the graph for more guidance.
326 total relationships
Connected Entity Relationship Type
Strength (mentions)
Documents Actions
organization OIG
Professional
5
1
View
organization MIA
Collaboration
5
1
View
person Pro-PRC organizations
Surveillance adversarial
5
1
View
person the defendant
Adversarial
5
1
View
person Robert Maheu
Informant operative
5
1
View
person NSA
Jurisdictional investigative
5
1
View
person The victims
Professional
5
1
View
person STEPHEN FLATLEY
Employment
5
1
View
person paul krassner
Adversarial
5
1
View
person Redacted Source
Informant service provider
5
1
View
organization The government
Operational
5
1
View
person James A. Baker
Employment
5
1
View
person Wild
Investigative law enforcement victim witness
5
1
View
person Annie Farmer
Subject of investigation evidence collection
5
1
View
organization [REDACTED]
Professional collaboration
5
1
View
organization NSA
Inter agency communication
5
1
View
person Jeffrey Epstein
Requester agency
5
1
View
organization State Attorney’s Office
Inter agency
5
1
View
person CIA
Withholding information
5
1
View
person USAO-SDFL
Professional
5
1
View
person Epstein's Victims
Investigator victim
5
1
View
person A. Farmer
Professional investigative
5
1
View
person Michelle Licata
Identified victim
5
1
View
person [Redacted Female]
Witness informant
5
1
View
person MR. ROBERT
Litigation foia requester
5
1
View
Date Event Type Description Location Actions
N/A N/A OPR working with FBI Palm Beach Office, including case agents and Victim Witness Specialist, to o... Palm Beach View
N/A N/A FBI search of Automated Case Support system and documentation of victim notification system. N/A View
N/A N/A FBI Meeting Unknown View
N/A N/A Notification received by OPR from FBI and USAO regarding federal investigation and Epstein's plea. N/A View
N/A N/A FBI investigation into Epstein's international sex trafficking organization was quashed. N/A View
N/A N/A Federal investigation began, contemporaneous with news reports of Epstein's arrest. N/A View
N/A N/A Victims provided OPR with information regarding their contacts with the FBI and USAO. N/A View
N/A N/A Rothstein's firm was raided. N/A View
N/A N/A FBI produced a criminal complaint related to Alfredo Rodriguez. N/A View
N/A N/A Potential arrest of Ghislaine Maxwell ('green lighting ab arrest'). Unknown View
N/A N/A Launch of counterintelligence investigation into Trump campaign USA View
N/A N/A Defense counsel review of nude images FBI View
N/A N/A FBI interview of a victim pursuant to a federal investigation regarding the sexual exploitation o... Unknown View
N/A Investigation Epstein investigation N/A View
N/A N/A Transfer of evidence New York Office (NYO) View
N/A N/A Criminal Investigation / Agency Interviews MCC New York View
N/A N/A Search of Epstein's island Little St. James View
N/A N/A Seizure of images from Jeffrey Epstein's residences pursuant to search warrants. New York and Virgin Islands View
N/A N/A Planned Arrest upon return to US Unspecified Airport View
N/A N/A Closure of federal investigations by FBI and U.S. Attorney Federal jurisdiction View
N/A N/A FBI Raid / Evidence Collection Epstein Residence View
N/A N/A Identification of new victims Unknown View
N/A N/A Government interviews with accusers Unknown View
N/A N/A Opening of the case/Investigation New York View
N/A N/A Referral of case to FBI Palm Beach View

DOJ-OGR-00014481.jpg

This document is a page from the court transcript of the summation (closing argument) by defense attorney Ms. Menninger in the trial of Ghislaine Maxwell. Menninger argues that Maxwell is innocent and that the prosecution's case relies on stories manipulated by personal injury lawyers and motivated by money. She asserts that the government successfully proved Jeffrey Epstein was a manipulator and abuser, but failed to connect those actions to Maxwell.

Court transcript (summation/closing argument)
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00014440.jpg

This document is a page from the summation transcript of the Ghislaine Maxwell trial (Case 1:20-cr-00330-PAE), delivered by prosecutor Ms. Moe. It details corroborating testimony from witnesses Janice Swain and David Mulligan (Annie's high school boyfriend) regarding what the victim, Annie, told them in the 1990s about a trip to New Mexico involving Maxwell and Epstein. The text highlights that Annie consistently described Maxwell buying her cowboy boots and sexually abusing her during a massage, a story she also told the FBI in 2006.

Court transcript (summation)
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00005290.jpg

This document is page 14 (marked -13- internally) of a Juror Questionnaire filed on October 22, 2021, for Case 1:20-cr-00330-PAE (United States v. Ghislaine Maxwell). It contains screening questions regarding the potential jurors' past experiences with grand jury investigations, being a victim of a crime, or having legal disputes with government agencies like the FBI or NYPD. The document features strikethroughs indicating a renumbering of the questions (e.g., changing question 23 to 24).

Legal document (juror questionnaire)
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00002875.jpg

This legal document, dated March 29, 2021, is a filing from the Government to Judge Alison J. Nathan. It clarifies the role of the FBI New York Office in an investigation conducted by the FBI Florida Office, stating that the New York office provided only 'ancillary support' by interviewing four witnesses between 2007 and 2008. The document asserts that this assistance did not make the New York office part of the prosecution team and that such inter-office cooperation is common.

Legal document
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00002725.jpg

This legal document, filed on February 4, 2021, is a request for the production of documents related to defense motions in the case against Ghislaine Maxwell. It seeks all communications concerning the 2007 Non-Prosecution Agreement (NPA) with Jeffrey Epstein, including those between various government agencies and Epstein's lawyers. The request also demands communications from meetings in 2016 and 2018 where attorneys for Epstein's victims urged the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York (SDNY) to launch a criminal investigation into both Epstein and Maxwell.

Legal document
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00033129.jpg

This document is an index page (Page 141, Bates DOJ-OGR-00033129) from a legal transcript produced by Consor & Associates on July 26, 2017. It lists alphabetical keywords from 'Duval' to 'final' with their corresponding page and line numbers in the main transcript. Significant entries include 'Epstein' (heavily referenced), 'FBI' (indicating federal investigation discussions), 'Figueroa', 'e-mail', and 'fifty-million-d...' (suggesting a large financial sum or settlement was discussed).

Transcript index / deposition index
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00023231.jpg

This document page (193) details the Office of Legal Counsel's (OLC) legal interpretation that rights under the Crime Victims' Rights Act (CVRA) formally commence upon the filing of a complaint, as that establishes a 'Federal offense.' It also outlines the 2005 Attorney General Guidelines, which assigned the responsibility of identifying and notifying victims during the 'investigation stage' to the FBI Special Agent in Charge.

Government report (likely doj opr/ig report)
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00023228.jpg

This document is a timeline graphic from a Department of Justice report detailing key events surrounding the Crime Victims' Rights Act (CVRA) analysis in the Jeffrey Epstein case. It tracks internal DOJ communications, victim notifications, and court actions from 2006 to 2008, with an additional sidebar covering legal developments up to 2020. Key events include the signing of the Non-Prosecution Agreement (NPA), the deferral of victim notification regarding the plea deal, and subsequent court rulings finding that the U.S. violated the CVRA.

Timeline/graphic from doj report
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00002706.jpg

This legal document, filed on February 4, 2021, is an argument from the defense demanding the immediate production of unredacted reports from the government. The defense contends these reports, held by the FBI, contain exculpatory 'Brady material' and that the government cannot fulfill its disclosure obligations by providing redacted versions. The argument is supported by citations to legal precedents, including Kyles v. Whitley, and a prior ruling from the court on the timing of such disclosures.

Legal document
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00025265.jpg

In a letter dated August 12, 2019, Lamine N'Diaye, the Warden of the Metropolitan Correctional Center (MCC) in New York, responds to an inquiry from District Judge Richard M. Berman. The Warden confirms that the ongoing FBI and OIG investigations into an August 10, 2019 incident involving inmate Jeffrey Epstein will also encompass a prior incident from July 23, 2019. Due to the active investigations, the Warden states he is unable to release any information regarding the previously completed internal inquiry into the July incident.

Letter
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00017590.jpg

A court transcript excerpt from the Ghislaine Maxwell trial (Case 1:20-cr-00330-PAE) involving a discussion about witness 'Jane'. Defense attorney Ms. Menninger raises a concern about a potential undisclosed statement from May 2019. Prosecutor Ms. Comey clarifies that the witness was approached by the FBI in May 2019 but declined to speak, and her first substantive interview did not occur until September 2019.

Court transcript
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00017584.jpg

This document is a page from a court transcript dated August 10, 2022, featuring the direct examination of a witness named 'Jane'. The witness clarifies that her first interview with the FBI regarding Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell occurred in May 2019, not September 2019. She also confirms that she subsequently filed a lawsuit against Ghislaine Maxwell.

Legal document
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00014528.jpg

This document is a page from the defense summation by Ms. Menninger in the Ghislaine Maxwell trial (Case 1:20-cr-00330-PAE). The attorney argues that a witness named Carolyn did not mention Maxwell in her original 2007 statements to the FBI or in her 2008 civil lawsuits. The text details Carolyn's interactions with Epstein, Roberts, and Sarah Kellen, specifically noting that Roberts instructed the massage and engaged in sex acts with Epstein, while Kellen took photos and arranged logistics.

Court transcript (summation)
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00014527.jpg

This document is a page from a court transcript (Case 1:20-cr-00330-PAE, likely the Ghislaine Maxwell trial) containing the defense summation by Ms. Menninger. The attorney challenges the credibility of a witness named Kate using property records and discusses another witness, Carolyn, who was interviewed by FBI agents in 2007. The text highlights that Carolyn told the FBI she was recruited by Virginia Roberts, who discussed money with her and brought her inside a property where she saw a woman with an unknown accent.

Court transcript / summation
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00014513.jpg

This document is a page from the defense summation by Ms. Menninger in the Ghislaine Maxwell trial (Case 1:20-cr-00330). The attorney attacks the credibility of a witness (likely 'Jane' or Carolyn) by highlighting inconsistencies in her statements to the FBI regarding her housing (Bear Lake Estates), her age when moving to Interlochen, and the timeline of meeting Donald Trump in a green car owned by Epstein. The defense argues the witness fabricated Ghislaine Maxwell's involvement at the suggestion of her personal injury lawyer, Mr. Glassman.

Court transcript (closing argument/summation)
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00014504.jpg

This document is a transcript page from a defense summation by Ms. Menninger in a criminal trial (Case 1:20-cr-00330-PAE). The attorney argues that a witness's testimony is unreliable due to significant memory lapses and inconsistencies, specifically highlighting contradictory accounts given to the FBI versus in court regarding the location and circumstances of the first instance of sexual abuse involving Epstein.

Court transcript (summation)
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00014486.jpg

This document is a page from the court transcript of the Ghislaine Maxwell trial (Case 1:20-cr-00330-PAE), specifically the summation by defense attorney Ms. Menninger. She argues that the government failed to record interviews with accusers, questions the credibility of witnesses who added Maxwell to their stories only after hiring personal injury lawyers, and points out discrepancies between testimony and flight logs regarding travel.

Court transcript (summation/closing argument)
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00011666.jpg

This document is the cover page for the court transcript of the jury trial in the case of United States of America v. Ghislaine Maxwell, held on November 29, 2021. The trial took place in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, presided over by Judge Alison J. Nathan. The document lists the appearances of the legal counsel for both the prosecution and the defense, as well as other individuals present.

Legal document
2025-11-20

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019810.jpg

This document appears to be page 322 from the notes section of a book, likely 'How America Lost Its Secrets' by Edward Jay Epstein (indicated by the ISBN in the footer). It contains endnotes for Chapter 18, citing various news articles and interviews regarding intelligence agencies (NSA, CIA), Russian espionage, and Edward Snowden. The document has a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' stamp, suggesting it was part of a larger document production for a congressional committee. Despite the filename containing 'Epst', the content relates to the author Edward Jay Epstein, not Jeffrey Epstein.

Book endnotes / bibliographic references
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019807.jpg

This document appears to be a page of endnotes (page 319) from a book, likely 'How America Lost Its Secrets' by Edward Jay Epstein, bearing a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' stamp. The text details sources and citations regarding Edward Snowden's flight from the US, the revocation of his passport by the State Department in June 2013, and various interviews conducted by the author with intelligence officials and journalists. The document references whistleblowers, the FBI, the NSA, and Russian President Vladimir Putin's involvement in the Snowden affair. While the prompt requests 'Epstein-related' data, this specific page concerns Edward Snowden; the 'Epstein' connection is likely the author of the book, Edward Jay Epstein, rather than Jeffrey Epstein.

Book endnotes / government exhibit
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019795.jpg

This document is a page of endnotes (page 307) from a book, likely 'How America Lost Its Secrets' by Edward Jay Epstein, produced to the House Oversight Committee (Bates stamp HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019795). The notes relate to a prologue about Edward Snowden in Hong Kong (2014), citing interviews the author conducted with figures like General Keith Alexander and Keith Bradsher, as well as various books and articles. While part of a House Oversight production potentially related to investigations involving the author (who had connections to Jeffrey Epstein), the content specifically details sources regarding the NSA and Snowden.

Book endnotes / manuscript page (house oversight production)
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019789.jpg

This document is a scanned page (301) from the Epilogue of a book, likely 'How America Lost Its Secrets' by Edward Jay Epstein, stamped as evidence by the House Oversight Committee. The text analyzes the impact of Edward Snowden's leaks, crediting him with prompting Congress to modify the Patriot Act regarding domestic privacy while simultaneously criticizing him for damaging long-standing US intelligence methods used against foreign adversaries. It details the mechanics of NSA call chaining and the shift in how billing records are stored.

Book page / legislative evidence (house oversight committee)
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019786.jpg

This document appears to be page 298 from the book 'How America Lost Its Secrets' (likely by Edward Jay Epstein, indicated by the filename 'Epst_...'). It details the operational fallout of the Edward Snowden leaks, specifically how terrorist targets using platforms like Xbox Live, Twitter, and Facebook ceased using these methods ('went dark') after the PRISM program was revealed in June 2013. The text cites NSA officials Richard Ledgett and Admiral Rogers confirming that the leaks resulted in a loss of surveillance capabilities against groups planning attacks in Europe and the US.

Book page / legislative exhibit
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019769.jpg

This document appears to be a page (281) from a book manuscript, likely 'How America Lost Its Secrets' by Edward Jay Epstein (inferred from the filename 'Epst' and ISBN 9780451494566), bearing a House Oversight Committee stamp. The text analyzes Edward Snowden's motivations, arguing that he sought fame rather than just whistleblower status, as evidenced by his refusal to remain anonymous despite offers from editors and his specific request for Laura Poitras to film him. It details the timeline of his communications with journalists Gellman, Greenwald, and Poitras in 2013.

Book page proof / manuscript (house oversight committee document)
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019758.jpg

This document is a page from the book 'How America Lost Its Secrets' by Edward Jay Epstein, produced as part of a House Oversight investigation (stamped HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019758). The text details an interview between the author and Snowden's Russian lawyer, Kucherena, discussing Snowden's potential possession of CIA files, the division of labor between his legal teams (Kucherena in Russia, Ben Wizner/ACLU in the US), and Snowden's financial state upon arriving in Russia. The document clarifies that media access to Snowden was controlled by Ben Wizner.

Book excerpt / government production document
2025-11-19
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