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

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016513.jpg

This page from a legal article discusses the concept of "enforcement redundancy" as a tool to combat criminal law underenforcement, particularly in cases of police violence and sexual assault. It analyzes the U.S. approach of federalism-based redundancy compared to other mechanisms like private prosecution or judicial review used internationally. The text argues that while federal intervention helps with public corruption and some civil rights violations, it has a mixed record on police violence and has failed to adequately address sexual assault underenforcement.

Law review article / legal document
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_012114.jpg

This document is page 8 of a telephone interview transcript with Virginia Roberts regarding the case 'Edwards adv. Epstein.' Virginia describes her 'full-time employment' with Jeffrey Epstein, which involved traveling with him, being on call 24/7 (including for sexual acts initiated by massages), and social activities like shopping. She details living arrangements, noting that Epstein furnished an apartment for her in Royal Palm Beach after she quit Mar-a-Lago, though she expresses difficulty remembering the exact address despite FBI inquiries.

Legal transcript / telephone interview record
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_026495.jpg

This document appears to be a page from a House Oversight Committee report (likely Republican-authored) criticizing the origins of the FBI's 'Crossfire Hurricane' investigation. It argues that the investigation into the Trump campaign was based on flimsy evidence, specifically attacking the credibility of the George Papadopoulos entrapment theory and the Steele Dossier, while contrasting this with alleged financial ties between the Clintons and Russian interests. The text details specific dates in August 2016 regarding letters sent to FBI Director Comey by Democrats pushing the collusion narrative.

Congressional oversight report / political memorandum
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_026493.jpg

This document discusses the findings of Inspector General Horowitz regarding political bias in FBI investigations involving James Comey and Peter Strzok, arguing that this bias taints the subsequent Mueller investigation. It cites legal precedents, such as *U.S. v. Russell* and *Blackledge v. Perry*, to argue that due process violations stemming from biased investigations function as "fruit of a poisonous tree," potentially invalidating convictions and indictments.

Legal or political analysis document
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_026488.jpg

This document appears to be a page from a House Oversight Committee report criticizing the FBI's 'Crossfire Hurricane' investigation into the Trump campaign's alleged ties to Russia. It argues that the investigation was based on flimsy evidence (specifically concerning George Papadopoulos and the Steele Dossier) and was driven by political bias, highlighting leaks to the media by officials and letters from Senator Harry Reid in late 2016. The text does not mention Jeffrey Epstein or Ghislaine Maxwell; it is focused entirely on the 2016 election and the Russia investigation.

Congressional report / house oversight committee record
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_026487.jpg

This document, originating from House Oversight records, argues that the FBI's 'Crossfire Hurricane' investigation into the Trump campaign was politically motivated and lacked evidence of collusion at its inception. It contrasts the handling of the Trump investigation with the Clinton email investigation and highlights financial ties between the Clinton sphere (Foundation, Podesta Group) and Russian entities. It references a 2012 Eric Holder memo regarding DOJ impartiality during election years to support the argument that the investigation violated standard protocol.

Report / legal analysis / congressional document
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_026486.jpg

The text argues that political bias among FBI officials tainted the Russia investigation and the subsequent appointment of Special Counsel Robert Mueller, likening the situation to the "fruit of a poisonous tree" legal doctrine. It cites several Supreme Court precedents regarding due process to suggest that such governmental bias creates an unfair process that should invalidate legal proceedings.

Legal/political commentary or memorandum
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_026481.jpg

This document appears to be a page from a House Oversight Committee report (indicated by the footer) analyzing the FBI's 'Crossfire Hurricane' investigation into the Trump campaign and Russia. It argues that the investigation was politically biased, noting that Papadopoulos did not mention emails connecting the campaign to the DNC hack. The text details a timeline of leaks and letters in late 2016 involving Harry Reid, James Comey, and the media, suggesting these were efforts to publicize the collusion narrative before the election. Note: While the prompt requested Epstein-related data, this specific page deals exclusively with the 2016 Election and Russia investigation.

Congressional report / investigative memorandum
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_026480.jpg

This document, stamped with a House Oversight footer, argues against the legitimacy of the 'Crossfire Hurricane' investigation into the Trump campaign. It contends that the investigation violated Justice Department norms regarding election-year impartiality and asserts there was no evidence of collusion when the probe began. The text contrasts the scrutiny of the Trump campaign with the activities of the Clinton campaign (funding the Steele dossier) and the Podesta Group's ties to Russian entities.

Report/memo excerpt (house oversight)
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_026479.jpg

This document appears to be an excerpt from a legal argument or opinion piece included in House Oversight Committee files (stamped HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_026479). It argues that the Mueller investigation is invalid ('fruit of a poisonous tree') because it stemmed from the 'Crossfire' investigation, which the author claims was politically motivated to help Hillary Clinton and hurt Donald Trump. The text cites several Supreme Court cases (U.S. v. Russell, Blackledge v. Perry, Young v. U.S., Williams v. Pennsylvania) to argue that due process is violated when prosecutorial efforts are motivated by bias or vindictiveness. **Note:** While the user prompt asks for 'Epstein-related' analysis, this specific page contains no mention of Jeffrey Epstein; it focuses exclusively on the Trump-Russia investigation and FBI conduct.

Legal commentary / political analysis (likely an op-ed or legal brief included in house oversight files)
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_026478.jpg

This document describes findings by Inspector General Horowitz regarding anti-Trump bias among FBI officials during the 2016 election cycle, specifically within the Crossfire Hurricane and Clinton email investigations. It details concerning communications from agents like Peter Strzok and questions whether bias influenced the prioritization of the Russia inquiry over the Clinton email probe.

Report excerpt / legal document
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020821.jpg

This document appears to be an email fragment or signature block from Alexandra V. Preate, CEO of CapitalHQ. It contains a 'Correction' notice stating that the FBI briefed the House Intelligence Committee about a source but did not provide documents. The document includes a standard legal disclaimer and a Bates stamp indicating it is part of a House Oversight production (HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020821).

Email / correspondence fragment
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020818.jpg

This document appears to be a printout of a digital news feed (likely Wall Street Journal given the 'WSJ' and 'Potomac Watch' headers) containing various political headlines. It highlights articles about John McCain's views on Putin, the Mueller investigation's interest in Ford records, and questions regarding FBI surveillance of the 2016 Trump campaign. The document includes a caption describing a photo of Devin Nunes at CPAC on February 24.

News digest / webpage printout
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020816.jpg

This document appears to be a printed page from a digital news digest or email newsletter, stamped with the Bates number HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020816. It lists various headlines categorized under Opinion, Life, Politics, and WSJ, covering topics such as the Clinton campaign, Michael Flynn's guilty plea, John McCain's views on Putin, and the Mueller investigation. The document contains placeholders for images that failed to load.

News clipping digest / email newsletter printout
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020610.jpg

This document appears to be a page from a House Oversight Committee report (Appendix 2) focused on foreign influence, specifically Chinese Communist Party (CCP) influence in Australia and Canada. The text contains extensive footnotes citing Australian media and government sources from 2017-2018 regarding political donations, espionage, and legislative responses to foreign interference. The body text begins a section on Canada, noting its long history with the PRC, significant student population (160,000), and a 1997 RCMP-SIS report on interference. There is no direct mention of Jeffrey Epstein on this specific page.

Government report / legislative appendix
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020589.jpg

This document appears to be a bibliography or endnotes page (labeled 130) from a House Oversight Committee report. The citations (numbered 14 through 30) reference academic papers, government reports, and news articles concerning technology transfer to China, reverse engineering, US export controls (deemed exports), and the monitoring of foreign students via SEVIS. The latest date referenced in the citations is September 2018.

Congressional report / bibliography page
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020586.jpg

This document appears to be page 127 of a House Oversight report (Section 8) discussing national security concerns regarding foreign students, specifically from China (PRC). It details the FBI's access to the SEVIS database, gaps in mandatory data collection (like passport numbers), and the issue of 'deemed exports' where foreign students access controlled technology in US university labs. While the prompt identifies this as 'Epstein-related,' this specific page contains no direct mentions of Jeffrey Epstein, his associates, or his specific financial dealings; it focuses entirely on US-China technology transfer policy and student visa regulations.

Government report / congressional oversight document
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020567.jpg

This document is page 108 of a House Oversight report (Bates: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020567) discussing the hiring of former senior government officials by Chinese companies and foreign influence in US state and local politics. It details specific instances of financial influence, including a $120,000 donation to Virginia Governor Terry McAuliffe by Chinese industrialist Wang Wenliang, and lobbying efforts by companies like BYD, Huawei, and Wanda. It also highlights a case involving the Imperial Pacific casino in Saipan hiring former CIA and FBI directors, and a 2017 FEC complaint regarding Dalian Wanda's funding of a California ballot initiative via a loan from a US company.

Government report / congressional oversight document
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020495.jpg

This document appears to be page 36 of a House Oversight Committee report regarding Chinese influence operations within the United States. It outlines policy recommendations for the US government to counter 'united front' activities, including enforcing the Foreign Agent Registration Act (FARA) on specific Chinese organizations and increasing FBI engagement with the Chinese American community. The text warns against Chinese Americans accepting 'honors' or travel from the Chinese Communist Party, citing the potential for compromised loyalties.

Congressional report / policy paper (house oversight committee)
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020490.jpg

This document is a page from a House Oversight report (page 31) detailing the goals and methods of the Chinese Communist Party's 'United Front' work. It describes how senior CCP officials lead outreach organizations to influence overseas Chinese communities, intimidate Uighur and Tibetan exiles, and establish pro-Beijing media in the West. It specifically mentions FBI agents contacting Chinese exiles in the US to offer protection against Chinese agents traveling on tourist visas. The document appears unrelated to Jeffrey Epstein despite the prompt's framing.

Congressional report / government report (house oversight)
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020489.jpg

This document page, labeled HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020489, details the history of US-China relations and the PRC's 'United Front' strategy to influence overseas Chinese communities. It covers the shift in US policy following Nixon's 1972 visit, the establishment of pro-Beijing organizations in the US in the 1970s, and the Chinese Communist Party's efforts to utilize the Chinese diaspora for political and economic gain, particularly after the 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown. Note: While the prompt requested an 'Epstein-related' document analysis, this specific page contains no mentions of Jeffrey Epstein, his associates, or his activities; it appears to be part of a broader House Oversight investigation into foreign influence.

Government report / house oversight committee document
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020485.jpg

This page is from a House Oversight Committee report (page 26) advising state and local governments on handling relations with Chinese institutions. It outlines protocols for due diligence, including communicating with the FBI, tracking the origins of funding ('Follow the money'), and avoiding prejudice against Taiwan to curry favor with Beijing. The document includes a 'Notes' section citing various China-US trade councils, friendship associations, and academic studies on political influence.

Government report / policy advisory (house oversight committee)
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017793.jpg

This document is a printout of a Law&Crime article from December 2018, filed as a court exhibit in April 2019. The article details an interview where Alan Dershowitz vehemently denies sexual abuse allegations made by Virginia Roberts, calling her a 'certified liar' and claiming he has conclusive travel records proving his innocence. The text also mentions the settlement of a civil case against Jeffrey Epstein by attorney Bradley Edwards.

News article / court exhibit
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017768.jpg

This document is a printout of an Axios article dated April 15, 2019, filed as a court exhibit. It details an interview with Alan Dershowitz in which he admits he is still technically Jeffrey Epstein's lawyer and receives calls from him regarding legal issues, though he denies social contact. The article also references the 'sweetheart plea deal' brokered by Alexander Acosta and the recent Miami Herald investigation into the suppression of the FBI probe.

News article / court exhibit
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017729.jpg

This document is an excerpt from a 2005 BYU Law Review article discussing the Crime Victims' Rights Act (CVRA), specifically regarding the government's obligation to notify victims of case events. It outlines specific rights such as notification of release, plea agreements, and sentencing, and includes a rationale section quoting Senator Feinstein. The document bears the name of attorney David Schoen and a House Oversight Bates stamp, suggesting it was part of a production related to the investigation into the handling of the Epstein case, particularly the failure to notify victims under the CVRA.

Legal reference material / law review article excerpt
2025-11-19
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