| Connected Entity | Relationship Type |
Strength
(mentions)
|
Documents | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
person
Emily Michot
|
Business associate |
6
|
2 | |
|
person
Jeffrey Epstein
|
Journalist subject |
5
|
1 | |
|
person
Geoffrey S. Berman
|
Investigative credit |
1
|
1 |
| Date | Event Type | Description | Location | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2019-01-01 | N/A | Announcement of the 2019 Hillman Prize winners. | N/A | View |
| 2018-12-06 | N/A | Publication of 'Lawmakers issue call for investigation of serial sex abuser Jeffrey Epstein's ple... | N/A | View |
| 2018-11-28 | N/A | Publication of Miami Herald article by Julie K. Brown | Miami Herald | View |
| 2018-11-28 | Publication | The Miami Herald published an investigative report by Julie K. Brown about Mr. Epstein's 2007 Non... | N/A | View |
| 2018-11-28 | Publication | Publication of a 3-part investigative report in the Miami Herald by Julie K. Brown regarding Mr. ... | N/A | View |
| 2018-11-28 | N/A | Publication of article 'Even from jail, sex abuser manipulated the system'. | Miami Herald | View |
| 2018-11-28 | N/A | Publication of the article 'Perversion of Justice' | Florida | View |
| 2018-11-28 | N/A | Miami Herald published investigative report 'Perversion of Justice'. | Miami, FL | View |
| 2018-11-28 | N/A | Publication date of the article | Florida | View |
| 2018-11-28 | N/A | Publication of Miami Herald article 'Even from Jail, Sex Abuser Manipulated the System' | Miami | View |
| 2018-11-28 | N/A | Miami Herald publishes 'Perversion of Justice' investigative report. | Miami, Florida | View |
| 2018-11-28 | N/A | Publication of 'Cops worked to put serial sex abuser in prison. Prosecutors worked to cut him a b... | Miami Herald | View |
This document is an email from Darren Indyke to 'jeevacation' (likely Epstein) and attorney Martin Weinberg, dated May 10, 2019. The body of the email is redacted for privilege, but it forwards a Miami Herald article from February 2019 regarding Jeffrey Sloman defending former prosecutor Alexander Acosta's handling of the Epstein plea deal. The document highlights the ongoing scrutiny of the non-prosecution agreement.
This document is a newspaper clipping from February 2019 detailing former prosecutor Jeffrey Sloman's public defense of Alexander Acosta regarding the lenient 2008 plea deal given to Jeffrey Epstein. Sloman attributes the deal to 'legal impediments' and terrified victims, rather than corruption or pressure from Epstein's high-profile lawyers. The article notes the reopening of a DOJ investigation into the case following the Miami Herald's 'Perversion of Justice' series.
This article from the Virgin Islands Daily News, originally by the Miami Herald, details how Alexander Acosta, as a federal prosecutor, negotiated a controversial non-prosecution agreement for Jeffrey Epstein in 2007. The deal allowed Epstein to avoid federal prison and concealed the extent of his crimes from his victims. The article highlights the involvement of high-profile figures and the ongoing trauma experienced by the victims.
This document appears to be an email printout or attachment from the files of Darren K. Indyke (Epstein's lawyer). The content displays the 'Team' credits for the Miami Herald's investigative series on Jeffrey Epstein, listing Julie K. Brown and others. The bottom of the page contains Indyke's professional signature block, address in Delray Beach, a legal disclaimer, and a redaction. It is marked with the Bates stamp HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_023016.
This article from The Virgin Islands Daily News (originally by Miami Herald) reports on Alan Dershowitz's efforts to limit press access to a 2019 court hearing regarding the unsealing of documents in the Epstein/Maxwell sex trafficking case. It details the history of the defamation suit brought by Virginia Roberts Giuffre against Ghislaine Maxwell, the 2017 settlement, and the involvement of high-profile figures like Alexander Acosta and Sarah Ferguson. The article highlights the legal battle between privacy for the accused and the public's right to know, framed by the 'Perversion of Justice' investigation.
This document is a page from The Virgin Islands Daily News dated February 22, 2019. The main article reports on a ruling by U.S. District Judge Kenneth Marra, stating that federal prosecutors, including Alexander Acosta, violated federal law by concealing a plea agreement with Jeffrey Epstein from his underage victims in 2008. A sidebar article details USVI Governor Albert Bryan Jr.'s trip to Washington D.C. to meet with Trump administration officials.
This article from The Virgin Islands Daily News (reprinted from the Miami Herald) details how federal prosecutors admitted in 2013 to bowing to pressure from Jeffrey Epstein's legal team, led by Kenneth Starr, regarding the non-prosecution agreement and victim notifications. It highlights the disparity between Epstein's lenient treatment—including work release and a private jail section—and the severity of his crimes involving dozens of underage girls. The document also references the 2008 sentencing hearing, the FBI's unfiled 2007 indictment, and the frustrations of local law enforcement officers like Detective Joseph Recarey.
This document is an email chain dated March 14, 2019, circulated among Jeffrey Epstein's legal team (including Darren Indyke, Martin Weinberg, Kathy Ruemmler, and Jack Goldberger). The email shares a Miami Herald article by Julie K. Brown detailing how the lead prosecutor in the Epstein case, A. Marie Villafaña, had been previously rebuked by a judge for concealing victim information in a prior sex crime case, and how Alexander Acosta defended her. The document includes a specific section marked as 'Privileged - Redacted'.
An email from Darren Indyke forwarding a Miami Herald article by Julie K. Brown. The article details how A. Marie Villafaña, a prosecutor involved in Jeffrey Epstein's plea deal, had previously been rebuked by Judge William J. Zloch for withholding information in a separate child sex case, an action that was defended by then-U.S. Attorney Alexander Acosta.
An email chain from March 14, 2019, in which Darren Indyke forwards a Miami Herald article to 'J' (jeevacation@gmail.com), who then forwards it to a legal team including Martin Weinberg, Kathy Ruemmler, and Jack Goldberger. The article, by Julie K. Brown, details how Alexander Acosta (then U.S. Attorney) was notified that A. Marie Villafaña, the lead prosecutor in the Epstein case, had been previously rebuked by a judge for concealing victim information in a separate 2007 case. The document highlights the legal team's monitoring of press coverage regarding the handling of Epstein's plea deal.
This document is an announcement of the 2019 Hillman Prize winners, likely included in House Oversight files (HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_021225) due to the inclusion of the Miami Herald's 'Perversion of Justice' series. This specific series by Julie K. Brown and Emily Michot is credited with exposing the Jeffrey Epstein scandal and the original non-prosecution agreement. The document highlights the impact of various investigative journalism pieces, including reforms in military housing and immigration policy.
This document is an announcement of the 2019 Hillman Prize winners, detailing awards given to journalists for investigative reporting. While Jeffrey Epstein is not named directly, the document is significant to the Epstein case because it lists Julie K. Brown and Emily Michot of the Miami Herald as winners for 'Perversion of Justice,' the investigative series that exposed Epstein's plea deal and reignited the case against him. The document also highlights other winners covering topics like MS-13, the Flint water crisis, and military housing hazards.
This document appears to be an excerpt from a news report (likely the Miami Herald given the authors) included in House Oversight Committee files. It details a December 2007 letter from Alexander Acosta to Kenneth Starr, in which Acosta complains that Epstein is in violation of a September plea agreement and criticizes the defense team's stalling tactics. The page features a collage of photos including Epstein, Maxwell, Prince Andrew, Dershowitz, and others, though only the text is analyzed here.
This document, likely an excerpt from a news article included in House Oversight records, details Jeffrey Epstein's connections to high-profile figures and his legal strategy during his 2006 prosecution. It describes his recruitment of Virginia Roberts at Mar-a-Lago, his 2002 trip to South Africa with Bill Clinton and celebrities, and his hiring of politically connected lawyers Kenneth Starr and Jay Lefkowitz to combat federal prosecutor Acosta.
This document is a page from a news report (likely the Miami Herald's investigative series) included in House Oversight records. It details Jeffrey Epstein's 2007 plea deal, noting that despite ample evidence of abusing dozens of underage girls starting in 2001, prosecutors granted him and his co-conspirators immunity from federal sex-trafficking charges. It highlights that the non-prosecution agreement was sealed to prevent victims from knowing the scope of the crimes.
This document contains the header and lead-in for a news article titled 'Perversion of Justice' by Julie K. Brown, published on November 28, 2018. It highlights the conflict between police who sought to imprison a Florida multimillionaire sex offender and prosecutors who arranged a lenient deal for him. The document bears a House Oversight Committee Bates stamp.
This is a legal affirmation filed by attorney John M. Browning on behalf of NYP Holdings, Inc. (New York Post) in the Appellate Division of the NY Supreme Court. The document supports a motion to unseal briefs in the case against Jeffrey Epstein. It introduces two news articles (one from the Miami Herald and one from the New York Post) as exhibits relevant to the motion.
This newspaper article from December 8, 2018, reports that over two dozen U.S. lawmakers are demanding an investigation into Labor Secretary Alexander Acosta for his role as a former federal prosecutor in brokering a lenient 2008 plea deal for multimillionaire sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. The call for a probe, spurred by a Miami Herald investigation, highlights how the deal granted Epstein immunity, hid the proceedings from his underage victims, and allowed him to serve only 13 months in jail.
Article regarding Epstein referenced as Exhibit A.
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