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Aaron S. Edlin
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Susan Shirk
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This document is a 72-page Curriculum Vitae for Gail S. Goodman, Ph.D., a Distinguished Professor of Psychology at the University of California, Davis. It details her extensive career (1977-2022) as a researcher and expert in developmental psychology, specifically focusing on child memory, child maltreatment, and eyewitness testimony in legal contexts. The document lists her education, academic positions, millions of dollars in research grants, committee memberships, and a vast list of publications and presentations, establishing her credentials as a leading expert witness in cases involving child sexual abuse and testimony.
This document contains an email exchange between an Assistant United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York and Dr. Gail Goodman, a Distinguished Professor of Psychology. The prosecutor contacts Dr. Goodman on November 24, 2021, seeking to hire her as a consultant and potential expert witness for the upcoming trial of United States v. Ghislaine Maxwell. Dr. Goodman responds on November 25, 2021, attaching research articles related to long-term memory of child sexual abuse.
This document is a partial curriculum vitae or list of professional engagements spanning from 2004 to 2007, detailing various lectures, conferences, and addresses given at universities and organizations across the US, Europe, and Mexico. It includes specific dates for events, participating organizations, and locations, highlighting a professional's involvement in psychological and legal fields.
This document is a list of professional activities and speaking engagements from 1994 and 1995, likely from a CV. It details conferences, seminars, grand rounds, and workshops with their host organizations and locations across the US, Canada, Europe, and Asia. Key themes include psychology, law, trauma, memory, and sexual abuse.
This document is a list of academic and professional engagements, likely by a single individual, spanning from 1989 to 1993. It details various conferences, lectures, seminars, and organizational affiliations across numerous universities, legal associations, and psychological societies in the United States, Canada, Australia, and Europe. The entries include the year, event name, and associated institutions or locations.
This document is a list of academic institutions, legal associations, and other organizations, along with events, grouped by year from 1974 to 1980. It appears to be a chronological record of affiliations, seminars, and conferences, potentially related to a professional's career or an institution's activities. The document also includes page numbering and a document identifier 'DOJ-OGR-00015246'.
This document is page 33 of a Curriculum Vitae or bibliography for Dr. Elizabeth F. Loftus, listing her academic publications between 2018 and 2020. The publications focus heavily on false memory, eyewitness testimony, repressed memory, and the intersection of psychology and law, including a critical paper on Title IX investigations. The document contains a Department of Justice footer (DOJ-OGR-00015244) and a file identifier (LOFTUS-046), suggesting it was part of a legal production, likely related to her role as an expert witness.
This document is page 20 of 43 from a legal filing in case 1:20-cr-00330-PAE, filed on October 29, 2021. It is a bibliography or reference list for a work titled 'Grooming in Child Sexual Abuse'. The page lists numerous academic sources, including journal articles and books, published between 1977 and 2010, covering topics such as victimization, cyber-grooming, prevention strategies, and offender behavior.
This document is the first page of an academic paper titled 'Cooperating Without Looking' co-authored by Moshe Hoffman, Erez Yoeli, and Martin Nowak. It originates from the Program for Evolutionary Dynamics at Harvard University, a center known to have received significant funding from Jeffrey Epstein. The document bears the Bates stamp 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_026521', indicating it was part of evidence collected during a US House Oversight Committee investigation, likely regarding Epstein's financial ties to academia.
This document is page 198 of a House Oversight production (stamped HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020657) titled 'About the Participants.' It lists biographical details for eleven individuals, primarily academics and policy experts specializing in political science, Asian studies, and US-China relations. The list includes scholars from major universities (Columbia, Harvard, GWU) and policy institutes (Hoover Institution, National Endowment for Democracy).
This document appears to be a page of endnotes (citations 47-54) from a House Oversight Committee report, likely concerning foreign influence (specifically China) on U.S. corporations and politics. It details financial dependencies of companies like GM and Boeing on China, Steve Wynn's role in conveying Chinese government requests to President Trump regarding dissident Guo Wengui, and Chinese intelligence monitoring of the President's phone calls. It also references Hollywood's relationship with China, including Disney hiring Henry Kissinger to manage fallout from the movie *Kundun*.
This document page, seemingly from a House Oversight report, details foreign influence operations by the Chinese government within Western universities. It describes specific incidents of retaliation against UCSD, the monitoring of students via CSSAs, and harassment of students at the University of Maryland and Duke University for expressions of free speech or political dissent. It also notes a trend in Australia of students recording professors for political reporting.
This document, seemingly part of a House Oversight Committee report (Section 4), details the influence of the Chinese government on US university campuses through Chinese Students and Scholars Associations (CSSA). It outlines how CSSAs reportedly coordinate with Chinese diplomatic missions to gather intelligence, pressure students, and disrupt events involving sensitive topics like Tibet or Taiwan. The text highlights a specific 2017 incident at UC San Diego where the CSSA and the PRC consulate in Los Angeles coordinated opposition to the Dalai Lama's commencement speech.
This document is a page of supplementary references for a scientific paper titled 'Quantitative analysis of culture using millions of digitized books' by Michel et al. (likely the 2011 'Culturomics' paper). It lists technical citations related to OCR technology, data processing (MapReduce), and information quantification. The document bears a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' Bates stamp, indicating it was part of evidence collected during a congressional investigation, likely related to Jeffrey Epstein's connections to scientific research and funding.
This document is a biographical list of high-profile individuals from the technology, political, and academic sectors, possibly serving as a guest list for a conference or retreat (such as the Dialog Retreat mentioned in Auren Hoffman's bio). It includes the footer 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017584', indicating it is part of a House Oversight Committee investigation. Notably, the list includes a 'Jeff Epstein,' who is identified as the former CFO of Oracle, distinct from the financier Jeffrey Epstein typically associated with such investigations.
This document is a biographical profile of Richard Saul Wurman, the founder of TED (implied by context, though not explicitly named in text), featuring a black and white portrait and a summary of his career as an architect, author, and information theorist. It lists numerous prominent deceased figures he associated with, such as Richard Feynman and Jonas Salk. The document bears a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' Bates stamp, indicating it is part of a larger government investigation file.
This document is a biographical profile of scientist J. Craig Venter, marked with the Bates stamp HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017559, indicating it is part of a congressional investigation (likely related to Epstein, given the context of such document dumps, though Epstein is not mentioned in the text). The text outlines Venter's education, military service in Vietnam, and his founding of multiple organizations including the J. Craig Venter Institute, Synthetic Genomics Inc, and Celera Genomics. It highlights his achievements in sequencing the human genome and lists various scientific awards received up to 2008.
This document appears to be a page from a biographical booklet or conference program (Bates stamped HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017555), detailing the professional achievements of physicist Lisa Randall and botanist Peter Raven. It lists their academic affiliations (Harvard, Missouri Botanical Garden), awards, publications, and contributions to their respective fields. The text does not explicitly mention Jeffrey Epstein, though the document origination (House Oversight) suggests it is part of a larger collection of subpoenaed records likely related to scientific gatherings or foundations associated with him.
This document is a comprehensive biographical profile of architect Frank Gehry, likely attached to a larger government report (indicated by the House Oversight footer). It details his educational background, extensive list of awards (including the Pritzker Prize and National Medal of Arts), honorary degrees, teaching positions, and notable architectural projects worldwide. The text serves as a backgrounder on Gehry's professional achievements up to at least 2010.
This document appears to be a page from a manuscript (likely by Alan Dershowitz, given the style and context of House Oversight documents) dated April 2, 2012. It discusses the legal and ethical implications of the 'Irvine Ten' case, where students were prosecuted for disrupting a speech by Ambassador Michael Oren at the University of California. The author argues that prosecuting the students was necessary to protect First Amendment rights and the open marketplace of ideas, criticizing the ACLU's stance on the matter.
This document appears to be page 34 of a publication by 'Nautilus Education' included in a House Oversight evidence file (Bates stamp HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_015494). The text discusses calpainopathy (limb-girdle muscular dystrophy Type 2a), referencing specific patients (the Topic family, Wrubel) and researchers (Cornelius Boerkoel, Melissa Spencer). While part of a larger cache that may be Epstein-related, this specific page contains scientific medical content and does not explicitly mention Epstein or his associates.
An email thread from May 2019 between 'J' (Jeffrey Epstein) and Paul Krassner. Krassner shares a draft of a memoir piece titled 'Remembering Cavalier Magazine,' detailing his time as a columnist for the publication in the 1960s. Epstein replies by quoting a 1964 announcement regarding political speech at UC Berkeley and suggests Krassner write a new article about campus speech today.
This document is a biographical executive summary for 'KUE' (Knowledge Universe Education), likely part of a larger House Oversight report (Bates stamped HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_024582). It details the professional backgrounds of three key executives: Vice Chairman Ted Sanders, SVP Stephen Goldsmith, and SVP Nina Shokraii Rees, highlighting their extensive experience in education policy, government service (including roles in the Bush administrations), and academia. The document also briefly references Mr. Milken's (Michael Milken) education at the top.
This document appears to be page 122 of a manuscript or memoir (Chapter 6: Pentecostal Phase Transitions) retrieved during a House Oversight investigation. The text is written from the perspective of a 'secular Jewish psychiatrist' father describing his two sons' religious conversion from a mixed Jewish/Christian Science background to Evangelical Pentacostalism during the post-Vietnam era of the 1960s and 70s. The narrator expresses skepticism regarding his sons' newfound faith, referring to it internally as 'denial' while noting their rejection of his own 'vacuous mélange' of beliefs.
This document appears to be page 115 of a scientific manuscript or book regarding neuroscience and behavioral psychology. It discusses the concept of 'habituation' in learning, citing Eric Kandel's Nobel-winning work with sea snails (Aplysia californica) and Pavlov's work with dogs. It further details the effects of entheogenic agents (psychedelics) like LSD, mescaline, and DMT on neural habituation, referencing researchers from UC La Jolla and Yale. The page bears a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_013615' stamp, indicating it is part of a document production related to a congressional investigation, likely involving Epstein's connections to the scientific community.
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