| Date | Event Type | Description | Location | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2018-09-23 | N/A | In the N.F.L., the Detroit Lions upset the New England Patriots in Week 3. | Not specified | View |
This Wall Street Journal newsletter from January 26, 2021, highlights the resignation of Apollo Global Management CEO Leon Black following an independent probe into his ties with Jeffrey Epstein. The report revealed Black paid Epstein $148 million for advice, though it stated Black was not involved in Epstein's criminal activities. The newsletter also covers general news including Janet Yellen's confirmation, Dominion Voting Systems suing Rudy Giuliani, and COVID-19 updates.
This page from a law review article discusses the historical evolution of public versus private prosecution in the United States compared to England. It notes that while private prosecution has largely vanished in the U.S. in favor of public prosecutors, some states like Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and New Hampshire retain vestiges of it. The footnotes provide legal citations regarding victims' rights statutes and case law.
This document appears to be page 11 of a manuscript or autobiographical statement by Alan Dershowitz (inferred by context), dated April 2, 2012, and bearing a House Oversight Committee Bates stamp. The text lists numerous high-profile individuals the author has advised, including Presidents and celebrities, as well as prominent figures he has debated. It details his involvement in legal cases, his media advocacy for Israel, and mentions that in 2010 he declined an offer from the Israeli Prime Minister to serve as Israel's Ambassador to the UN.
This document appears to be a single page from a larger production (Bates stamped HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_025316) containing snippets of sports news. It features a broken image link at the top, followed by a New York Times excerpt by Rory Smith regarding Alex Morgan and Carli Lloyd in Lyon, France (referencing the 2019 Women's World Cup), and a headline regarding the 'collapse of the Warriors' (NBA). While labeled as part of an investigation, the visible content is strictly sports-related news.
This document is a printout of a usatoday.com webpage containing sports news headlines from early July 2019. It features a snippet about a 15-year-old American tennis player (Coco Gauff) defeating Polona Hercog and a headline about Alex Morgan and Alyssa Naeher leading the U.S. women's soccer team to a World Cup semi-final victory over England. The document bears the stamp HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_029875, indicating it is part of a document production for a congressional investigation, likely included as incidental browsing history or background material from the time period immediately surrounding Jeffrey Epstein's arrest (July 6, 2019).
A document bearing the stamp 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_029335' detailing a partial client list for Rafanelli Events. The list includes high-profile entities such as the Democratic National Committee, Harvard University, J.P. Morgan Chase, the U.S. State Department, and various luxury brands like Louis Vuitton and Chanel. The document lists office locations in Boston, New York, Washington DC, and Palm Beach.
This document is an email sent by Jeffrey E. (from jeevacation@gmail.com) to Melanie Spinella on November 9, 2017. The email contains no text in the body, only a link to a Guardian article about the Paradise Papers, which mentions Donald Trump and Robert Kraft. The email includes a standard confidentiality notice and is marked with a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' Bates stamp.
This document is a technical data log, likely from the Apple News application, showing a series of New York Times headlines and article links from September 23, 2018. The document, marked 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028389', contains no mention of Jeffrey Epstein, his associates, or any related activities; its content consists of general news summaries on geopolitics and sports.
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