Lourie

Person
Mentions
286
Relationships
59
Events
107
Documents
141
Also known as:
Matthew Lourie

Relationship Network

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Event Timeline

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59 total relationships
Connected Entity Relationship Type
Strength (mentions)
Documents Actions
person Villafaña
Business associate
19 Very Strong
21
View
person Villafaña
Professional
10 Very Strong
15
View
person Acosta
Professional
10 Very Strong
8
View
person Acosta
Business associate
9 Strong
5
View
person Menchel
Professional
9 Strong
5
View
person Sloman
Business associate
7
3
View
person Oosterbaan
Professional
7
2
View
person Villafaña
Subordinate supervisor
6
2
View
person Menchel
Business associate
6
2
View
person Acosta
Superior subordinate
5
1
View
person Andrew Oosterbaan
Friend
5
1
View
person Villafaña
Professional conflict
5
1
View
person Lefkowitz
Professional
5
1
View
person Sanchez
Legal representative
5
1
View
person Villafaña
Professional hierarchical
5
1
View
person Oosterbaan
Professional consultative
5
1
View
person Lefkowitz
Legal representative
5
1
View
person Alice Fisher
Professional subordinate
5
1
View
person Sloman
Professional
5
1
View
person Sanchez
Professional
5
1
View
person Villafaña
Supervisor subordinate
5
1
View
person Jay Lefkowitz
Adversarial professional
5
1
View
person Sanchez
Professional adversarial
5
1
View
person Alice Fisher
Professional
5
1
View
person Lilly Ann Sanchez
Professional
5
1
View
Date Event Type Description Location Actions
2007-07-31 Meeting Sloman, Menchel, Lourie, Villafaña, and FBI agents meet with Epstein’s counsel to propose two-yea... N/A View
2007-07-31 Meeting The USAO presented its plea proposal to Epstein's defense team. The defense countered, arguing ag... N/A View
2007-07-31 N/A USAO presents NPA term sheet Unknown View
2007-07-18 Communication/endorsement CEOS Chief Oosterbaan emailed Sloman, Menchel, and Lourie, endorsing Villafaña’s legal analysis a... N/A View
2007-07-03 Communication Villafaña emailed colleagues about her intent to initiate plea discussions with Sanchez. N/A View
2007-06-26 Meeting A short post-meeting discussion where Lourie expressed concern about the purpose of travel issue ... N/A View
2007-06-26 Meeting A meeting where the defense presented their legal arguments to the prosecution. It was viewed by ... N/A View
2007-06-26 N/A Meeting: Defense presents legal issues, investigation improprieties, and federal jurisdiction issues Unknown View
2007-06-26 Meeting Sloman, Menchel, Lourie, Villafaña, and FBI meet with Epstein’s counsel. N/A View
2007-06-26 Meeting A meeting between USAO personnel and Epstein's defense team, where the defense presented their ar... Miami USAO View
2007-05-23 Meeting Menchel met with Lourie and Villafaña in West Palm Beach to discuss whether the USAO should agree... West Palm Beach View
2007-05-23 N/A Travel and meeting West Palm Beach View
2007-05-22 Communication Defense counsel Lefcourt emailed Lourie to confirm a meeting opportunity for Epstein's attorneys ... N/A View
2007-05-14 N/A Villafaña requests to file charges due to Epstein's travel; request denied by Menchel. Internal DOJ correspondence View
2007-05-11 N/A Lourie recommends charging strategy via email. Internal DOJ correspondence View
2007-05-10 Communication Lourie sent Villafaña's prosecution memorandum to CEOS Chief Andrew Oosterbaan for review. N/A View
2007-05-10 Meeting request Epstein's defense counsel sought a meeting with senior USAO managers, including Acosta. N/A View
2007-05-09 N/A Meeting/interaction between Lourie and FBI squad supervisor regarding delays in charging Epstein. Unknown View
2007-02-20 N/A Follow-up meeting where defense counsel provided recordings. Unknown View
2007-02-20 N/A Defense presents witness issues Unknown View
2007-02-20 N/A Meeting: Defense presents witness issues Unknown View
2007-02-01 Meeting A meeting was scheduled for Epstein's defense team (Sanchez, Lefcourt) to meet with the USAO (Lou... N/A View
2007-02-01 N/A Meeting: Defense presents investigation improprieties and federal jurisdiction issues Unknown View
2007-02-01 N/A Defense Counsel Meet with Lourie and Villafaña USAO Office (implied) View
2007-01-25 Deadline Deadline set by Lourie for Sanchez to provide documents and materials to the USAO. N/A View

DOJ-OGR-00003251.jpg

This document details conflicting accounts surrounding a July 26, 2007 meeting concerning a plea deal for Jeffrey Epstein. While Menchel and Acosta provided vague recollections to the OPR, Villafaña claimed she was left “shocked and stunned” by the abrupt decision to offer a two-year sentence, which she described as “random” and inconsistent with sentencing guidelines. The document establishes that Acosta ultimately made the decision to offer the two-year term of imprisonment.

Legal document
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00003250.jpg

This document details the internal decision-making process of the USAO in July 2007 regarding the Epstein case, specifically Alexander Acosta's decision to pursue a Non-Prosecution Agreement (NPA) with a two-year prison term. It highlights a pivotal meeting on July 26, 2007, where supervisor Matthew Menchel ordered prosecutors and FBI agents to halt federal investigative steps because Acosta had decided to offer a 'two-year state deal' instead of federal charges. The text notes that prosecutors were actively preparing a revised indictment and seeking to investigate Epstein's assistants just days before this directive was issued.

Government report (doj opr report) filed as court exhibit
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00003248.jpg

This document details prosecutor Villafaña's efforts during the federal investigation into Jeffrey Epstein to obtain computer equipment removed from his Palm Beach residence. Believing the equipment contained crucial evidence like surveillance video, Villafaña made formal requests to Epstein's defense counsel, consulted with other Department of Justice sections, and communicated with defense representatives who delayed and ultimately failed to comply with the request.

Legal document
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00003239.jpg

This document details an Office of Professional Responsibility (OPR) investigation into the handling of the Jeffrey Epstein case, focusing on the decision by prosecutor Acosta to pursue a state-based resolution. It reveals conflicting recollections among prosecutors, including Villafaña, Menchel, and Sloman, regarding communications with defense counsel, internal strategy discussions, and the extent of their involvement. Key issues include a rejected plea deal and Acosta's rationale for avoiding a federal trial, citing concerns about legal issues and victim testimony.

Legal document
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00003233.jpg

This legal document from April 2021 details events from May 2007 concerning the federal prosecution of Jeffrey Epstein, revealing significant internal disagreement within the U.S. Attorney's Office. Prosecutor Villafaña strongly objected to holding further meetings with Epstein's defense team, led by counsel Lefcourt, fearing it would compromise their strategy, and documented her dissent in a draft email to her supervisors, Matt Menchel and Jeff Sloman. The document highlights the strategic conflicts among prosecutors as they considered how to proceed with the high-profile case.

Legal document
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00003232.jpg

This legal document details internal conflicts within the U.S. Attorney's Office regarding the prosecution of a case against Epstein. Prosecutor Villafaña was perceived by her managers, including Menchel, Sloman, and Acosta, as rushing to indict, creating tension and disagreement over the case's timeline and direction. The document highlights differing perspectives on the urgency of the case and the decision-making process, as investigated by the Office of Professional Responsibility (OPR).

Legal document
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00003228.jpg

This document contains an excerpt from a DOJ OPR report detailing internal communications regarding the initial federal investigation into Jeffrey Epstein. It highlights emails from prosecutor Lourie to Menchel discussing a 50-page prosecution memo, the strategy to use only 'clean victims' (those without impeachment baggage), and the assertion that the State Attorney's Office intentionally sabotaged their own grand jury case. The document also covers OPR interviews where Menchel recalls this as his introduction to the case, and then-US Attorney Alexander Acosta admits he likely did not read the prosecution memo, relying instead on his senior staff.

Department of justice opr (office of professional responsibility) report
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00003227.jpg

This document details the internal deliberations within the USAO regarding the prosecution of Jeffrey Epstein in 2007. AUSA Villafaña submitted a comprehensive 82-page prosecution memorandum on May 1, 2007, recommending a 60-count indictment for sex trafficking. Supervisor Lourie acknowledged the thoroughness of the work and supported prosecution, but suggested a strategic shift to focus on victims with the highest credibility, while noting that final approval required Miami 'front office' involvement due to the case's profile.

Doj office of professional responsibility (opr) report
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00003225.jpg

This legal document details communications in late 2006 and early 2007 between Jeffrey Epstein's defense attorneys, Lilly Ann Sanchez and Gerald Lefcourt, and prosecutors at the U.S. Attorney's Office. The defense sought a meeting to "make a pitch," leading to an internal disagreement between prosecutors Villafaña, who opposed the meeting without first receiving documents, and Lourie, who granted the meeting believing it was strategically valuable to hear the defense's theories. Ultimately, a meeting was scheduled for February 1, 2007, despite Villafaña's objections and her belief that the defense would not provide the requested evidence and would only use the meeting to discredit victims.

Legal document
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00003223.jpg

This document is a page from a DOJ OPR report detailing the initial federal handling of the Jeffrey Epstein case in July-August 2006. It highlights the distrust federal prosecutors (Acosta, Sloman) held toward the Palm Beach State Attorney's Office, fearing leaks to Epstein. It also details the unusual reporting structure where 'Miami' senior management took direct authority, bypassing local supervisors, and notes the FBI's collection of flight manifests and victim testimony despite intimidation tactics by the defense.

Government report (doj office of professional responsibility - opr)
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00003208.jpg

This document details the professional background of AUSA Ann Marie C. Villafaña, focusing on her role as the lead prosecutor in the Jeffrey Epstein investigation starting in 2006. It clarifies that while Alexander Acosta made the decision to use a Non-Prosecution Agreement (NPA), Villafaña was the primary negotiator with Epstein's counsel and drafted the agreement. The text also outlines the timeline of the investigation, the subsequent CVRA litigation, and the eventual finding of government misconduct in 2019.

Court filing / doj opr report excerpt
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00002973.jpg

This legal document details communications and events following the signing of Jeffrey Epstein's Non-Prosecution Agreement (NPA). It reveals internal dissent within the Department of Justice, citing an OPR Report where official Oosterbaan described the NPA as overly advantageous to Epstein. The document also notes that Assistant Attorney General Fisher denied any role in reviewing or approving the agreement.

Legal document
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00004605.jpg

This document is an excerpt from a DOJ OPR report analyzing the conduct of federal prosecutors (Villafaña, Acosta, Sloman, Menchel, Lourie) regarding the Jeffrey Epstein Non-Prosecution Agreement (NPA). The report concludes that while there was no evidence prosecutors intentionally hid the NPA to protect Epstein, they failed to consult victims, leaving victims like Wild feeling misled and mistreated. The text details how Villafaña wished to consult victims but was constrained by management and concerns over creating impeachment evidence, a decision OPR criticizes as lacking consideration for the victims' rights and the fairness of the process.

Doj office of professional responsibility (opr) report / court filing
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00004604.jpg

This document is a page from an Office of Professional Responsibility (OPR) report criticizing the government's handling of victims in the Epstein case. It concludes that prosecutors, including Acosta and Sloman, failed to treat victims with forthrightness and sensitivity, particularly by not consulting them before the Non-Prosecution Agreement (NPA) was signed and by providing confusing information afterwards. The case of one victim, 'Wild,' is used as a specific example of these failures in communication by government representatives like Villafaña and the FBI.

Legal document
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00023194.jpg

This document is a page from a DOJ OPR report detailing a timeline of meetings between the USAO (including Alexander Acosta) and Jeffrey Epstein's defense team (including Dershowitz, Starr, and Lefkowitz). It covers the period from February 2007 to January 2008, categorizing meetings as 'Pre-NPA' and 'Post-NPA'. The table logs specific participants and topics, including the presentation of the NPA term sheet, discussions of investigation improprieties, and the negotiation of state plea provisions.

Doj opr report (office of professional responsibility) / investigation record
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00023132.jpg

This page from a DOJ OPR report details the delays in Jeffrey Epstein's guilty plea following the signing of the Non-Prosecution Agreement (NPA). It describes legal maneuvering by Epstein's defense team, including Kenneth Starr calling senior DOJ official Alice Fisher, and disagreements between the USAO and defense regarding the timeline for the plea entry, which was eventually set for January 4, 2008. The document also highlights internal communications regarding Epstein's failure to use 'best efforts' to comply with the NPA timeline.

Department of justice opr report (investigation report)
2025-11-20
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As Sender
55
As Recipient
36
Total
91

Case recollection

From: Lourie
To: OPR

Stated everyone had concerns about long-term viability of prosecution.

Interview
N/A

Defense preference for state-only agreement

From: Lourie
To: Acosta

Lourie emailed Acosta to inform him that Epstein's defense wanted to avoid the sexual offender registration requirement.

Email
N/A

Non-prosecution provision for co-conspirators

From: Lourie
To: ["OPR"]

Lourie told OPR the provision was 'unusual' and posited it might have been a message to victims who were also recruiters that they would not be charged.

Interview/statement
N/A

NPA Language

From: Villafaña
To: Lourie

Alerted Lourie about 'promises not to prosecute other people' clause; later added defense persistence on immigration waiver.

Email
N/A

Response to Immigration Waiver

From: Lourie
To: Villafaña

'No way. We don't put that sort of thing in a plea agreement.'

Email
N/A

Re: Draft NPA with non-prosecution provision

From: Lourie
To: ["Villafaña"]

Lourie sent a reply email to Villafaña, though the content mentioned here relates to another issue in the draft.

Email
N/A

Initial prosecution memorandum

From: Lourie
To: Menchel

Lourie made Menchel aware of Epstein's prominence when forwarding the memorandum.

Internal communication/memo
N/A

No Subject

From: Villafaña
To: Lourie

Asking Lourie to call her.

Email
N/A

No Subject

From: Lourie
To: manager

Reporting agreement with Lefkowitz on 'two federal obstruction charges (24 month cap) with nonbinding recommendation for 18 months', and Epstein pleading to state offenses including house arrest/community confinement.

Email
N/A

No Subject

From: West Palm Beach manager
To: Lourie

Suggesting Lourie 'talk to Epstein and close the deal'.

Email
N/A

No Subject

From: Villafaña
To: Lourie

Replied to Lourie, indicating she would pass his response along to defense counsel and asked 'Any other thoughts?'.

Email
N/A

Transmittal of Prosecution Memorandum

From: Lourie
To: Menchel

Discussing Marie Villafaña's 50-page memo, Epstein's wealth and defense team, the state's mishandling of the grand jury, and strategy for 'clean victims'.

Message/email
N/A

Regarding Epstein

From: Lourie
To: Kenneth Starr

Lourie, Fisher's deputy, returned Kenneth Starr's call at Fisher's request.

Phone call
2007-11-16

N/A

From: Lefkowitz
To: Lourie

Expressed concern about leaks to the media regarding Chief Reiter notification.

Email
2007-10-03

Concern about media leaks regarding Epstein

From: Lefkowitz
To: Lourie

Expressed concern about notification given to Chief Reiter and leaks unduly prejudicing Jeffrey Epstein in the media. Stated, "I am very concerned about leaks unduly prejudicing Jeffrey [Epstein] in the media." and "I have enjoyed working with you on".

Email
2007-10-03

NPA final draft

From: Lourie
To: ["Lefkowitz"]

Lourie had a phone conversation with Lefkowitz before sending additional comments on the final draft to Acosta and Villafaña.

Phone call
2007-09-24

Discussion on NPA draft

From: Lourie
To: Lefkowitz

Lourie had a phone conversation with Lefkowitz and sent additional comments on the final draft of the NPA to Acosta and Villafaña.

Phone call
2007-09-24

Objection to registration

From: Lily Ann Sanchez
To: Lourie

Lengthy email outlining arguments against sex offender registration; claimed misunderstanding at Sept 12 meeting

Email
2007-09-22

Florida public official case

From: Lily Ann Sanchez
To: Lourie

Cited a case where a Florida official got probation for child sex abuse

Email
2007-09-22

Lefcourt's number

From: Lily Ann Sanchez
To: Lourie

Sent Lefcourt's phone number

Email
2007-09-22

Reconsideration request

From: Lily Ann Sanchez
To: Lourie

Called Lourie 'fair', argued registration precludes federal camp, called registration a 'life sentence'

Email
2007-09-22

Internal discussion

From: Lourie
To: Alexander Acosta

Discussion following Sanchez emails

Call
2007-09-22

Request for call

From: Jay Lefkowitz
To: Lourie

Asked Lourie to phone him

Email
2007-09-22

Reaching out to Acosta

From: Lourie
To: Acosta

Lourie reached out to Acosta for a phone conversation after receiving emails from Sanchez.

Phone call
2007-09-22

Details from press report, request to call Menchel

From: Sanchez
To: Lourie

Sanchez provided details from a press report about a Florida public official who pled guilty to child sex abuse charges and was sentenced to probation. She noted she spoke to Matt Menchel and asked Lourie to call her.

Email
2007-09-22

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