This document is a printout of a Miami Herald article from April 2019, filed as an exhibit in a House Oversight committee record. It details the legal battle between the Miami Herald and Ghislaine Maxwell regarding sealed court documents, mentions Epstein's cooperation with the FBI ('valuable consideration'), and describes his lifestyle and sex offender registration status across different states. It includes quotes from Maxwell's lawyer attacking Virginia Roberts' credibility and a former prosecutor questioning Epstein's lenient treatment.
This document is a printout of a Miami Herald article dated April 3, 2019, filed as a court exhibit in Case 1:19-cv-03377. It discusses legal motions to unseal documents related to Ghislaine Maxwell and Jeffrey Epstein, noting Epstein's 'valuable consideration' given to the FBI in 2013. It also details Epstein's residency on Little St. James, his sex offender registration status in different jurisdictions, and includes a photo of a woman (likely Virginia Roberts Giuffre, though not explicitly captioned in the text).
This document, stamped by the House Oversight Committee, details the criticism directed at former U.S. Attorney Alexander Acosta and prosecutor Marie Villafaña regarding the Jeffrey Epstein plea deal. It highlights judicial orders from Judges Zloch and Marra admonishing the prosecutors for withholding information from both the court and the victims, violating the Crime Victims' Rights Act. The text notes that at the time of writing, Acosta (then Secretary of Labor) was facing scrutiny and a DOJ probe into professional misconduct.
This document is a news article excerpt, marked as House Oversight Committee evidence, detailing the scrutiny surrounding Alexander Acosta and A. Marie Villafaña regarding the non-prosecution agreement they negotiated for Jeffrey Epstein. It highlights a federal judge's ruling that the deal violated the Crime Victims' Rights Act by intentionally withholding information from victims. The text also notes a DOJ probe launched in January into potential professional misconduct and mentions that the White House was reviewing Acosta's involvement.
This document appears to be a news article included in House Oversight Committee files (HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_021732). It details the scrutiny facing then-Labor Secretary Alexander Acosta and prosecutor A. Marie Villafaña regarding the non-prosecution agreement (plea deal) given to Jeffrey Epstein. The text highlights a federal judge's ruling that the prosecutors violated the Crime Victims' Rights Act by concealing the deal from victims, and mentions a DOJ probe into potential professional misconduct.
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.
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