| Connected Entity | Relationship Type |
Strength
(mentions)
|
Documents | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
person
Bradley Edwards
|
Legal representative |
5
|
1 | |
|
person
Bradley Edwards
|
Client |
5
|
1 |
| Date | Event Type | Description | Location | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| N/A | N/A | Filing of a legal motion accusing Prince Andrew and Alan Dershowitz. | West Palm Beach court | View |
| N/A | N/A | Brad [Edwards] files a motion accusing Alan Dershowitz of participating in abuse. | Court (Legal filing) | View |
| 2002-05-25 | N/A | Arrival in Brunei | Brunei | View |
This document is the final page of a letter written by Alan Dershowitz. He addresses an unnamed recipient regarding specific allegations, offering to investigate the source of claims if they do not originate from 'two women mentioned above.' The letter is copied to Barry Krischer, Lanna Belohlavek, and Daliah Weiss, and appears to be part of a larger DOJ public records release dated July 26, 2017.
This document is a scan of pages 240-241 from a book (likely James Patterson's 'Filthy Rich') produced as evidence for House Oversight. Chapter 63, set in September 2014, discusses the stalling FBI investigation into Epstein and recounts a 2008 legal motion filed by Bradley Edwards accusing Prince Andrew and Alan Dershowitz of participating in Epstein's illegal activities, which Dershowitz denied.
This document is a scan of pages 240 and the subsequent page from a book by James Patterson, stamped with a House Oversight Bates number. The text contrasts the massive media coverage of Prince Andrew's scandals (specifically regarding a 'gun smuggler') against the backdrop of the 2011 Japan earthquake. The second page begins a section on Alan Dershowitz, detailing a legal motion filed in early 2008 by a lawyer named Brad (likely Brad Edwards) on behalf of two unnamed women, accusing Dershowitz of participating in Epstein's trafficking activities.
This document, likely a page from a news report contained within House Oversight files, details the aftermath of Jeffrey Epstein's initial plea deal. It discusses his properties, philanthropic efforts (Harvard, AI), and allegations that he used assistants to recruit underage girls for sex. The text highlights the legal battle over the Crime Victims' Rights Act, noting that victims were kept in the dark about plea negotiations, and features defense attorney Roy Black arguing that the non-prosecution agreement was not a 'sweetheart deal.'
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