This document is a directory page titled 'Principal Residence' listing five key properties associated with Jeffrey Epstein. It provides the full addresses for properties in St. Thomas (under LSJE, LLC), New York City, New Mexico (Zorro Ranch), Palm Beach, and Paris. Contact numbers for all locations have been redacted.
A photograph of an interior room featuring a painted wall mural depicting clouds or mountains, a fireplace with a dark mantle, and a framed portrait of a bearded man hanging above it. The room contains a long bench with striped and patterned cushions along the wall and chairs upholstered in leopard print fabric around a table. The image is marked with the evidence tag EFTA00000943.
This document is a page from the trial transcript of United States v. Ghislaine Maxwell (Case 1:20-cr-00330-PAE). It features the direct examination of a witness, Mr. Parkinson (likely law enforcement), by defense attorney Mr. Everdell. They are reviewing a video (Government Exhibit 296) showing the initial police search of a residence (likely Epstein's Palm Beach home), describing the layout, and identifying the property manager, Janusz Banasiak, as he is being read a search warrant.
This document serves as a historical summary of legal proceedings regarding Jeffrey Epstein between 2008 and 2018. It details his controversial work release program via the 'Florida Science Foundation,' the eventual unsealing of his Non-Prosecution Agreement (NPA), and the subsequent civil litigation under the CVRA. It also covers Alexander Acosta's 2017 confirmation as Labor Secretary and the 2018 Miami Herald investigation exposing the lenient plea deal.
This document is a printout of a Miami Herald article from April 2019, filed as a court exhibit in Case 1:19-cv-03377. It details the post-Epstein lives of key figures including Sarah Kellen (now married to NASCAR driver Brian Vickers), Ghislaine Maxwell (who founded TerraMar), Alan Dershowitz, and Prince Andrew. It specifically notes Kellen's alleged role in scheduling sexual massages for underage girls, Maxwell's rebranding as an environmentalist, and a $24,000 loan from Epstein to Sarah Ferguson.
This document is a clipping of a news article regarding Jeffrey Sloman's defense of the non-prosecution agreement offered to Jeffrey Epstein. Sloman, formerly second-in-command to Alexander Acosta, claims in a Miami Herald opinion piece that the decision was made due to legal impediments and terrified victims, and argues that current criticism of Acosta is politically motivated. The document notes the Justice Department's opening of an investigation into misconduct following the 'Perversion of Justice' series.
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