USAO's West Palm Beach office

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Also known as:
West Palm Beach office Palm Beach Office

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EFTA00031937.pdf

A 2009 article from PalmBeachDailyNews.com details Jeffrey Epstein's release from Palm Beach County jail to serve one year of probation at his home without electronic monitoring. The article includes reactions from victims (Jane Doe No. 3 and No. 5) and their attorneys, who express outrage at the leniency of the sentence and fear of Epstein's wealth and influence. It also lists the specific conditions of his probation, including a curfew and restrictions on contact with minors.

News article / fax printout
2025-12-25

EFTA00025091.pdf

This document is a response to follow-up questions from an attorney proffer regarding an executive assistant (identified by context as 'LG' or Lesley Groff) who worked for Jeffrey Epstein from approximately 2002 to 2019. The text details her hiring process, the logistics of scheduling massages (which she claims stopped after the Florida plea), office locations, document shredding by an office helper in 2009, and her lack of knowledge regarding illegal activities or abuse. It also covers her travel to Epstein's properties, including visits to Little St. James and Paris, and her final resignation in July 2019 after feeling 'betrayed' by the indictment.

Legal correspondence / attorney proffer response
2025-12-25

DOJ-OGR-00023198.tif

This document analyzes the circumstances surrounding a breakfast meeting between Acosta and Epstein's defense counsel, Jay Lefkowitz, on October 12, 2007, and the Non-Prosecution Agreement (NPA) signed on September 24, 2007. OPR concludes that Acosta did not make significant concessions during the breakfast meeting, as the key provisions of the NPA, including Epstein's 18-month sentence and sexual offender registration, were established prior to the meeting and not materially altered thereafter. The document also references a Miami Herald article critical of Acosta's involvement.

Report excerpt
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00003266.jpg

This document details the plea negotiations in September 2007 between the USAO (represented by VillafaƱa, Acosta, and others) and Epstein's defense team. It outlines the drafting of a Non-Prosecution Agreement (NPA) proposing a 20-month jail sentence (reducible to 17 months with 'gain time') and notes a critical meeting on September 12 involving the State Attorney's Office to discuss state charges. The text also reveals internal USAO strategy, including preparing a revised indictment in case negotiations failed.

Legal report / doj-ogr report (office of professional responsibility)
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00004612.jpg

This document is a page from an OPR report regarding the investigation into the handling of the Jeffrey Epstein case. It details a technological error that resulted in a gap in U.S. Attorney Alexander Acosta's emails from May 2007 to April 2008 during a system migration, concluding there was no intentional concealment of evidence. The report also notes that OPR gathered records from the FBI's Palm Beach Office, the Criminal Division, CEOS, and the Office of the Deputy Attorney General to reconstruct the timeline and communications.

Court filing / government report (doj opr report extract)
2025-11-20

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017973.jpg

This document is a Miami Herald article filed as a court exhibit (Case 1:19-cv-03377) describing Jeffrey Epstein's 2008 work release conditions. It details how Epstein paid Palm Beach Sheriff's deputies to monitor him while he spent up to 12 hours a day at his office, where he met with male and female visitors behind closed doors without deputy supervision. The article notes that visitor logs from this time were kept in a safe but no longer exist, and highlights how deputies began referring to him as a 'client' rather than an 'inmate'.

News article (miami herald) / court exhibit / house oversight document
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017801.jpg

This document is a printout of a November 2018 Miami Herald article by Julie K. Brown, filed as an exhibit in a 2019 court case and marked with a House Oversight Committee stamp. The article details Jeffrey Epstein's 2008 sentencing, where despite facing a potential federal life sentence for abusing underage girls, he received a lenient 18-month state sentence due to a non-prosecution agreement signed by U.S. Attorney Alexander Acosta. It highlights the extraordinary privileges Epstein received during incarceration, including work release for 12 hours a day and a private jail wing.

News article / court exhibit (house oversight committee)
2025-11-19
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