This document is the Curriculum Vitae (CV) of Lisa M. Rocchio, Ph.D., a clinical psychologist specializing in trauma, forensic assessment, and ethics. It details her education, clinical experience, academic appointments at Brown University, and extensive list of publications and presentations on trauma psychology. The document also highlights her professional advocacy work, including meetings with Rhode Island Senators and Representatives regarding mental health reform.
This document is page 115 of a legal filing (Document 204) from United States v. Ghislaine Maxwell (Case 1:20-cr-00330-PAE), filed on April 16, 2021. It outlines legal arguments regarding the 'good faith exception' to the exclusionary rule, citing precedents like United States v. Leon and United States v. Moore. The text argues that suppression of evidence is not warranted because the Government acted in good faith by obtaining a grand jury subpoena and applying to the court to modify a civil protective order.
This document is page 7 of 239 (internally numbered 'vi') from a legal filing, Document 204 in case 1:20-cr-00330-PAE, filed on April 16, 2021. It is a table of cases, listing legal precedents with their citations and the page numbers where they are referenced in the main document. The footer includes a Department of Justice document identifier, DOJ-OGR-00002941.
This document is page 2 of the Curriculum Vitae for Lisa Marie Rocchio, Ph.D., filed as an exhibit in Case 1:20-cr-00330-PAE (United States v. Ghislaine Maxwell). It details her clinical, training, consultation, and research experience in psychology from 1990 to 2003, focusing on trauma, youth assessment, and expert witness work in Rhode Island and Connecticut. The document bears a DOJ discovery stamp (DOJ-OGR-00005655).
This document is page 329 from a book (likely 'How America Lost Its Secrets' by Edward Jay Epstein, based on the ISBN in the footer), containing a 'Selected Bibliography' of books related to espionage, the CIA, the KGB, and Edward Snowden. It bears a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' Bates stamp, indicating it was collected as evidence during a congressional investigation. The 'Epstein' mentioned in the text is author Edward Jay Epstein, not the financier Jeffrey Epstein.
This document appears to be a draft narrative or statement, likely by Ken Starr (former Baylor President and Epstein lawyer), defending his administration's handling of sexual violence at Baylor University. The text critiques the 'Pepper Hamilton' report narrative, claiming the administration prioritized safety, and details the creation of a Student Safety Concern Task Force in 2010-2011 modeled after lessons learned from a tragedy at Eastern Michigan University. The document bears a House Oversight Committee stamp.
This document is a Table of Contents for a book manuscript, dated April 2, 2012, with a House Oversight stamp. The text outlines an autobiography covering the author's life from Brooklyn to Yale, clerkships with Judge Bazelon and Justice Goldberg, and a legal career focused on the First Amendment, addressing topics such as the Pentagon Papers, Wikileaks, and pornography cases like 'Deep Throat' and 'I Am Curious Yellow'. Based on the specific clerkships and career trajectory described, the manuscript appears to be by Alan Dershowitz.
This document appears to be a draft of a personal anecdote or speech, dated April 2, 2012, stamped with a House Oversight production number. The narrator (biographical details strongly suggest Alan Dershowitz) recounts a story from their student days where they successfully defended themselves against a mugger using a frozen tongue given to them by their mother in Brooklyn. The text compares the incident to a fictional story where a wife kills her husband with a leg of lamb and then feeds the evidence to the police.
This document appears to be page 43 of a manuscript or memoir (likely by Alan Dershowitz, given the biographical details regarding Yale, Harvard, and his son Elon) submitted to the House Oversight Committee. The text recounts the author's time at Yale Law School, including a moot court victory against a Taft family member, his role as the first Orthodox Jewish Editor-in-Chief of the Law Journal, and his graduation featuring JFK. It also details his academic development, mentorship under various professors like Joseph Goldstein, and early writings on the 5th Amendment.
This document appears to be page 13 of a manuscript or memoir draft (likely by Alan Dershowitz, given the birth date of Sept 1, 1938) included in House Oversight Committee records. The text details the author's birth in Brooklyn, his family's Jewish immigrant roots from Poland, and his upbringing in the Williamsburg and Boro Park neighborhoods. It provides biographical details about his parents, including his mother's brief attendance at City College during the Great Depression and his father's Yeshiva education.
This document is a single page (page 262) from a bibliography or reference section of a larger academic work, stamped with a House Oversight Committee identifier. It lists scientific publications ranging from 1902 to 1998, focusing on chaos theory, fractals, nonlinear dynamics, and neuroscience. The presence of this document in the House Oversight records suggests it may be related to scientific research funded by or submitted to Jeffrey Epstein or his foundations.
This document appears to be page 108 of an academic book or paper included in a House Oversight Committee file dump (Bates number HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_021354). The text discusses theological history, specifically focusing on Jonathan Edwards, anthropomorphism in religion, and the conflict between science and religion. It includes a list of references citing various academic works published between 1874 and 2008. There is no direct mention of Jeffrey Epstein or his associates on this specific page.
This document is page 256, containing the endnotes for "Chapter Sixteen: The Question of When." It lists eleven sources, including books like "Spy Wars," articles from the New York Times and Reuters, a PBS program, and interviews conducted by the author with individuals such as Victor Cherkashin, Tyler Drumheller, and anonymous officials from the PFIAB and NSA. The citations cover topics related to espionage, including the NSA, KGB, Edward Snowden, and Robert Hanssen.
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