| Date | Event Type | Description | Location | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1978-03-01 | N/A | UK petitions UNCHR for special rapporteur in Cambodia; blocked by Syria, USSR, Yugoslavia. | UN | View |
This document is a court transcript from August 10, 2022, detailing the cross-examination of a witness named Jane. The questioning focuses on Jane hiring a 'tough litigator' around 2015 to counter press allegations that she was a 'Yugoslavian sex slave'. The examination probes into payments made to this lawyer, specifically questioning a 'quarter of a million dollars' amount which Jane denies in this testimony, and confirms she spoke with the government on September 2, 2021.
This Palm Beach Police Department incident report details an interview conducted on October 11, 2005, with a victim who describes her recruitment by a woman named Sara and her subsequent sexual abuse by Jeffrey Epstein. The victim describes being paid $200 for a massage that ended in sexual acts, visiting the house hundreds of times, and attending dinners and parties. Notably, the report includes an allegation that Epstein bragged about purchasing his assistant, Nada Marcinkova, from her family in Yugoslavia to serve as his 'sex slave,' and details a sexual encounter involving the victim, Epstein, and Marcinkova.
This is a Palm Beach Police Department incident report detailing an interview conducted on October 11, 2005, with a redacted witness/victim regarding her interactions with Jeffrey Epstein. The report describes her initial recruitment by a woman named Sara, her first massage encounter with Epstein which escalated to sexual acts, and subsequent visits where she witnessed Epstein's assistant, Nada Marcinkova, whom Epstein claimed to have purchased as a sex slave.
This Palm Beach Police Department incident report, dated April 20, 2006, documents a victim's sworn statement from October 11, 2005. The victim details her initial encounter with Epstein, a massage for which she was paid $200 that ended with him masturbating, and claims this escalated over 'hundreds' of subsequent visits. These later encounters allegedly involved his assistant, Nada Marcinkova, whom Epstein reportedly bragged was his 'Yugoslavian sex slave'.
This document, labeled as House Oversight evidence, appears to be a compilation of photo captions or news snippets detailing the social connections and legal troubles of Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell. It highlights Maxwell's presence at high-profile events in New York between 2009 and 2013, including the Clinton Global Initiatives Conference and a dinner with Rupert Murdoch, while also recounting allegations from victims like Haley Robson regarding recruitment for massages and sexual servitude. The text references Epstein's 2008 conviction and ongoing legal efforts to void his non-prosecution agreement.
This document is page 9 of a Freedom House report (likely published in or after 2016) discussing the history of democratization, civil society, and the internet following the Cold War. It analyzes political changes in Eastern Europe, China, Serbia, and Ukraine, citing various articles and reports in the footnotes. The document bears a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' Bates stamp, indicating it was part of a document production for a US House Oversight Committee investigation.
This document appears to be page 16 of a geopolitical essay or briefing. The text contrasts the 'velvet' revolutions of 1989-90 in Central Europe (Poland, Czech Republic, Hungary) with the more difficult political landscapes of the Arab world and China. It argues against the idealistic assumption that modern revolutions will easily result in Western-style democracies, citing lack of cultural ties to the West and economic incentives as key differences.
This document is a Miami Herald article detailing how Jeffrey Epstein manipulated the legal system, even from jail, to minimize his criminal charges and avoid public scrutiny. It highlights the cozy relationship between federal prosecutors and Epstein's legal team, which resulted in a plea deal that kept victims uninformed and allowed Epstein to argue that his victims were prostitutes, not victims of abuse. The article also identifies four accomplices who received immunity.
This document, marked as a House Oversight record, draws parallels between private military contractor Erik Prince (Blackwater) and Osama Bin Laden as intelligence assets. It details the controversial legal defense of Jeffrey Epstein by Ken Starr and others, specifically highlighting the sweeping immunity granted by the Southern District of Florida non-prosecution agreement. The text explicitly suggests Epstein's light sentence is best explained by the use of children for 'government-sponsored sexual blackmail.'
This document appears to be a page from a manuscript or memoir written by Alan Dershowitz, bearing a House Oversight Bates stamp. It details Dershowitz's admiration for and relationship with Elie Wiesel, highlighting Wiesel's universal humanitarian work and a specific compliment Wiesel paid Dershowitz in 1982. The text also recounts a dinner party at the Wiesel home in New York attended by French President François Mitterrand.
This document, bearing a House Oversight Bates stamp, appears to be a page from a manuscript or book analyzing the United Nations' historical response to the Cambodian genocide versus its treatment of Israel. The text criticizes the 'hard left' (specifically citing Noam Chomsky, Gareth Porter, and George Hilderbrand) for downplaying Khmer Rouge atrocities as 'Western propaganda' while simultaneously noting the UN's swift condemnation of Zionism via Resolution 3379. The document highlights the diplomatic actions of Daniel Patrick Moynihan and Abba Eban in opposing the anti-Zionist resolution.
This document appears to be a page from a memoir (likely by Alan Dershowitz) stamped as evidence for House Oversight. It details the author's interactions with high-profile political figures, including a scheduled meeting with Yitzhak Rabin shortly before his assassination, a refusal to represent Rabin's assassin Yigal Amir, and discussions with Bill and Hillary Clinton regarding the potential representation of Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic. The text also mentions inquiries for legal representation received during the 2011 Arab Spring from representatives of Hosni Mubarak and Muammar Gaddafi.
This document appears to be page 11 of a geopolitical analysis or policy paper, marked with a House Oversight Bates stamp. The text discusses the fragility of borders in the Middle East, specifically referencing the potential fragmentation of states like Yemen and Iraq following the precedent of South Sudan's secession. The author argues that borders created by European colonial powers are not sacred and that self-determination, including breaking away to form new countries, should be an acceptable option if it reflects the will of the people.
These pages appear to be from a manuscript (likely by Virginia Giuffre) recounting a period in her youth involving the FBI and an abuser named Ron. The text details Ron's flight to Yugoslavia, his extradition to Miami, and his eventual death in prison. It also describes the narrator's fear of returning to juvenile detention and an emotional scene where FBI agents disclose the nature of her abuse (statutory rape/sex slavery) to her father.
This document details aspects of Jeffrey Epstein's legal troubles and defense strategies between 2006 and 2008. It covers charges of aggravated assault, a non-prosecution agreement related to prostitution charges, attempts by Epstein's legal team to discredit prosecutors, and his eventual guilty plea and jail sentence. It also includes an account of Ms. Maxwell contacting an individual about Epstein's investigation and the individual's subsequent refusal to cooperate.
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