This document is a page from a court transcript where an attorney argues that their client, Mr. Epstein, is not a flight risk. The attorney cites past actions as evidence, including not fleeing before his Non-Prosecution Agreement (NPA), hiring lawyers, and serving time in county jail, from which he was released in 2010. The document also mentions a past legal dispute in New York regarding Mr. Epstein's classification.
This legal document details the contentious communications in late November and early December 2007 between federal prosecutors (Acosta, Sloman, VillafaƱa) and Jeffrey Epstein's defense team (Lefkowitz, Starr). The core conflict revolved around the timing, content, and legal necessity of notifying victims about Epstein's upcoming state plea hearing, with the defense arguing for delay and review, and the prosecution asserting its obligations and threatening to void the plea agreement. The dispute involved a series of letters and instructions, highlighting the friction in executing the terms of the Non-Prosecution Agreement (NPA).
This document is a page from an Office of Professional Responsibility (OPR) report analyzing claims made by Lefkowitz about concessions from Acosta regarding Jeffrey Epstein's non-prosecution agreement (NPA). OPR examined three claims from Lefkowitz's October 23, 2007 letter and found that evidence did not support them, concluding that Acosta did not agree to interfere with state proceedings or alter the NPA's sentencing provisions. The document cites subsequent communications from USAO representatives Sloman and VillafaƱa that reinforced the original terms of Epstein's 18-month jail sentence.
This document contains pages 200 and 201 from a book (likely James Patterson's 'Filthy Rich'), stamped as evidence by the House Oversight Committee. It details an interview from June 2015 with Palm Beach County Sheriff Ric Bradshaw, who describes Jeffrey Epstein's time in the 'Stockade' jail. The text highlights the special treatment Epstein received, including solitary confinement for his protection ('make sure nobody killed him'), a private wing, and unlimited visitors, contrasting him with typical inmates.
Discussion 0
No comments yet
Be the first to share your thoughts on this epstein entity