| Date | Event Type | Description | Location | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2019-08-08 | N/A | The Marshall Project newsletter 'Opening Statement' is published. | New York | View |
This June 26, 2019 edition of The Daily 202 newsletter highlights Robert Mueller's upcoming congressional testimony regarding his report on Russian interference and potential obstruction of justice. It also covers significant national news including the humanitarian crisis at the US-Mexico border, tensions with Iran, the 2020 Democratic primary debates, and various political developments involving the Trump administration. The document provides analysis, key quotes, and links to further reading on these topics.
This document is an email chain dated August 9, 2019, involving USDOJ officials (specifically an Associate U.S. Attorney from SDNY and John McEnany). They are discussing the retrieval of documents from the Southern District of Florida (SDFL) and noting a Miami Herald report about a prosecutor leaving that office. The email forwards a newsletter from The Marshall Project which mentions that the Florida governor has ordered an investigation into the Palm Beach Police Department's handling of the Jeffrey Epstein case.
This page from the Minnesota Law Review contains a series of footnotes (188-201) discussing legal topics such as rape law reform, crime statistics, and federal police reform. It references various statutes like the Violence Against Women Act and 42 U.S.C. ยง 14141, as well as specific cases like United States v. Screws and the prosecution of Michael Slager.
This document is page 37 of a legal filing submitted to the House Oversight Committee by attorney David Schoen (indicated by the footer). The content is an excerpt from the Minnesota Law Review (Vol. 103) containing footnotes 178-187, which discuss the history of sexual assault legislation, the backlog of untested rape kits, the evolution of 'rape shield' laws, and the efficacy of specialized prosecution units for sexual crimes and prison abuse. While the text discusses general legal precedents and statistics regarding sexual assault, its submission by Schoen suggests relevance to a specific investigation, likely regarding the handling of sexual abuse cases.
This document is a page from a Minnesota Law Review article (Vol. 103, circa 2019) discussing the legal theory and international differences regarding private prosecutions versus public prosecutors. It specifically highlights the Crime Victims' Rights Act (CVRA) in the footnotes. The document appears to be from the files of David Schoen (Epstein's lawyer), as indicated by the footer, and was submitted to the House Oversight Committee as part of an investigation (Bates stamp HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016521).
Discussion 0
No comments yet
Be the first to share your thoughts on this epstein entity