This document is a chain of emails between the FBI (NY Field Office/CART) and the US Attorney's Office (SDNY) regarding the chaotic processing of digital evidence seized from Jeffrey Epstein. The US Attorney's office complains that over 1.3 million documents were provided in a disorganized manner, with emails unlinked from attachments (specifically citing flight records as an example of unlinked data), making review impossible. The FBI cites technical issues, including a network replacement where they were mandated to delete 400TB of old data, and clarifies that some evidence originated from a July 2007 search.
This document is a chain of emails between the FBI's NY CART team and the US Attorney's Office (SDNY) regarding the technical challenges of processing digital evidence seized from Jeffrey Epstein. The correspondence details friction over data compatibility between forensic tools and the 'Relativity' e-discovery platform, with the FBI explaining delays due to encryption and the sheer volume of terabytes of data from servers, computers, and loose media found in Epstein's New York and Virgin Islands properties. A significant detail reveals that 9 hard drives found in his NY apartment were actually copies of drives from a previous July 2007 search.
This document is a chain of emails between the US Attorney's Office (SDNY) and digital forensic teams regarding the chaotic processing of digital evidence seized from Jeffrey Epstein's properties in New York and the Virgin Islands in 2019-2020. The prosecutors express severe frustration with the FBI and technical teams over disorganized data dumps, including over 1 million documents with broken links between emails and attachments, and the inability to correlate files with specific seized devices. The text also reveals that some evidence found in the NY apartment included copies of drives from a previous July 2007 search.
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