This document is a screenshot of a webpage from the Bureau of Prisons (BOP) website, captured on January 4, 2021. It was filed as an exhibit in a legal case (1:20-cr-00330-AJN) on January 13, 2021. The page provides links to official U.S. government resources for COVID-19 information, including Coronavirus.gov, CDC.gov, and USA.gov, and mentions the White House Coronavirus Task Force.
This document is a news article printout (likely Washington Post) describing meetings between Donald Trump and various figures regarding healthcare policy and Obamacare reform. It specifically highlights the attendance of Bruce Moskowitz and Marvel CEO Isaac Perlmutter at a meeting, noting the latter's presence was unexplained. It also mentions Cosgrove's criticism of healthcare paperwork and a scheduled meeting with former Governor Tommy Thompson.
This document is page 85 of a 2017 report by Ackrell Capital regarding the U.S. legal landscape for cannabis. It discusses the path to federal legalization, analyzing the roles of the DEA and FDA, the conflict between state and federal regulations, and the bureaucratic hurdles stalling the approval of cannabis-derived drugs under the leadership of Attorney General Jeff Sessions. The document bears a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' Bates stamp, indicating it was part of a document production for a congressional oversight committee.
This document is page 171 from a 2017 report by Ackrell Capital, LLC. It contains a 'Glossary of Terms' specifically related to the cannabis industry (defining terms like THCA, Edible, Flower, Ganja) and relevant regulatory bodies (DEA, FDA, FinCEN). While the document bears a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' Bates stamp, indicating it was produced as part of a Congressional investigation (potentially swept up in a broader request for financial documents), the content itself contains no direct references to Jeffrey Epstein, his associates, or his specific activities.
This document appears to be a page from a House Oversight Committee production (ID: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_025932). It contains the text of a forwarded email featuring a satirical, scripted dialogue between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump. The text lists numerous conservative grievances and scandals associated with the Obama/Clinton era, including Benghazi, Solyndra, the Iran Nuclear Deal, and the Uranium One deal. While the user requested 'Epstein-related' analysis, Jeffrey Epstein is not mentioned in the text of this specific page.
The document is a page from a House Oversight collection (HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_025923) containing a forwarded email chain or text. It features a satirical dialogue between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump, where Clinton lists numerous scandals associated with her tenure and the Obama administration (Benghazi, emails, Clinton Foundation, IRS targeting, etc.) while Trump repeatedly responds 'No, the other one.' It appears to be a piece of political viral mail rather than a factual record or transcript.
This document appears to be a printed email forward or transcript containing a satirical dialogue between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump. The text lists numerous political scandals and controversies associated with the Obama/Clinton administration (including Benghazi, Solyndra, the Clinton Foundation, and IRS targeting) framed as questions from Hillary, to which Trump repeatedly replies, 'No, the other one.' The document bears a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' footer, indicating it was likely part of a document production for a Congressional investigation.
This document is a digital message log from August 2018 between Jeffrey Epstein (via alias jeeitunes@gmail.com) and a redacted individual. The conversation begins with a speculative list of high-level US government appointees (including Pompeo, Meadows, and Tulsi Gabbard) sent to Epstein. The dialogue shifts to legal concerns, with the redacted sender warning that 'Things will get uglier' if investigators 'get Matt calamari,' while offering reassurance that 'burke' (likely attorney Bill Burck) will provide legal protection.
This document is a Reference Code Sheet (revised 12-19-2006) for the MAOP (Manual of Administrative Operations and Procedures), likely used by the FBI or DOJ to categorize case file data. It provides alphanumeric codes for property, sentence types, agencies (e.g., DEA, FBI, USSS), organized crime roles, government subjects, and specific crime categories including a section for 'Child Predators' (Codes 9A-9I). It serves as a key to interpret coded entries in other documents within the House Oversight file dump.
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