| Date | Event Type | Description | Location | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| N/A | N/A | Photograph taken as evidence, likely as part of the U.S. House Committee on Oversight and Reform'... | Metropolitan Correctional C... | View |
This document is a fragment containing the footer of an email, identified by a standard confidentiality clause. It provides a contact email, 'jeevacation@gmail.com', for reporting erroneous receipt. The Bates stamp 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_030419' indicates this fragment is part of a larger set of documents produced for the House Oversight Committee.
This document is a confidentiality notice, likely an email footer, stating that the communication is confidential, potentially privileged, and the property of 'JEE' (Jeffrey E. Epstein). It instructs recipients who received it in error to report it to the email address jeevacation@gmail.com. The document is marked with a Bates stamp 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_030407'.
This document is an email chain from May 11, 2017, between Landon Thomas Jr. and Jeffrey Epstein (using the email jeevacation@gmail.com), marked as 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_030358'. Thomas asks Epstein about "your man Jes?" and how Epstein's "Trump contacts" are responding to the recent firing of FBI Director James Comey. Epstein expresses a desire to speak on the phone rather than by email, stating it is "not for email," and later comments, "everyone gets their turn in the barrel."
This document is a duplicated email disclaimer from a communication owned by 'JEE' (likely Jeffrey E. Epstein). It asserts that the information is confidential, potentially attorney-client privileged, and instructs anyone who received it in error to notify jeevacation@gmail.com and destroy the message. The footer 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_030317' indicates it is part of a document production for the U.S. House Committee on Oversight.
This document, bearing the Bates number 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028465', is a technical data file that appears to be a manifest for digital assets. The text consists of structured data, likely in JSON format, defining properties for images and fonts, such as identifiers, asset URLs, dimensions, and font families. The document contains no direct narrative, names, dates, or other specific information related to the Epstein case itself, but is metadata associated with digital evidence.
This document is a technical file containing a JSON object that defines layout and styling parameters for a digital document or webpage. It is marked with the Bates number 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028446', identifying it as part of a collection from a House Oversight Committee investigation. The content is purely code and contains no explicit information about Jeffrey Epstein, his associates, or related events.
This document, labeled HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028440, contains a block of JSON code that defines layout and style configurations for a digital publication. The code specifies parameters for components like articles, blockquotes, and images, but does not contain any names, dates, locations, or other specific information related to the Epstein case. Its only context is the 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' label, suggesting it is an exhibit from a congressional investigation.
This document consists of a JSON-formatted metadata snippet, likely from The New York Times' content system, for an article titled, "Kavanaugh’s Yearbook Page Is ‘Horrible, Hurtful’ to a Woman It Named." The document is marked with the Bates stamp "HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028439", but its content does not contain any direct information related to Jeffrey Epstein or his associates.
This document is a JSON configuration file that defines layout and style rules for various components of a digital document. It specifies properties such as column spans, margins, colors, and font styles for elements like blockquotes, headings, images, and banners. The font names 'NYTImperial-Regular' and 'NYTFranklin-Bold' suggest it may be related to a New York Times publication, while the footer 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028432' indicates a connection to the House Committee on Oversight.
This document consists of technical metadata for digital assets (fonts, images, video), likely from a New York Times webpage. A URL within the data points to a video dated September 24, 2018, related to 'mcconnell' and 'kavanaugh'. The document is marked with the Bates number 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028404', indicating it is an exhibit in a congressional investigation.
This document consists of technical metadata for digital assets, such as images and fonts, formatted in a JSON-like structure. The Bates stamp 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028395' identifies it as an item from a U.S. House Oversight Committee investigation. The metadata references fonts like 'NYTImperial' and 'NYTCheltenham', strongly suggesting the source is a digital file from The New York Times, but the document itself contains no direct information about Jeffrey Epstein, individuals, events, or specific activities.
This document is a raw data file, likely in Apple News Format, containing metadata and text for several New York Times articles from September 2018. The content is entirely unrelated to Jeffrey Epstein, discussing topics like lifestyle, cooking, finance, and general news. The only potential link to a formal investigation is the footer 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028388', indicating it is an exhibit from a larger collection of documents.
This document, identified by the Bates number 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028372', is a technical metadata log. It appears to be a data export listing digital assets, such as images and fonts (e.g., 'Proxima Nova', 'PracticeSemibold'), along with their internal system identifiers, asset paths, and properties. The document contains no substantive information regarding individuals, events, communications, or financial details related to the Epstein case.
This document is a technical data structure, likely JSON, that defines the layout and content of an Apple News article. It is marked with the Bates stamp 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028366', suggesting it was part of a collection by the House Oversight Committee. The actual content of the article, which mentions a 'guide to fall TV' and a 'Daily Discovery' section, appears to be entirely unrelated to Jeffrey Epstein or any associated investigation.
This document is a JSON-like data structure for an Apple News article about the HBO show 'Jane Fonda in Five Acts'. It contains the article's descriptive text, broadcast time (8 p.m.), and links to the full content, sourced from the Los Angeles Times. The footer 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028364' indicates it was collected as evidence in a congressional investigation, but the content itself is unrelated to Jeffrey Epstein.
The document is a technical file, likely a JSON or JavaScript object containing CSS style definitions for a digital publication or website. It details font types, sizes, colors, and layout properties for various elements like 'masthead', 'newsletter-sign-up', and 'olympics-masthead-sponsor'. The document itself contains no direct information about Jeffrey Epstein, his associates, or related events, but is marked with the Bates stamp 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028355', indicating it is part of a document collection from a U.S. House Oversight Committee investigation.
This document, identified by the Bates stamp HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028327, contains JSON-formatted data that appears to define styling and layout properties for a digital application or webpage. The code specifies attributes such as colors, fonts (e.g., "Balto"), and component styles, but contains no discernible information about people, events, communications, or financial transactions relevant to the Epstein case.
This document is a standard confidentiality notice, likely from the footer of an email. It instructs any unintended recipient to contact jeevacation@gmail.com and destroy the communication. The Bates number 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_026375' indicates it is part of a larger set of documents produced for a House Oversight committee investigation.
This document is a fragment of an email chain, showing a repeated confidentiality notice. The notice states that the communication is the property of 'JEE' (Jeffrey E. Epstein) and provides the contact email 'jeevacation@gmail.com' for reporting errors in transmission. The footer 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_026339' indicates it is an exhibit from a U.S. House of Representatives oversight investigation.
This document is a news article, likely from the NY Post, detailing a real estate boom in the Yorkville neighborhood of Manhattan. The article discusses major development projects by companies like Extell Development and Icon Realty, rising property values, and the impact of the upcoming Second Avenue subway. Despite the request to analyze it as an 'Epstein-related document', the content of the article itself contains no mention of Jeffrey Epstein, his associates, properties, or any related activities.
This document is a photograph labeled 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_022433', indicating it is likely an exhibit from a U.S. House Oversight Committee investigation. The image displays the interior of a large property undergoing extensive renovation or deconstruction. No individuals, specific dates, or explicit connections to Jeffrey Epstein are mentioned in the image itself, though the context suggests it is a related property.
This document is a photograph, identified by the Bates number HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_022431, indicating its origin from a U.S. House Committee on Oversight investigation. The image depicts a large, unfinished space, possibly a basement, during a period of construction or renovation. The specific location is not identified, and there is no direct information within the photograph to link it to Jeffrey Epstein, though its inclusion in a congressional file suggests relevance to an investigation.
This document is a photograph, identified as 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_022430', showing the interior of a room during a state of construction or demolition. The walls contain various pieces of graffiti, most notably the letters 'GBM' spray-painted in multiple locations. The specific location and its direct connection to the Epstein case are not evident from the image itself, but the 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' label indicates it is part of a formal evidence collection for a congressional committee.
This document is a photograph labeled 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_022429', indicating it was part of a U.S. House Oversight Committee investigation. The image displays a dilapidated, unfinished room with exposed brick and pipes, believed to be located within the Metropolitan Correctional Center (MCC) in New York, where Jeffrey Epstein was held.
This document is a draft presentation slide titled 'Why is this important?' that lists statistics concerning women in the United States, including sexual harassment, the gender pay gap, and disparities in venture capital funding. The document does not contain any direct mention of Jeffrey Epstein or his associates, but a Bates number in the footer ('HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_022414') suggests it was part of a larger document production for the U.S. House Committee on Oversight.
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