This document is an excerpt from a declaration dated September 17, 2009, signed by Adam D. Horowitz. It describes an incident where Jeffrey Epstein intimidated Jane Doe No. 4 by staring at her, causing her to become terrified, cry uncontrollably, and flee the building, thereby preventing her deposition. The declarant affirms the truthfulness of these statements under penalty of perjury.
This document is page 160 of a court transcript from the trial Case 1:20-cr-00330-PAE (Ghislaine Maxwell trial), filed on August 10, 2022. It features the direct examination of a witness named Parkinson by Ms. Comey regarding the layout of a building, specifically identifying a staff room and bathroom on the ground floor/north side. The prosecution introduces Government Exhibits 289 through 293 for identification.
This document is a page from a court transcript dated August 10, 2022, detailing the direct examination of a witness named Parkinson. The witness identifies various locations on a property, including a cabana, storage building, and barracks, while narrating a walk-through video being shown as evidence. The transcript concludes with the attorney, Ms. Comey, ending the video presentation and the judge providing instructions to the jury.
This document is a court transcript from August 10, 2022, showing attorney Ms. Comey conducting a direct examination of witness Gregory Parkinson. Parkinson identifies Government Exhibit 296 as a CD containing video footage of the reading and execution of a search warrant at a residence, which includes a search for persons and a final walk-through showing no property damage.
This document is a page from a legal filing (dated March 23, 2021) arguing for Ghislaine Maxwell's release on bail, citing the Reform Act and proposing a strict bail package including an eight-figure bond, renunciation of foreign citizenship, and asset monitoring by a retired judge. The text argues that her continued detention impairs her ability to prepare for trial and subjects her to a 'trial by public opinion.' A lengthy footnote details poor detention conditions at the MDC, including delayed legal mail, technical issues with electronic discovery, and ventilation issues in visiting rooms characterized by an expert as a 'death trap.'
This document is a page from a court transcript (Case 1:20-cr-00330-PAE) recording the direct examination of a witness named Espinosa. The testimony focuses on identifying individuals who held regular apartments in a specific building associated with Jeffrey Epstein. The witness identifies Epstein's pilots, a woman named Jane and her family, Shelly Lewis (described as a friend of Epstein), and Emmy Taylor as individuals who had apartments there.
This document is a page from a court transcript (Case 1:20-cr-00330-PAE) filed on August 10, 2022, featuring the direct examination of a witness named Espinosa. The testimony focuses on identifying individuals who held regular apartments in a specific building associated with Jeffrey Epstein. The witness identifies Epstein's pilots, a woman named Jane and her family, Shelly Lewis (described as a friend of Epstein), and Emmy Taylor as residents.
This document is the introductory page of a transcript regarding the sworn testimony of a Special Agent before a Federal Grand Jury in West Palm Beach, Florida, on March 18, 2008. The document identifies the location, date, and court reporting service involved, though the names of the agent and the reporter are redacted. It is marked confidential and appears to be part of a larger filing from 2021.
This document is the cover page for a transcript of testimony given by a Special Agent (name redacted) before Federal Grand Jury 07-103 on March 18, 2008, at the U.S. Courthouse in West Palm Beach, Florida. The case involves the United States of America vs. Jeffrey Epstein and co-defendants Sarah Kellen, Adriana Ross (a/k/a Adriana Mucinska), and Nadia Marcinkova. Assistant United States Attorney A. Marie Villafana is listed as the appearing counsel.
This document page argues for the release of Ms. Maxwell on bail, asserting that proposed conditions, including renouncing foreign citizenship and strict asset monitoring, are sufficient to mitigate flight risk. It contends that her continued detention is prejudicial, impairing her physical health and ability to prepare for trial, while a footnote details specific issues with discovery access, mail delays, and unsafe visiting conditions at the MDC.
This document is page 6 of a 43-page interview transcript dated July 26, 2017. An interviewer, identified as 'MP', questions an individual about an event where two people went upstairs. The interviewee recalls an older man named Jeff and a tall, blonde woman, whom they speculate was Jeff's assistant, going upstairs for about five minutes after a brief introduction in the kitchen.
This document is page 150 from a James Patterson book, stamped as a House Oversight exhibit. It narrates Graydon Carter (Vanity Fair editor) arriving at the Condé Nast building to review a story by a journalist named Ward about Jeffrey Epstein. The text describes Epstein's NYC townhouse in bizarre detail, noting 'menservants' in white gloves and a hallway decorated with framed eyeballs imported from England. It also includes two photos: one of Epstein in 1969 and another related to a Palm Beach Police search of his El Brillo Way home.
This document is page 150 from a book by James Patterson, included as a House Oversight exhibit. It details Graydon Carter's hesitation regarding a story about Jeffrey Epstein written by Vicky Ward (referred to as Ward), noting that at the time, there were only rumors about Epstein's dealings with young women and no criminal investigation. The text includes a vivid description of Epstein's NYC townhouse, mentioning menservants and a hall decorated with prosthetic eyeballs. The page also features two photos: one of Epstein's Palm Beach home during a police search, and a 1969 photo of a young Epstein at Coney Island.
The document is a high-resolution aerial photograph of the Midtown Manhattan skyline at night, looking towards the East River. The Chrysler Building is visible on the left. The only text present is the Bates stamp 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_026730' in the bottom right corner, indicating this image serves as an exhibit in a House Oversight Committee investigation.
This document is a deposition transcript (pages 6-9) in which a witness (likely Scott Rothstein) admits to starting a Ponzi scheme around 2005 out of 'greed and the need to support the law firm.' The testimony details the history of his law firm's locations (One Financial Plaza, Colonial Bank Building, 401 Building) and partners (Stu Rosenfeldt, Susan Dolin, Michael Pancier). The witness clarifies that despite having approximately 70 attorneys and various people with 'partner' or 'shareholder' titles for 'prestige' and 'ego,' the only actual equity shareholders receiving distributions were himself and Stu Rosenfeldt.
This document appears to be a page from a memoir, likely by Ehud Barak (identified as 'Ehud' in the text), produced during a House Oversight investigation. The text details his childhood upbringing on a kibbutz, his relationship with his intellectual but unconfident father, his contemplative nature as a child, and his relationships with his caregiver Bina and mentor Yigal Garber.
This document appears to be a printout of a New York Times opinion column by Frank Rich from March 2005, titled 'The Greatest Dirty Joke Ever Told.' The article describes a Friars Club roast of Hugh Hefner that occurred shortly after the 9/11 attacks, noting the presence of celebrities including Donald Trump. The piece focuses on comedian Gilbert Gottfried telling the infamous 'Aristocrats' joke to a shocked audience. The document bears a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' footer, suggesting it was included in an evidence file for a Congressional investigation.
This document appears to be an excerpt from a memoir or personal narrative submitted as evidence to the House Oversight Committee. The text recounts an anecdote from 1963 in New York City where the narrator, who worked in the building where MAD Magazine was published, had a dangerous encounter with a 'lower-echelon Mafioso' after spending the night with the mobster's girlfriend. The page details the phone confrontation and the narrator's subsequent maneuvering to avoid being caught in a lie at his office building.
This document, marked with a House Oversight Bates number, appears to be an excerpt from a narrative or book discussing the production of the 1968 film 'Skidoo.' It details the FBI's concerns regarding the film's script, Jackie Gleason's status as an FBI contact, and a personal anecdote about Groucho Marx taking LSD with the narrator at a home in Beverly Hills. The text does not explicitly mention Jeffrey Epstein, despite being part of a larger oversight file.
This document appears to be a page from a memoir or narrative account (likely attributed to Richard Nixon) produced as part of a House Oversight discovery (Bates stamp HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_015095). The text details the narrator's introduction to Howard Hughes via Herman Perry and Murray Chotiner. It describes Hughes asserting dominance over Nixon's political future ('I own the ocean') and mentions the narrator's distrust of the Justice Department stemming from the 1948 Alger Hiss case. While the user prompt references Epstein, the content of this specific page is historically focused on Nixon and Hughes.
This document is a diary entry or narrative log (likely by Ghislaine Maxwell given the context of the House Oversight files) detailing the filming of the movie 'Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps' in New York around November 2009. The text describes the author's participation as an extra alongside high-society figures and celebrities like Michael Douglas, Charlie Sheen, and Prince Dimitri of Yugoslavia at locations including the Shun Lee Restaurant and 25 Broadway. It includes gossip about cast interactions, costume details, and the author's personal relationship with Chuck Pfieffer.
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