Sloman

Person
Mentions
421
Relationships
84
Events
122
Documents
207

Relationship Network

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Interactive Network: Click nodes or edges to highlight connections and view details with action buttons. Drag nodes to reposition. Node size indicates connection count. Line color shows relationship strength: red (8-10), orange (6-7), yellow (4-5), gray (weak). Use legend and help buttons in the graph for more guidance.
84 total relationships
Connected Entity Relationship Type
Strength (mentions)
Documents Actions
person Villafaña
Business associate
22 Very Strong
20
View
person Acosta
Business associate
19 Very Strong
16
View
person Villafaña
Professional
11 Very Strong
28
View
person Acosta
Professional
11 Very Strong
30
View
person Lefkowitz
Professional
9 Strong
5
View
person Villafaña
Subordinate supervisor
8 Strong
4
View
person Menchel
Professional
7
3
View
person Lourie
Business associate
7
3
View
person Belohlavek
Professional
7
2
View
person Mr. Herman
Business associate
6
2
View
person Villafaña
Professional supervisory
6
2
View
person Acosta
Subordinate supervisor
6
2
View
person Roy Black
Professional
5
1
View
person Villafaña
Professional collegial
5
1
View
person Villafaña
Friend
5
1
View
person victim's attorney (former law partner)
Business associate
5
1
View
person Sanchez
Business associate
5
1
View
person Alexander Acosta
Professional advisory
5
1
View
person A victim's attorney
Business associate
5
1
View
person Lourie
Professional
5
1
View
person Belohlavek
Legal representative
5
1
View
person Oosterbaan
Professional
5
1
View
person Lefkowitz
Adversarial
5
1
View
person West Palm Beach FBI squad supervisor
Professional
5
1
View
person Sanchez
Defense prosecution negotiation
5
1
View
Date Event Type Description Location Actions
N/A N/A Discussion and agreement on the addendum's terms after a draft was sent and a phone call occurred. N/A View
N/A N/A Federal investigation resolved through a Non-Prosecution Agreement (NPA). N/A View
N/A N/A Sloman briefly left the USAO and entered private practice specializing in plaintiffs' sexual abus... Miami View
N/A N/A Menchel made substantive changes to Villafaña's draft letter concerning Epstein's plea deal, incl... N/A View
N/A N/A Early meeting with Acosta, Sloman, and Menchel where Villafaña raised victim consultation issue a... N/A View
N/A N/A John Roth handled Starr's letter and reviewed materials related to the Epstein matter, limiting h... N/A View
N/A N/A Defense counsel arguing against victim notification letters N/A View
N/A N/A Sloman met with Dershowitz and informed him of USAO's opposition to early termination and transfe... N/A View
N/A N/A Prosecution of Epstein N/A View
N/A N/A Victim notification process regarding Epstein's case. N/A View
N/A N/A Trial considerations for Epstein case, including victim trauma and evidentiary challenges N/A View
N/A N/A OPR interviews regarding Epstein's case and sentencing discussions. N/A View
N/A N/A Acosta anticipated leaving USAO and considered employment with Kirkland & Ellis, leading him to r... N/A View
N/A N/A The defense team rejected Acosta's December 19, 2007, NPA modification letter. N/A View
N/A N/A OPR Interviews conducting a retrospective review of the case handling. Unknown View
N/A N/A OPR Interviews with prosecutors involved in the Epstein case. Unknown View
N/A N/A Internal USAO discussions regarding the viability of federal prosecution vs. a negotiated plea deal. USAO View
N/A N/A Discussions regarding the two-year plea deal resolution. USAO (implied) View
N/A N/A Villafaña reports Epstein is at the Stockade instead of Main Detention Center. Palm Beach View
N/A Legal dispute Dispute between the prosecution (Sloman) and defense (Starr, Lefkowitz) over the notification of ... N/A View
N/A Investigation OPR questioned Lourie, Menchel, Sloman, and Acosta about the timeline for reviewing a prosecution... N/A View
N/A Interview OPR conducted interviews with Acosta, Lourie, Menchel, Sloman, and Villafaña about the origins of... N/A View
N/A Meeting A meeting to discuss how to proceed with the Epstein case, where the FBI insisted on lifetime sex... USAO in Miami View
N/A Conversation Sloman told Villafaña that pre-charge resolutions do not require victim notification. N/A View
N/A Legal process Discussions regarding whether to contact victims about the potential resolution of the case befor... N/A View

DOJ-OGR-00021414.jpg

This legal document details a dispute between the prosecution (represented by Sloman, Villafaña, and Acosta) and Jeffrey Epstein's defense team (Starr and Lefkowitz) regarding the government's obligation to notify victims under the VRRA. The prosecution argues for the necessity of informing victims about Epstein's Non-Prosecution Agreement and his upcoming state plea deal, scheduled for December 14, 2007, while the defense objects strongly. The document includes excerpts from letters exchanged between the two sides, outlining their legal positions and the specifics of the proposed plea agreement.

Legal document
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00021413.jpg

This legal document details the contentious communications in late November and early December 2007 between federal prosecutors (Acosta, Sloman, Villafaña) and Jeffrey Epstein's defense team (Lefkowitz, Starr). The core conflict revolved around the timing, content, and legal necessity of notifying victims about Epstein's upcoming state plea hearing, with the defense arguing for delay and review, and the prosecution asserting its obligations and threatening to void the plea agreement. The dispute involved a series of letters and instructions, highlighting the friction in executing the terms of the Non-Prosecution Agreement (NPA).

Legal document
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00021412.jpg

This legal document details the federal handling of victim notification in the Jeffrey Epstein case in late 2007, specifically around his state plea hearing. It reveals that federal officials, including Villafaña, did not inform new victims of the Non-Prosecution Agreement (NPA) because they believed Epstein would still be federally charged. The document also outlines the coordination and communication challenges between the U.S. Attorney's Office and the State Attorney's Office regarding who was responsible for notifying victims for the state court proceedings.

Legal document
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00021411.jpg

This legal document details communications in late 2007 and 2008 between federal prosecutors (Acosta, Sloman, Villafaña) and counsel for Epstein (Lefkowitz) regarding victim contact and a non-prosecution agreement (NPA). While the FBI continued to investigate and interview new potential victims, the prosecution team decided not to inform victims about the NPA, citing concerns that discussing financial settlements would compromise them as witnesses and create impeachment evidence. The document highlights the internal rationale for limiting victim notification, balancing legal obligations with strategic concerns in the case against Epstein.

Legal document
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00021410.jpg

This document details the complex discussions and objections surrounding victim notification in a legal case, likely involving Epstein, during late 2007. It highlights concerns raised by the FBI and defense attorneys, particularly Lefkowitz, about the implications of direct victim contact, including potential impeachment material, confidentiality breaches, and grand jury secrecy rules. Various parties, including Villafaña, case agents, and the USAO's Professional Responsibility Officer, navigated these issues, with Villafaña also raising ethical concerns about 'cold calling' victims under Florida Bar Rules.

Legal document
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00021408.jpg

This document is a page from a DOJ OPR report detailing the internal handling of victim notifications regarding Jeffrey Epstein's Non-Prosecution Agreement (NPA). It describes how prosecutor Villafaña directed agents to inform victims about the deal without disclosing the full text, citing confidentiality clauses and the belief that victims only needed to know about restitution rights. The text highlights a discrepancy between what agents claim they told victim Courtney Wild in October 2007 versus Wild's 2015 declaration stating she was misled about the federal case being dropped.

Department of justice office of professional responsibility (opr) report
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00021407.jpg

This document details communications from September 2007 concerning a Non-Prosecution Agreement (NPA). Case Agent Villafaña, prosecutors Acosta and Lourie, and defense attorney Lefkowitz discussed how to handle the NPA's disclosure, with a focus on preventing it from becoming public while navigating legal requirements and informing victims. Villafaña also attempted to coordinate the appointment of an attorney representative for the victims and sought guidance on what information could be shared with them and other agents.

Legal document
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00021405.jpg

This document is a page from a legal filing, likely an investigative report by the Office of Professional Responsibility (OPR), detailing interviews about the failure to notify victims before a Non-Prosecution Agreement (NPA) was signed. It presents conflicting accounts from key figures like Sloman, Villafaña, and Acosta regarding the USAO's policy on victim consultation under the CVRA for pre-charge resolutions. The text highlights internal disagreement and confusion over the legal obligations to victims, with CEOS Chief Oosterbaan disagreeing with the USAO's stance but not finding it to be an abuse of discretion.

Legal document
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00021404.jpg

This legal document details a factual dispute investigated by the Office of Professional Responsibility (OPR) concerning the Epstein case. Prosecutor Villafaña claimed her supervisors—Acosta, Sloman, and Menchel—instructed her not to consult with victims about plea negotiations, an instruction they all deny recalling. The document outlines the conflicting testimonies and notes that while OPR could not definitively resolve the disagreement, it found no documentary evidence to support Villafaña's claim of a specific meeting or instruction on this matter.

Legal document
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00021399.jpg

This page from a DOJ OPR report details how prosecutor Villafaña handled victim notification in the Epstein case prior to charges being filed. Villafaña created a custom letter for FBI agents to hand-deliver to victims, outlining their rights under the CVRA, though she claimed this was not intended to formally activate USAO CVRA obligations. The report notes that while Villafaña informed supervisors Lourie and Sloman, the letters were not reviewed by management (including Acosta), who viewed such notifications as routine tasks.

Doj opr (office of professional responsibility) report / legal filing
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00021390.jpg

This document is a timeline detailing key events from 2006 to 2020 related to the Crime Victims' Rights Act (CVRA) in the context of the Jeffrey Epstein case. It outlines actions taken by the FBI, USAO, and DOJ officials, including Villafaña, Sloman, and Acosta, regarding victim interviews and notifications surrounding Epstein's non-prosecution agreement (NPA) and state court plea. The timeline also tracks subsequent legal challenges by victims, court rulings on CVRA violations, and major developments in the case, such as Epstein's 2019 arrest and death.

Legal document (timeline)
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00021385.jpg

This document details the chaotic final stages of the Jeffrey Epstein non-prosecution agreement (NPA) negotiations in September 2007, highlighting how the absence of key personnel like Menchel, Lourie, and Sloman led to a lack of clear ownership and fragmented decision-making. The text specifically critiques a broad provision in the agreement not to prosecute 'any potential co-conspirators,' noting it was accepted with little discussion despite internal concerns, which ultimately precluded the USAO from prosecuting others involved in Epstein's criminal conduct.

Legal document
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00021384.jpg

This document is an excerpt from a DOJ OPR report analyzing the handling of the Epstein case by the US Attorney's Office. It details a significant communication breakdown between US Attorney Alexander Acosta and AUSA Marie Villafaña regarding the signing of Epstein's 2007 plea agreement (NPA), where Villafaña felt forced to sign a deal she opposed while Acosta claimed he intended to give her veto power. It also highlights how senior management (Menchel) blocked Villafaña from meeting directly with Acosta, resulting in final decisions being made without input from the prosecutor most familiar with the facts.

Doj opr report (office of professional responsibility)
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00021383.jpg

This page from an OPR report discusses the handling of the Epstein case, concluding that prosecutors did not intend to benefit Epstein but that the outcome resulted from Acosta's concerns about state authority. It highlights communication failures within the team, noting that while Acosta was unusually involved in decision-making, he was removed from the supervisory chain and may not have been fully aware of critical details known by staff members like Villafaña.

Legal report / case file document
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00021382.jpg

This legal document analyzes decisions made by U.S. Attorney Acosta that created difficulties in enforcing the Non-Prosecution Agreement (NPA) with Epstein. It details the USAO's internal debate on whether to declare a breach of the agreement and highlights a critical change Acosta made to the NPA's language, weakening the requirement for Epstein to enter a guilty plea. The document suggests these decisions made it significantly harder for the USAO to prove Epstein was intentionally failing to comply with the agreement.

Legal document
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00021380.jpg

This document details an investigation into the origins of a two-year sentence proposal for Jeffrey Epstein, contrasting the differing recollections of prosecutors Acosta, Lourie, Menchel, and Sloman with documentary evidence. The record shows no indication that Epstein's team initially proposed the two-year term; in fact, they argued against any federal prosecution just before the offer was made. The document also outlines alternative, harsher sentencing options the U.S. Attorney's Office considered, such as a plea to a federal offense with a much longer sentence or a conspiracy charge, and why those options were ultimately rejected.

Legal document
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00021378.jpg

This page from an OPR report critiques the USAO's handling of the Epstein Non-Prosecution Agreement (NPA), specifically regarding the failure to seize Epstein's computers. It details how prosecutors Sloman and Villafaña postponed litigation to obtain the computers, and how US Attorney Acosta signed the NPA—which effectively ended the pursuit of this critical evidence—despite likely being aware of the ongoing efforts to obtain it. The report argues the USAO gave away significant leverage and potential evidence of crimes without proper consideration.

Opr (office of professional responsibility) report / legal filing
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00021374.jpg

This document is a page from an OPR report analyzing U.S. Attorney Alexander Acosta's handling of the Jeffrey Epstein case. It criticizes the reliance on state procedures for the Non-Prosecution Agreement (NPA), noting that the specific state charges selected allowed Epstein to avoid sex offender registration in New Mexico due to age-of-consent laws. It also details that Acosta was aware the Palm Beach Police Department distrusted the State Attorney's Office, yet he proceeded with a plea deal that relied heavily on state authorities.

Government report (likely department of justice office of professional responsibility - opr)
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00021368.jpg

This document is a page from an OPR report investigating a non-prosecution agreement (NPA) with Epstein. It details the conflicting recollections of prosecutors Acosta and Lourie regarding a broad provision not to prosecute 'potential co-conspirators,' with Lourie suggesting it could have been a message to victims while Acosta focused on Epstein's punishment. OPR concludes the provision was likely intended to protect Epstein's four assistants and other employees, not victims or his influential associates, and that its inclusion was not carefully considered by the USAO.

Legal document
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00021365.jpg

This document, an OPR report, analyzes prosecutor Villafaña's conduct during the federal investigation and prosecution of Epstein, refuting a public narrative that she colluded with defense counsel. The report concludes that Villafaña consistently advocated for prosecuting Epstein, worked to protect victims' anonymity, and cared deeply about them, despite some criticisms of her interactions. It examines email exchanges and supervisor statements to provide context for her actions and explanations.

Investigative report
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00021363.jpg

This page from a DOJ OPR report analyzes the Non-Prosecution Agreement (NPA) negotiations between the USAO and Epstein's defense. It concludes that while prosecutor Villafaña's emails to defense attorney Lefkowitz appeared accommodating—suggesting 'off campus' meetings and venue changes to avoid press—OPR did not find evidence that these actions were motivated by improper favoritism or that Acosta's breakfast meeting with Lefkowitz materially altered the sentence. The document notes that state officials, not the USAO, were responsible for granting Epstein work release privileges.

Legal report / investigation findings (likely doj office of professional responsibility - opr)
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00021362.jpg

This document is a page from an Office of Professional Responsibility (OPR) report analyzing claims made by Lefkowitz about concessions from Acosta regarding Jeffrey Epstein's non-prosecution agreement (NPA). OPR examined three claims from Lefkowitz's October 23, 2007 letter and found that evidence did not support them, concluding that Acosta did not agree to interfere with state proceedings or alter the NPA's sentencing provisions. The document cites subsequent communications from USAO representatives Sloman and Villafaña that reinforced the original terms of Epstein's 18-month jail sentence.

Legal document
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00021361.jpg

This legal document details the post-meeting communications and ongoing negotiations between the U.S. Attorney's Office (represented by Acosta and Sloman) and Jeffrey Epstein's defense counsel (Lefkowitz) regarding Epstein's Non-Prosecution Agreement (NPA). It highlights a significant dispute over alleged concessions Acosta made during a breakfast meeting, as claimed by Lefkowitz in an October 23, 2007 letter, and a contemporaneous draft response from the USAO refuting those claims.

Legal document
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00021359.jpg

This page from a DOJ OPR report concludes that the frequency of meetings between USAO officials (Acosta, Menchel, Lourie, Sloman, Villafaña) and Epstein's defense team (Starr, Lefkowitz) was not evidence of improper favoritism, given the high-profile nature of the case and the resources of the defendant. It details specific meetings in late 2007 and early 2008, noting that despite defense efforts to involve higher-level DOJ officials (Fisher, Filip), the USAO maintained its position on the federal investigation and the NPA. The report ultimately finds no evidence that these meetings resulted in substantial improper benefits to the defense.

Doj office of professional responsibility (opr) report
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00021358.jpg

This legal document details a series of meetings and communications in 2007 between federal prosecutors (USAO) and Jeffrey Epstein's defense team regarding a potential prosecution. It outlines the strategic maneuvering on both sides, including the defense's presentation of legal arguments and the prosecutors' internal deliberations, led by figures like Acosta and Lourie, on charging strategy and a potential non-prosecution agreement. The document highlights key meetings in June and September 2007 where the parties exchanged information and argued their positions.

Legal document
2025-11-20
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As Sender
76
As Recipient
42
Total
118

Epstein's compliance with the NPA

From: Villafaña
To: Sloman

Villafaña emailed Sloman about Epstein's failure to comply with the NPA timeline and the USAO's need to communicate with the State Attorney's Office and victims' attorney.

Email
2007-10-29

N/A

From: Belohlavek
To: Sloman

Informed Sloman that state judge scheduled plea/sentence for early Jan 2008.

Communication
2007-10-29

N/A

From: Villafaña
To: Sloman

Raising issues to address with Lefkowitz regarding 'best efforts' compliance and communication with State Attorney.

Email
2007-10-29

Special master's duties

From: Sloman
To: special master

Sloman sent a letter to the person selected by the USAO to serve as special master, outlining the duties.

Letter
2007-10-25

No Subject

From: Sloman
To: special master

Outlined the special master's duties.

Letter
2007-10-25

Victim notification and Bar Rules

From: Villafaña
To: Sloman

Stated necessity of contacting victims to advise them of outcome and potential civil claims to avoid 'cold call' violations.

Internal discussion
2007-10-23

Fwd: Concerns with USAO proposal

From: Sloman
To: Acosta

Sloman forwarded Lefkowitz's email to Acosta, noting it 're-ploughs' old ground and raised 'unnecessary' issues. Sloman also reported on a new civil lawsuit against Epstein and Villafaña's concerns about it.

Email
2007-10-19

Forwarded email / 're-ploughs'

From: Sloman
To: Acosta

Sloman forwarded Lefkowitz's email to Acosta, noting that it 're-ploughs some of what we accomplished this week' and raised 'unnecessary' issues.

Email
2007-10-19

Areas of Concern / USAO Proposal

From: Lefkowitz
To: Sloman

Lefkowitz emailed Sloman identifying 'areas of concern' with a proposal the USAO had made days before.

Email
2007-10-19

Forwarding Lefkowitz email

From: Sloman
To: Acosta

Noted Lefkowitz was 're-ploughing' accomplished work; reported a victim civil lawsuit in NY and Villafaña's suspicion about delay tactics.

Email
2007-10-19

Concerns with USAO proposal

From: Lefkowitz
To: Sloman

Lefkowitz emailed Sloman identifying 'areas of concern' with a proposal the USAO had made days before.

Email
2007-10-19

Debrief

From: Alexander Acosta
To: Sloman

Acosta communicated with Sloman about his conversation with Lefkowitz.

Communication
2007-10-12

NPA addendum

From: Sloman
To: Acosta

Sloman and Acosta exchanged emails about crafting an addendum to the NPA.

Email
2007-10-11

Proposed addendum

From: Sloman
To: Lefkowitz

Discussing the text of a proposed addendum to the NPA.

Email
2007-10-11

Proposed NPA addendum

From: Sloman
To: Lefkowitz

Sloman sent the text of a proposed NPA addendum to Lefkowitz.

Email/document
2007-10-11

Proposed addendum text

From: Sloman
To: Lefkowitz

Sloman exchanged emails with Lefkowitz about the text of a proposed addendum to the NPA.

Email
2007-10-11

Complaint about Lefkowitz's letter

From: Villafaña
To: Sloman

Complained defense interpretation violated NPA; asked 'Can I please just indict him?'

Email/forward
2007-10-01

NPA Addendum

From: Sloman
To: Acosta

Crafting an addendum to the NPA regarding attorney representative appointment.

Email
2007-10-01

Attorney representative's role

From: Sanchez
To: Sloman

Asked Sloman to help resolve issues regarding the attorney representative's role.

Email/letter
2007-10-01

Victim notification requirements

From: Sloman
To: Villafaña

Sloman told Villafaña that pre-charge resolutions do not require victim notification.

Discussion
2007-09-24

Forwarded email from Sanchez

From: Sloman
To: Acosta

Sloman, while on vacation, forwarded Sanchez's email to Acosta, who replied, 'Enjo[y] vacation. Working with [M]arie on this.'

Email
2007-09-21

Forwarded email from Sanchez

From: Sloman
To: Lourie

Sloman forwarded Sanchez's email to Lourie, asking if Lourie knew what Sanchez was talking about. Lourie responded that Sanchez had not been involved in any negotiations.

Email
2007-09-21

FW: Finalizing plea deal

From: Sloman
To: ["Acosta", "Lourie"]

Sloman forwarded Sanchez's email to Acosta and Lourie.

Email forwarding
2007-09-21

Finalizing plea deal

From: Sanchez
To: Sloman

Sanchez advised Sloman that he wanted to finalize the plea deal, noting one outstanding issue and believing that Alex had not read all defense submissions.

Email
2007-09-21

Disclosure of information

From: Sloman
To: Villafaña

Sloman told Villafaña by telephone, "[Y]ou can't do that now." (referring to victim consultation/disclosure)

Call
2007-09-06

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