This document is an email thread from July 8-9, 2019. A Special Assistant US Attorney from the Eastern District of Virginia (EDVA) emails a colleague to congratulate them on being assigned to 'the Epstein case,' describing it as 'excellent and very important.' The recipient replies thanking them and acknowledging their position in the EDVA.
This document is an email thread from August 15, 2019, circulating a Fox News article about the accidental release of serial bank robber Michael Matthews from the Metropolitan Correctional Center (MCC) just days before Jeffrey Epstein's death. The article highlights serious security failures and irregularities at the MCC, including quotes from Attorney General William Barr expressing anger at the facility's failures. It also includes comments from the lawyer of Epstein's former cellmate, Nicholas Tartaglione, describing conditions at MCC as inhumane and worse than Rikers Island.
This document is a page from a court transcript (Page 45, filed on 04/01/2021) regarding a bail hearing. Defense counsel is arguing for the release of their client (implied to be Ghislaine Maxwell based on the case ID context), asserting that while the Crime Victims' Rights Act (CVRA) gives victims a voice, it does not give them a 'veto' over a defendant's right to release. The counsel cites Judge Orenstein's opinion in *United States v. Turner* (2005) to support the argument that victim objections regarding flight risk should not automatically deny bail.
This document is a page from a legal filing that critiques the reasoning of a prior court decision, 'Annabi'. The author argues that 'Annabi' departed from the established legal doctrine that a plea agreement with a specific U.S. Attorney's Office (USAO) only binds that office, not the entire U.S. government, unless explicitly stated otherwise. The text cites numerous other cases in its footnotes to support this traditional, more limited interpretation of such agreements.
This document is page 4 of a book titled 'How America Lost Its Secrets' (likely by Edward Jay Epstein, given the filename 'Epst...'). It details the June 2013 discovery of the NSA data breach committed by Edward Snowden, his flight to Hong Kong, and the subsequent criminal charges filed against him in the Eastern District of Virginia. The text describes Snowden's video confession and asserts that he stole intelligence regarding foreign adversaries from the NSA, CIA, DOD, and British services, not just domestic surveillance records. The document bears a House Oversight Bates stamp.
This document is a page from a legal analysis (likely a law journal article) produced to the House Oversight Committee by David Schoen. It discusses the Crime Victims' Rights Act (CVRA) and specifically analyzes case law determining that victim rights attach before formal charges are filed. It prominently cites 'Does v. United States' (the Epstein case) in the Southern District of Florida, noting that the court rejected the government's dismissal attempts and acknowledged that victims might be entitled to invalidate Epstein's nonprosecution agreement.
Discussion 0
No comments yet
Be the first to share your thoughts on this epstein entity