January 02, 2008
Bruce Reinhart begins representing Epstein's employees.
| Name | Type | Mentions | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Epstein employees | person | 2 | View Entity |
| Bruce Reinhart | person | 54 | View Entity |
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016449.jpg
This document is an excerpt from a news story or report produced by the House Oversight Committee detailing the career transition of Bruce Reinhart from Assistant U.S. Attorney in South Florida to a defense attorney for Jeffrey Epstein's employees. It highlights the controversy surrounding his move on January 2, 2008 (one day after leaving the DOJ), subsequent accusations of ethical violations for 'switching sides,' and the U.S. Attorney's Office's claim that he did possess confidential information about the case despite his denials. The text specifically notes Reinhart represented Epstein's pilots, scheduler Sarah Kellen, and Nadia Marcinkova.
Events with shared participants
Reinhart named in Crime Victims’ Rights Act lawsuit.
2011-01-01 • Unknown
Bruce Reinhart leaves the U.S. Attorney's Office.
2008-01-01 • South Florida
Preparation of a 53-page federal indictment and subpoenas served on Epstein employees.
2007-01-01 • Federal Grand Jury
Reinhart named in Crime Victims' Rights Act lawsuit accusing him of switching sides.
2011-01-01 • Court
A 53-page federal indictment was prepared but not used; subpoenas served on employees.
2007-01-01 • Federal Court
Deposition of Sarah Kellen where she invoked the 5th Amendment
2010-03-24 • Unknown
Epstein, the defendant, and other employees traveled to and from Palm Beach on Epstein's private plane.
Date unknown • Palm Beach
Deposition of Sarah Kellen
2010-03-24 • Unknown
Epstein's alleged criminal scheme and the defense's efforts to secure non-prosecution and immigration waivers for employees and female assistants.
Date unknown
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