circa 2020
OPR's investigation occurred approximately 12 years after the USAO's investigation of Epstein.
| Name | Type | Mentions | |
|---|---|---|---|
| OPR | person | 0 | View Entity |
DOJ-OGR-00021183.jpg
This document is a page from a report by the Office of Professional Responsibility (OPR) concerning its investigation into the conduct of Department of Justice attorneys in the Epstein case. The OPR outlines the scope and limitations of its investigation, noting it lacks jurisdiction over state officials and that the significant passage of time (approx. 12 years) affected witness recollections. The report's analysis relied heavily on contemporaneous emails and communications from the 2006-2008 period to evaluate the attorneys' actions based on the information available to them at that time.
Events with shared participants
OPR conducted an investigation which involved obtaining records, conducting interviews, and reviewing public documents related to the Epstein case.
Date unknown
OPR conducted extensive interviews under oath of five subjects involved in the Epstein investigation.
Date unknown
OPR conducted more than 60 interviews of witnesses.
Date unknown
OPR investigated whether the USAO violated department policy and whether prosecutors were influenced by improper motives in the Epstein case.
Date unknown
The initiation and scope of OPR's investigation into the Epstein case.
Date unknown
The Office of Professional Responsibility (OPR) conducted a review and interviews regarding the facts and circumstances of the Epstein NPA negotiation.
Date unknown
OPR questioned Lourie, Menchel, Sloman, and Acosta about the timeline for reviewing the prosecution memorandum and proposed charges in the Epstein case.
Date unknown
The Office of Professional Responsibility (OPR) conducted a review of hundreds of thousands of pages of documents related to the Epstein investigation.
Date unknown • Southern District of Florida
EOUSA investigated a data gap in Acosta's email records at the request of OPR.
Date unknown
Villafaña explained her decisions and reasoning to the Office of Professional Responsibility (OPR) regarding the handling of Epstein's plea deal, including the non-prosecution of co-conspirators and immigration matters.
Date unknown
Discussion 0
No comments yet
Be the first to share your thoughts on this epstein event