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d-14562House OversightFBI Report

FBI investigation of Jeffrey Epstein in 2006 and subsequent non‑prosecution agreement

The passage confirms that Palm Beach police referred Epstein to the FBI in 2006, that the FBI found the allegations credible, and that the case was presented to the U.S. Attorney’s Office, leading to Palm Beach Police Department asked the FBI to investigate Epstein for federal sex offenses in 2006. FBI determined the allegations were credible and forwarded the case to the Southern District of Flo

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #017627
Pages
2
Persons
1
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage confirms that Palm Beach police referred Epstein to the FBI in 2006, that the FBI found the allegations credible, and that the case was presented to the U.S. Attorney’s Office, leading to Palm Beach Police Department asked the FBI to investigate Epstein for federal sex offenses in 2006. FBI determined the allegations were credible and forwarded the case to the Southern District of Flo

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jeffrey-epsteinvictim-rights-violationpalm-beach-police-departmentfbius-attorneys-officenonprosecution-agreementlaw-enforcement-investigationlegal-exposuremoderate-importancehouse-oversightvictim-rightscvra

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Page 24 of 31 104 J. Crim. L. & Criminology 59, *93 In 2006, Epstein's acts of abuse came to the attention of the Palm Beach Police Department, which began investigating the case. 195 At this point, once again, the victims would not have had rights under the proposed CVRA test. The CVRA extends rights in the federal criminal justice process. A state investigation does not trigger the CVRA (although it may trigger certain state law protections, as discussed below). !%° At some point in 2006, the Palm Beach Police Department asked the FBI to investigate Epstein on federal sex offenses, such as using a means of [*94] interstate communication in connection with sex offenses and traveling in interstate commerce for the purpose of engaging in illicit sexual conduct with minors. !97 The local police provided the FBI with information, which the FBI then investigated. Following an investigation, the FBI determined that the allegations of abuse against Epstein were credible, and it presented the case to the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of Florida. In 2007, the Office contacted counsel for Jeffrey Epstein and began negotiating a resolution of the case against him. 78 Under our proposed test, the victims would not have had CVRA rights the first moment that the FBI became aware of Epstein’s possible commission of sex offenses. But after the FBI developed substantial evidence of those sex offenses, identified victims of those offenses, and presented the case to the appropriate U.S. Attorney's Office for prosecution, CVRA rights would have attached. Accordingly, the FBI would have been required to notify the identified victims of their rights under the CVRA (as well as under the VRRA). From that point forward in the case, the victims would have had CVRA rights, such as the right to fair treatment and the right to confer with prosecutors. In this case, the victims would have had the right to confer with prosecutors about the nonprosecution agreement that they ultimately reached with Epstein. 1°? C. CURRENT DEPARTMENT POLICY ON PRE-CHARGING RIGHTS One objection that might be made to the formulation offered above is that it might unduly burden federal law enforcement officers and prosecutors, who would need to make judgment calls about when an investigation has coalesced to the point where "victims" are in existence, "substantial evidence" has been collected, and notice of rights has to be provided. Any such objection would be ill-founded, though, as it does not appear that implementing such an approach would be difficult. 7° Presumably the Justice Department has already been providing such rights in at least Texas, Louisiana, and Mississippi to comply with the Fifth [*95] Circuit's 2008 ruling in In Re Dean, which held that the CVRA extends rights to victims before defendants are charged. 7°! We have not seen any reports that providing the rights has been difficult. Perhaps the reason for the lack of any reported difficulty is that the Department's current policy on crime victims' rights already requires notices to victims during investigations. The Justice Department has promulgated the Attorney General Guidelines for Victim and Witness Assistance, the latest edition of which is from May 2012. The Guidelines discuss crime victims’ rights under both the CVRA and the earlier VRRA. Because of the OLC memorandum discussed above, the Guidelines limit CVRA 195 See Probable Cause Affidavit, Palm Beach Police Department: Police Case No. 05-368(1) (May 1, 2006), available at http://goo.gl/fAPFw5; see also Statement of Undisputed Facts, Epstein v. Rothstein, No. 50 2009 CA 040800XXXXMBAG (Fla. Cir. Ct. Sept. 22, 2010), available at hitp:-//goo.gl/DzMbe8. 196 See supra notes 178-95 and accompanying text as well as infra Part IV.D. 197 See 18 U.S.C.882422(b), 2423(b), (e) (2012). 198 A more substantial summary of the case is available in case filings. See Jane Doe Motion, supra note 40. 199 See supra Part II. 200 This Article does not discuss mass victim cases in which notice needs to be provided to hundreds of victims. But in such situations, the CVRA already provides for "reasonable" alternative procedures. /8 U.S.C. § 3771(d)(2) (2012). The Department of Justice, for example, has used websites to provide notice in terrorism cases to large numbers of victims. See, e.g., United States v. Ingrassia, No. CR-04-0455ADSJO, 2005 WL 2875220, at 4 (E.D.N.Y. Sept. 7, 2005); Criminal Division's Victim Notification Program, U.S. Dep't of Justice, hittp://goo.gl/6H6IEk (last visited Dec. 4, 2013). 201 527 F.3d 391 (Sth Cir. 2008). DAVID SCHOEN

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Related Documents (6)

House OversightUnknown

FBI investigation of Jeffrey Epstein in 2006 and subsequent non‑prosecution agreement

FBI investigation of Jeffrey Epstein in 2006 and subsequent non‑prosecution agreement The passage confirms that Palm Beach police referred Epstein to the FBI in 2006, that the FBI found the allegations credible, and that the case was presented to the U.S. Attorney’s Office, leading to a negotiated non‑prosecution agreement. These details provide concrete leads—dates, agencies, and procedural steps—that merit follow‑up to uncover why a prosecution was not pursued and whether victims’ rights were violated. Key insights: Palm Beach Police Department asked the FBI to investigate Epstein for federal sex offenses in 2006.; FBI determined the allegations were credible and forwarded the case to the Southern District of Florida U.S. Attorney’s Office.; In 2007 the U.S. Attorney’s Office entered negotiations with Epstein’s counsel, resulting in a non‑prosecution agreement.

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The passage outlines a legal argument that the federal Crime Victims' Rights Act (CVRA) should apply before criminal charges are filed, using the high‑profile Jeffrey Epstein case as an illustration. The DOJ’s Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) issued a 2011 memo limiting CVRA rights to post‑charging sta Sen. Jon Kyl publicly objected to the OLC memo, asserting CVRA rights attach during investigations

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The document contains multiple concrete leads that, if verified, tie a roster of powerful individuals—including Prince Andrew, Donald Trump, Bill Clinton, Henry Kissinger, Ted Kennedy, and others—to J Alfredo Rodriguez possessed a bound notebook containing names, addresses, and phone numbers of dozen Rodriguez attempted to sell this notebook to an undercover FBI operative for $50,000, indicating p

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Epstein Investigation Files Reveal Potential High‑Level Collusion, Suppressed Evidence, and Questionable Plea Deal The document contains multiple concrete leads that, if verified, tie a roster of powerful individuals—including Prince Andrew, Donald Trump, Bill Clinton, Henry Kissinger, Ted Kennedy, and others—to Jeffrey Epstein’s illegal activities or to the suppression of evidence. It also details alleged misconduct by the Palm Beach State Attorney’s Office, the involvement of high‑ranking lawyers (Dershowitz, Starr, Lefkowitz) in shaping a non‑prosecution agreement, and a possible extortion scheme by former Epstein employee Alfredo Rodriguez. These points suggest actionable investigative steps (e.g., subpoenaing Rodriguez’s notebook, tracing the alleged $50,000 payment, reviewing the non‑prosecution agreement, interviewing the listed high‑profile contacts). The controversy is extreme, the information is largely unpublished in this detail, and it implicates senior officials and political figures, meeting the criteria for a high‑impact lead. Key insights: Alfredo Rodriguez possessed a bound notebook containing names, addresses, and phone numbers of dozens of high‑profile individuals (Kissinger, Jagger, Hoffmann, Koch, Ted Kennedy, Donald Trump, Bill Clinton, Ehud Barak).; Rodriguez attempted to sell this notebook to an undercover FBI operative for $50,000, indicating possible extortion and obstruction of justice.; State Attorney Barry Krischer negotiated a non‑prosecution agreement (NPA) that granted immunity to co‑conspirators, including Sarah Kellen and Nadia Marcinkova, while limiting charges against Epstein.

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Legal analysis of DOJ grand jury subpoena policy and CVRA victim rights applied to Epstein case

Legal analysis of DOJ grand jury subpoena policy and CVRA victim rights applied to Epstein case The passage provides a doctrinal discussion of how victim rights under the CVRA could be interpreted in federal investigations, using the Epstein case as an illustrative example. It does not reveal new facts, transactions, or undisclosed actors, and offers limited actionable leads for investigation. Key insights: Defines DOJ "target" as a putative defendant with substantial evidence.; Outlines criteria for CVRA victim rights to attach in federal investigations.; Applies the test to Jeffrey Epstein’s alleged abuse, noting victims lacked CVRA rights before federal awareness.

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