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d-34647House OversightOther

Local report alleges sealed deal allowed Jeffrey Epstein to avoid federal prosecution, citing involvement of high‑profile lawyers and possible pros...

The passage mentions a sealed agreement that shielded Epstein from federal charges, names prominent legal figures (Alan Dershowitz, Kenneth Starr, former NACL president), and suggests a back‑room deal Sealed agreement reportedly allowed Epstein to avoid federal prosecution in exchange for a plea to s Attorney Michael McCabe (now securities litigator) comments on the rarity of the procedure. High‑p

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #013417
Pages
1
Persons
5
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage mentions a sealed agreement that shielded Epstein from federal charges, names prominent legal figures (Alan Dershowitz, Kenneth Starr, former NACL president), and suggests a back‑room deal Sealed agreement reportedly allowed Epstein to avoid federal prosecution in exchange for a plea to s Attorney Michael McCabe (now securities litigator) comments on the rarity of the procedure. High‑p

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jeffrey-epsteinprosecutorial-misconductsealed-agreementhighprofile-attorneyslegal-strategyfinancial-flow-implied-paymentforeign-influence-potential-inpalm-beach-countylegal-exposuremoderate-importancehouse-oversight

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Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
Local News: West Palm Beach, Palm Beach County, Martin & St. Lucie Counties | The Palm Beach Post "It's very, very rare. I've never seen or heard of the procedure that was set up here." said McCabe, who has no involvement in any Epstein litigation and is now a securities litigation attorney. "He's essentially avoiding federal prosecution because he can afford to pay that many lawyers to help those victims review their cases.... If a person has no money he couldn't be able to strike a deal like this and avoid federal prosecution.” The back-room deal with federal prosecutors all the more interesting in light of the legal heavyweights who have worked for Epstein, including Harvard professor Alan Dershowitz and Kenneth Starr of Clinton impeachment fame. Lefcourt is a past president of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers. Epstein's local defense attorney, Jack Goldberger, issued a statement Friday saying he had fought the release of the sealed agreement to protect the third parties named there. "Mr. Epstein has fully abided by all of its terms and conditions. He is looking forward to putting this difficult period in his life behind him. He is continuing his long standing history of science philanthropy...” Epstein ended up avoiding federal charges, and pleaded guilty in state court to felony solicitation of prostitution and procuring a person under the age of 18 for prostitution. In July 2008, he was sentenced to 18 months in jail, and later allowed out up to six days a week on work release. Epstein left the jail in late July 2009 after serving not quite 13 months of the sentence, having earned gain time for good behavior. Palm Beach Police began investigating the "international moneyman of mystery,” as the New York magazine dubbed him, after they received a complaint from a relative of a 14-year-old girl who had given Epstein a naked massage at his home on the Intracoastal Waterway. Police sought and found in poor neighborhoods a variety of tall, thin, model-like young women, who told stories of begin recruiting, then going to Epstein's home and massaging and stimulating him. They walked away with between $200 and $1,000. The investigation triggered tensions between police and prosecutors, with then-Chief Michael Reiter saying in a May 2006 letter to then-State Attorney Barry Krischer that the chief prosecutor should disqualify himself. "| continue to find your office's treatment of these cases highly unusual,” Reiter wrote. He then asked for and got the federal investigation that ended in the sealed deal. "The Jeffrey Epstein matter was an experience of what a many-million-dollar defense can accomplish," Reiter told the Palm Beach Daily News upon his retirement. http://www.palmbeachpost.com/pbcwest/content/local_news/epaper/2009/09/18/0918epstein.html 4/6/11 1:38 PM Nea Rick Heidy Vero Debra Robin Audrey Gabriel Jeffrey Katie Jodie Recent Activity [ Login | You need to be logged into Facebook to see your friends’ activity Cerabino: Florida House GOP's ‘uterus’ ban: A free-speech battle is born 1,518 people shared this. Foreclosure crisis: Fed-up judges crack ‘ down disorder in the courts 207 people shared this. | | Facebook social plugin POSTPIX » Latest news photos a e.. Aa 4 Massive earthquake and tsunami devastate Japan MAGES OF WAR in Iraq and Afghanistan Jeri Mucio Sworn in as Severe weather in Central, South Florida Mayor Do Your Feet Hurt? SELBY SHOES 561-969-9369 We'LI| Put Wow! Into Your Windows IN THE SHADE INC 772-223-1212 Eree Hearing Test! BELTONE 561-948-3049 Gourmet Meat in Delray MARIO'S MEATS 561-499-7019 Do Your Feet Hurt? SELBY SHOES 561-969-9369 Historic Archive (1897 - 1988) Search historic editions of The Palm Beach Post, Palm Beach Daily News, Miami News and more. It's free! Page 2 of 3

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Phone561-499-7019
Phone561-948-3049
Phone561-969-9369
Phone772-223-1212
URLhttp://www.palmbeachpost.com/pbcwest/content/local_news/epaper/2009/09/18/0918epstein.html

Related Documents (6)

House OversightUnknown

Local report alleges sealed deal allowed Jeffrey Epstein to avoid federal prosecution, citing involvement of high‑profile lawyers and possible prosecutorial misconduct

Local report alleges sealed deal allowed Jeffrey Epstein to avoid federal prosecution, citing involvement of high‑profile lawyers and possible prosecutorial misconduct The passage mentions a sealed agreement that shielded Epstein from federal charges, names prominent legal figures (Alan Dershowitz, Kenneth Starr, former NACL president), and suggests a back‑room deal facilitated by the Palm Beach police chief and state attorney. While many details are already public, the claim of a specific sealed deal and the involvement of senior prosecutors provide a concrete lead for further document requests and interviews. Key insights: Sealed agreement reportedly allowed Epstein to avoid federal prosecution in exchange for a plea to state charges.; Attorney Michael McCabe (now securities litigator) comments on the rarity of the procedure.; High‑profile defense attorneys Alan Dershowitz and Kenneth Starr were involved in Epstein’s legal team.

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House OversightFinancial RecordNov 11, 2025

Jeffrey Epstein non‑prosecution agreement and alleged high‑level connections revealed in multiple Palm Beach filings

The passage aggregates numerous contemporaneous reports about a secret non‑prosecution agreement that allowed billionaire Jeffrey Epstein to avoid federal charges, mentions specific federal actors (U. Sealed non‑prosecution agreement between Epstein and U.S. Attorney's Office (2007‑2008) prevented fe Agreement granted immunity to co‑conspirators Sarah Kellen, Adriana Ross, Lesley Groff, Nadia Marc

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House OversightUnknown

Jeffrey Epstein non‑prosecution agreement and alleged high‑level connections revealed in multiple Palm Beach filings

Jeffrey Epstein non‑prosecution agreement and alleged high‑level connections revealed in multiple Palm Beach filings The passage aggregates numerous contemporaneous reports about a secret non‑prosecution agreement that allowed billionaire Jeffrey Epstein to avoid federal charges, mentions specific federal actors (U.S. Attorney's Office, FBI, Assistant U.S. Attorneys), and lists a roster of powerful individuals allegedly on Epstein’s private jet (Bill Clinton, Prince Andrew, Ehud Barak, Andrés Pastrana, Lawrence Summers, Ron Burkle, Kevin Spacey, Chris Tucker). It also cites procedural irregularities, victim exclusion, and potential immunity for co‑conspirators. These details provide concrete leads – names, dates, court actions, and alleged financial flows – that merit further investigation into possible prosecutorial misconduct, quid‑pro quo arrangements, and foreign‑political influence. Key insights: Sealed non‑prosecution agreement between Epstein and U.S. Attorney's Office (2007‑2008) prevented federal charges.; Agreement granted immunity to co‑conspirators Sarah Kellen, Adriana Ross, Lesley Groff, Nadia Marcinkova.; Victims were not consulted; attorneys claim the deal is unprecedented for an individual.

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House OversightOtherNov 11, 2025

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 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

63p
House OversightOtherNov 11, 2025

NY Post seeks to unseal sealed appellate briefs in Jeffrey Epstein appeal, exposing DA and prosecutor conduct

The filing reveals a concrete dispute over sealed court documents that could shed light on why the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office and Florida prosecutors allegedly gave Jeffrey Epstein preferent NY Post filed a motion (Dec 21, 2018) to unseal appellate briefs in Epstein’s SORA appeal, requestin Manhattan DA’s office (Danny Frost, Karen Friedman‑Agnifilo) initially opposed unsealing, citing C

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House OversightSep 28, 2016

Epstein Investigation Files Reveal Potential High‑Level Collusion, Suppressed Evidence, and Questionable Plea Deal

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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