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Allegations that Federal Grand Jury Subpoenas Violate Jeffrey Epstein's 2007 Non‑Prosecution Agreement
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kaggle-ho-012132House Oversight

Allegations that Federal Grand Jury Subpoenas Violate Jeffrey Epstein's 2007 Non‑Prosecution Agreement

Allegations that Federal Grand Jury Subpoenas Violate Jeffrey Epstein's 2007 Non‑Prosecution Agreement The passage outlines a potential breach of a 2007 Non‑Prosecution Agreement (NPA) by the U.S. Attorney’s Office (USAO) and federal grand jury, suggesting a procedural misstep that could be pursued for legal challenge. While it references high‑profile actors (Jeffrey Epstein, USAO, federal prosecutors), the claim is already part of publicly known litigation and offers limited new factual detail, resulting in moderate investigative value but low novelty. Key insights: Epstein entered a Non‑Prosecution Agreement on Sept. 24, 2007 with the USAO.; The NPA stipulated that pending federal grand jury subpoenas would be held in abeyance unless the agreement was violated.; A new grand jury subpoena in New York is alleged to breach the NPA.

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House Oversight
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kaggle-ho-012132
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Summary

Allegations that Federal Grand Jury Subpoenas Violate Jeffrey Epstein's 2007 Non‑Prosecution Agreement The passage outlines a potential breach of a 2007 Non‑Prosecution Agreement (NPA) by the U.S. Attorney’s Office (USAO) and federal grand jury, suggesting a procedural misstep that could be pursued for legal challenge. While it references high‑profile actors (Jeffrey Epstein, USAO, federal prosecutors), the claim is already part of publicly known litigation and offers limited new factual detail, resulting in moderate investigative value but low novelty. Key insights: Epstein entered a Non‑Prosecution Agreement on Sept. 24, 2007 with the USAO.; The NPA stipulated that pending federal grand jury subpoenas would be held in abeyance unless the agreement was violated.; A new grand jury subpoena in New York is alleged to breach the NPA.

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kagglehouse-oversightmedium-importancenon‑prosecution-agreementgrand-juryfederal-prosecutionjeffrey-epsteinusao

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KIRKLAND & ELLIS LLP John Roth, Esq. June 19, 2008 Page 3 prosecution as a result of Mr. Epstein's having entered into the September 24, 2007 Non Prosecution Agreement with the USAO. Notably, the Non Prosecution Agreement contains the following agreed condition: Further, upon execution of this agreement and a plea agreement with the State Attorney’s Office, the federal Grand Jury investigation will be suspended, and all pending federal Grand Jury subpoenas will be held in abeyance unless and until the defendant violates any term of this agreement. The defendant likewise agrees to withdraw his pending motion to intervene and to quash certain grand jury subpoenas. See Tab 21, September 24, 2007 Non Prosecution Agreement. It also guarantees that persons identified in the Grand Jury subpoena such and Leslie Groff and others will not be prosecuted. The new Grand Jury subpoena clearly violates the Non- Prosecution Agreement. Although Mr. Epstein has exercised his rights to appeal to the Department of Justice with the full consent and knowledge of the USAO, he has not breached the Agreement. The re-commencing of the Grand Jury is in violation of the Agreement. But further, the new investigation, which features a wide-ranging, fishing-expedition type to search in New York does nothing to satisfy the very essential elements of federal statutes that are lacking despite the intensity of an over two-year investigation in the Palm Beach area. Absent evidence of Internet luring, inducements while using the phone, travel for the purpose, fraud or coercion, the subject of the New York investigation is as lacking in the essential basis for converting a state case into a federal case as is the remainder of the Florida investigation. The reaching out to New York to fill the void emanating from the failures of the Florida investigation compellingly demonstrates the misuse of federal resources in an overzealous, over- personalized, selective and extraordinary attempt to expand federal law to where it is has never gone. This last-ditch attempt by Ms. Villafana reinforces our belief that the USAO does not have facts that, without distortion, would justify a prosecution of Mr. Epstein. In view of the prosecution’s often-verbalized desire to punish Mr. Epstein, we believe that the prosecution summary suffers from critical inaccuracies and aggregates the expected testimony of witnesses so as to reach a conclusion of guilt. Our contention is reinforced by the fact that key prosecution witnesses have provided evidence and testimony that directly undermines the prosecution’s misleading and inaccurate summary of its case. Indeed, we now have received statements from three of the principal accusers (through a state criminal deposition), (through a federal FBJ-USAO sworn and transcribed interview), and [MA (through a defense—generated sworn transcribed interview). Each of these witnesses categorically denies each essential element that the prosecution will have to prove in order to convert this quintessential state-law case into a federal matter.

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Allegations that Federal Grand Jury Subpoenas Violate Jeffrey Epstein's 2007 Non‑Prosecution Agreement

The passage outlines a potential breach of a 2007 Non‑Prosecution Agreement (NPA) by the U.S. Attorney’s Office (USAO) and federal grand jury, suggesting a procedural misstep that could be pursued for Epstein entered a Non‑Prosecution Agreement on Sept. 24, 2007 with the USAO. The NPA stipulated that pending federal grand jury subpoenas would be held in abeyance unless the ag A new grand jury subp

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