Court Order: 476
Summary
The court orders the Government to reply to the Defendant's response regarding the authentication of Government Exhibit 52 and sets a deadline for proposed redactions to motion papers. The dispute centers on whether Employee-1 can authenticate the document given that Mr. Rodriguez, a former employee, allegedly removed it from the property before Employee-1 began working for Jeffrey Epstein.
This document is from the epstein-docs Archive.
View Source CollectionPersons Referenced (8)
Related Documents (6)
Court Filing: 41
The government responds to Ghislaine Maxwell's request for disclosure of certain government witnesses 11 months prior to trial, arguing that the request is premature and without merit. The government highlights its expeditious production of discovery materials, totaling over 165,000 pages, and notes that the defendant's request is not supported by relevant case law.
Court Filing: 457
The document is a letter from the US Department of Justice to Judge Alison J. Nathan, arguing that Government Exhibit 52, a contact book belonging to Ghislaine Maxwell, is authentic and should be admitted as evidence in her trial. The Government contends that Employee-1's testimony will establish the book's authenticity and relevance to the case.
Court Filing: 491
The document is a letter from the US Attorney's Office to Judge Alison J. Nathan arguing that Government Exhibit 52, an address book, is authentic and should not be excluded from evidence. The government contends that Employee-1 can authenticate the exhibit despite not being present when it was removed from Jeffrey Epstein's property. The letter cites case law and provides analogies to support the government's position.
Court Order: 514
The court grants the government's request to file a letter motion under seal to protect witness privacy and orders the defendant, Ghislaine Maxwell, to respond by a specific deadline. The motion relates to precluding certain lines of cross-examination of government witnesses. The case is ongoing in the Southern District of New York.
Court Filing: 545
The US Government filed a letter opposing Ghislaine Maxwell's request to call victim lawyers Jack Scarola, Brad Edwards, and Robert Glassman as witnesses, arguing that their testimony is irrelevant and would compromise attorney-client privilege. The Government contends that the victims themselves have already testified and been cross-examined, making the lawyers' testimony unnecessary. The court must decide whether to allow the defendant to call these lawyers as witnesses.
Court Filing: 92
The document includes a letter from the government requesting an extension of the deadline for producing electronic discovery, which was granted by the court. It also includes a court order regarding the defendant's conditions of confinement and the government's obligations to ensure her access to legal materials.
This document was digitized, indexed, and cross-referenced with 1,400+ persons in the Epstein files. 100% free, ad-free, and independent.