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efta-efta02112818DOJ Data Set 10CorrespondenceEFTA Document EFTA02112818
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EFTA DisclosureText extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
To:
Joseph Thakuria
Cc:
Rich Kahn
From:
Sent
Mon 2/24/2014 8:41:32 PM
Subject
Re: Jeffrey Epstein
done! thanks, Lesley
On Feb 24, 2014, at 3:38 PM, Joseph Thakuria
wrote:
Hi Lesley and Rich,
Lesley, can you forward the following info to Jeffrey?
So when I sent the initial invoice i didn't have the actual whole genome costs through
Illumina which are $9500 for a normal turn around time and $11,400 for "rapid
turn around time". The rapid turn around time isn't necessary in Jeffrey's case.
And, in my opinion, if the budget is only $5000, I think the most bang for his buck
(and this is what I would do for myself with only $5000 to spend) is to get an
cxome done. I should be able to get this through Ambry and through the same
research protocol well be suing for the YPO study participants for $1000. I would
then use the remainder to purchase genome analyses tools (there won't be enough
for any servers) to perform secondary analyses on the exome.
The exome only represents around 1.5% of the genome - but this is the medically most
important part of the genome (at least given our current knowledge) and
represents all the coding regions in all our 20,000+ genes.
If this sounds good to Jeffrey, I'll produce a final budget before the end of the week that
specifies which of the tools we'll be able to get with the remaining $4000. (I need
to finish pricing and tallying up features among the 61 listed to determine which
onc(s) will get.
This won't of course cover any cellular work or other items in the full invoice but I would
still recommend moving at least some fibroblast cell lines aliquots from the PGP to
our new study so we can work on those when funding from other sources is
available.
I would also just throw out there for Jeffrey's consideration that the same ambitious
protocol for a stripped down clinical next generation DNA sequencing laboratory
could be pursued with a similar budget on the commercial side - and I've already
been in discussion with others about funding this effort. Having followed this space
since 2005 I can say the timing is very good for this type of business right now.
Again, it hasn't even been more than a year that this technology has transitioned
into clinical care. So if this is something Jeffrey would be interested in pursuing as
an investor with an equity stake, rather than as a philanthropic grant for academic
research, that would be another route for going ahead with the full project that he
may be interested in discussing further.
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EFTA02112818
Rich, I'll leave it to you on how you'd like to handle the $5000 invoice. I could receive this
as a lump sum and account for how it is spent. I would expect all of it to be used
up before the end of the summer. We can also arrange it so that as the various
vendors (sequencing and software) provide invoices, your office pays them
directly. Either way is fine with me. I don't have a preference.
Thanks and let me know if I can provide any clarifications. Again, I'll follow up with an
invoice capped at $5K before the end of the week (assuming you agree with the
above).
Joe Thakuria
On Fri, Feb 21, 2014 at 6:34 PM,
wrote:
Hello Joe. I have Jeffrey's accountant on this email as well, Rich Kahn . Jeffrey
has told Rich he would like to do a $5000 genetic work up done for the time
being. Could you coordinate with Rich regarding payment/next steps?
Thank you,
Sent from my iPhone
EFTA_R1_00735720
EFTA02112819
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