Skip to main content
Skip to content

Duplicate Document

This document appears to be a copy. The original version is:

Deferred Prosecution Agreement Dispute Over Minor Procurement Charge in Epstein Case
Case File
kaggle-ho-012176House Oversight

Deferred Prosecution Agreement Dispute Over Minor Procurement Charge in Epstein Case

Deferred Prosecution Agreement Dispute Over Minor Procurement Charge in Epstein Case The passage reveals internal conflicts between the defense, state prosecutors, and the State Department of Florida (SDFL) regarding the specific charge to be included in Epstein's Deferred Prosecution Agreement, including references to a threatened 53‑page indictment and a missed appeal to Assistant Attorney General Alice Fisher. While it names high‑profile actors (Jeffrey Epstein, AAG Fisher) and suggests possible procedural obstruction, it lacks concrete evidence of wrongdoing, financial flows, or direct misconduct, limiting its immediate investigative utility. Key insights: Disagreement over whether Epstein should be charged with 'procurement of minors' (registrable) or 'solicitation of minors' (non‑registrable).; SDFL allegedly failed to provide factual allegations needed for a registrable offense despite multiple requests.; Defense faced a deadline threatening a 53‑page indictment identifying 40 minors and a potential 188‑month sentence.

Date
Unknown
Source
House Oversight
Reference
kaggle-ho-012176
Pages
1
Persons
12
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

Deferred Prosecution Agreement Dispute Over Minor Procurement Charge in Epstein Case The passage reveals internal conflicts between the defense, state prosecutors, and the State Department of Florida (SDFL) regarding the specific charge to be included in Epstein's Deferred Prosecution Agreement, including references to a threatened 53‑page indictment and a missed appeal to Assistant Attorney General Alice Fisher. While it names high‑profile actors (Jeffrey Epstein, AAG Fisher) and suggests possible procedural obstruction, it lacks concrete evidence of wrongdoing, financial flows, or direct misconduct, limiting its immediate investigative utility. Key insights: Disagreement over whether Epstein should be charged with 'procurement of minors' (registrable) or 'solicitation of minors' (non‑registrable).; SDFL allegedly failed to provide factual allegations needed for a registrable offense despite multiple requests.; Defense faced a deadline threatening a 53‑page indictment identifying 40 minors and a potential 188‑month sentence.

Persons Referenced (12)

Paula Epstein

LLP describes the additional charge to which Mr. Epstein is required to plead guilty under the Deferred Pr

Jeffrey H. Sloman

s failed to do so without any explanation. e Mr. Sloman refuses to provide the requested factual allegati

Andrew Oosterbaan

2007. At the September 7, 2007 meeting, with Drew Oosterbaan in attendance, the government dismissed the defen

Edward Jay Epstein

LLP describes the additional charge to which Mr. Epstein is required to plead guilty under the Deferred Pr

Facilities Assistant

or Mr. Epstein to comply. 5, WAIVER OF APPEAL TO ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL FISHER. Mr. Sloman’s Letter: «

Marie Villafana

it is the offense which, over and over again, Ms. Villafana insisted upon including in the Deferred Prosecuti

Ilan Epstein

LLP describes the additional charge to which Mr. Epstein is required to plead guilty under the Deferred Pr

Larry Page

t or the defense would face an already-drafted 53-page indictment, purportedly identifying 40 minors, wi

Alice Fisher

e Assistant Attorney General of the United States Alice Fisher” and “you chose to forego an appeal to AAG Fisher

Jeffrey Epstein

LLP describes the additional charge to which Mr. Epstein is required to plead guilty under the Deferred Pr

Alexander Acosta

eal to AAG Fisher.” Id., p. 2. The Truth: e Mr. Acosta tolled an August 17 deadline, acknowledging that

Mark Epstein

LLP describes the additional charge to which Mr. Epstein is required to plead guilty under the Deferred Pr

Tags

kagglehouse-oversightmedium-importancedeferred-prosecutionsex-traffickinglegal-procedureprosecutorial-conductjeffrey-epstein

Ask AI About This Document

0Share
PostReddit
Review This Document

Extracted Text (OCR)

EFTA Disclosure
Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
KIRKLAND & ELLIS LLP describes the additional charge to which Mr. Epstein is required to plead guilty under the Deferred Prosecution Agreement as “procurement of minors to engage in prostitution” or “solicitation of minors to engage in prostitution.” The former is an offense for which Mr. Epstein would be required to register, but one for which the state has no evidence to charge Mr. Epstein and the SDFL refuses or is unable to provide evidence that it claims it has. The latter requires no registration, but it is the offense which, over and over again, Ms. Villafana insisted upon including in the Deferred Prosecution Agreement, and is one which the State believes is appropriate. The inconsistency between the description of the offense required by the SDFL, the elements of an offense that can be justified on the facts of this case and the SDFL’s requirement that the offense be a registrable one has created substantial confusion. o Asa result of this confusion, in December 2007, both the defense and the state requested that the SDFL provide the factual allegations to enable Mr. Epstein and the State to create a truthful factual recitation of a registrable offense required by the Deferred Prosecution Agreement, but, to date, the SDFL has failed to do so without any explanation. e Mr. Sloman refuses to provide the requested factual allegations, which the State cannot furnish, and now demands a two week deadline to comply. Thus Mr. Sloman has unreasonably imposed a deadline with which he himself has made it impossible for Mr. Epstein to comply. 5, WAIVER OF APPEAL TO ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL FISHER. Mr. Sloman’s Letter: « “[T]he SDFL provided you with 30 days to appeal the decision to the Assistant Attorney General of the United States Alice Fisher” and “you chose to forego an appeal to AAG Fisher.” Id., p. 2. The Truth: e Mr. Acosta tolled an August 17 deadline, acknowledging that there were “serious issues” about the case that needed to be discussed, and scheduled a meeting with the defense for September 7, 2007. At the September 7, 2007 meeting, with Drew Oosterbaan in attendance, the government dismissed the defense’s objections and set a September 21, 2007 deadline to finalize a non-prosecution agreement or the defense would face an already-drafted 53-page indictment, purportedly identifying 40 minors, with a guideline range of 188 months. e Facing Ms. Villafana’s threatened draconian indictment, without the claimed offer of the right to raise objections in an appeal to AAG Fisher, the defense chose to negotiate an

Related Documents (6)

House OversightFinancial RecordNov 11, 2025

Attorney‑Generated Oversight Memo Accuses DOJ Prosecutors of Misconduct, Conflict of Interest, and Political Motives in Jeffrey Epstein Federal Case

The document provides a detailed, contemporaneous account of alleged DOJ misconduct—including unauthorized subpoenas, misrepresentations to the court, undisclosed financial incentives to witnesses, ex Alleged illegal re‑issuance of a grand‑jury subpoena after a Non‑Prosecution Agreement (NPA) was sig Claims that AUSA Villafana disclosed confidential case details to the New York Times and leaked in

85p
House OversightOtherNov 11, 2025

Deferred Prosecution Agreement Dispute Over Minor Procurement Charge in Epstein Case

The passage reveals internal conflicts between the defense, state prosecutors, and the State Department of Florida (SDFL) regarding the specific charge to be included in Epstein's Deferred Prosecution Disagreement over whether Epstein should be charged with 'procurement of minors' (registrable) or 's SDFL allegedly failed to provide factual allegations needed for a registrable offense despite mult

1p
House OversightUnknown

House Oversight Document IMAGES-001-HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_012197

House Oversight Document IMAGES-001-HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_012197 The file contains only a title and no substantive content, providing no leads, names, dates, or allegations to investigate.

1p
House OversightUnknown

Attorney‑Generated Oversight Memo Accuses DOJ Prosecutors of Misconduct, Conflict of Interest, and Political Motives in Jeffrey Epstein Federal Case

Attorney‑Generated Oversight Memo Accuses DOJ Prosecutors of Misconduct, Conflict of Interest, and Political Motives in Jeffrey Epstein Federal Case The document provides a detailed, contemporaneous account of alleged DOJ misconduct—including unauthorized subpoenas, misrepresentations to the court, undisclosed financial incentives to witnesses, ex‑parte communications, and leaks to the press—while naming senior DOJ officials (Deputy Attorney General Mark Filip, Assistant U.S. Attorneys Marie Villafana and Jeffrey Sloman) and linking the case to former President Bill Clinton’s notoriety. These allegations, if substantiated, could expose abuse of prosecutorial discretion, potential violations of DOJ ethics rules, and political influence, making it a strong investigative lead. However, much of the material is defensive in nature and repeats known procedural complaints, limiting its novelty and concrete evidentiary hooks. Key insights: Alleged illegal re‑issuance of a grand‑jury subpoena after a Non‑Prosecution Agreement (NPA) was signed (July 1 2008 subpoena).; Claims that AUSA Villafana disclosed confidential case details to the New York Times and leaked information to reporter Landon Thomas.; Accusations that Villafana attempted to appoint a personal friend of her live‑in boyfriend as attorney‑representative for victims, suggesting a conflict of interest.

1p
House OversightOtherNov 11, 2025

Alleged USAO Leaks and Victim Notification Scheme in Epstein Non‑Prosecution Agreement

The passage describes internal communications showing a U.S. Attorney’s Office (USAO) allegedly coordinating victim‑notification letters, encouraging civil suits, and leaking confidential case details Nov 27‑28 2007 emails/letters show USAO staff (Sloman, Villafana) preparing victim‑notification lett Letter cites the “Justice for All Act of 2004,” later deemed inapplicable, and mischaracterizes Ep

1p
OtherUnknown

Case 9:08-cv-80736-KAM Document 329 Entered on FLSD Docket 06/23/2015 Page 1 of 2

DOJ EFTA Data Set 10 document EFTA01325031

20p

Forum Discussions

This document was digitized, indexed, and cross-referenced with 1,500+ persons in the Epstein files. 100% free, ad-free, and independent.

Support This ProjectSupported by 1,550+ people worldwide
Annotations powered by Hypothesis. Select any text on this page to annotate or highlight it.