DOJ-OGR-00021233.jpg
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Case 22-1426, Document aay at eae 3536038, Page61 of 258
Case 1:20-cr-00330-AJN Document 204-3 Filed 04/16/21 Page 59 of 348
for meetings was to cause delay, but “the people in my office either couldn’t see that or didn’t
want to see that,” perhaps because of “their lack of experience with these types of cases” or a
misguided belief “that [Epstein’s] attorneys would not engage in this behavior.” Villafafia told
OPR that she “could not seem to get [her supervisors] to understand the seriousness of Epstein’s
behavior and the fact that he was probably continuing to commit the behavior, and that there was
a need to move with necessary speed.” Nonetheless, Villafafia followed the guidance of her
immediate supervisor and did not send the email.
Like Lourie, Menchel told OPR that he believed meeting with defense counsel was good
practice. Menchel told OPR that he saw “no downside” to hearing the defense point of view.
Defense counsel might make a persuasive point “that’s actually going to change our mind,” or
alternatively, present arguments the defense would inevitably raise if the case went forward, and
Menchel believed it would be to the USAO’s advantage to learn about such arguments in advance.
Menchel also told OPR that he did not recall Villafafia ever articulating a concern that Epstein was
continuing to offend, and in Menchel’s view, Epstein was “already under a microscope, at least in
Florida,” and it would have been “the height of stupidity” for Epstein to continue to offend in those
circumstances.
E, June 2007: Villafafia Supplements the Prosecution Memorandum
While Villafafia’s supervisors were considering whether to go forward with the proposed
charges, Villafafia took additional steps to support them. On June 14, 2007, she supplemented the
prosecution memorandum with an addendum addressing “credibility concerns” relating to one of
the victims. In the email transmitting the addendum to Lourie, Menchel, Sloman, and her
immediate supervisor, Villafafia reported, “another Jane Doe has been identified and interviewed,”
and the “different strategies” about how to structure the charges left Villafafia unsure whether “to
make... changes now or wait until we have received approval of the current charging strategy.”
The addendum itself related to a particular victim referred to as the minor who “saw Epstein most
frequently” and who had allegedly engaged in sexual activity with both Epstein and an Epstein
assistant. In the addendum, Villafafia identified documents she had found corroborating four
separate statements made by this victim.
Villafafia told OPR that the only victim about whom any supervisor ever articulated
specific credibility issues was the victim discussed in the addendum. Lourie told OPR that he had
no specific recollection of the addendum, but it was “reasonable” to assume that the addendum
addressed one particular victim because no one had identified specific concerns relating to any
other victim. Villafafia’s immediate supervisor similarly told OPR that to her recollection, the
discussions about credibility issues were generic rather than tied to specific victims.
F. The June 26, 2007 Meeting with Defense Counsel
Menchel agreed to meet with defense counsel on June 26, 2007, communicating directly
with Sanchez about the arrangements. At Menchel’s instruction, on June 18, 2007, Villafafia sent
a letter to defense counsel identifying what she described as “the statutes under consideration.”°!
a Villafafia sent copies of this letter to both Menchel and Sanchez. Villafafia told OPR that she objected to
sending this information to the defense. Although Menchel did not recall directing Villafafia to send the letter to
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Extracted Information
Document Details
| Filename | DOJ-OGR-00021233.jpg |
| File Size | 1003.0 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 94.4% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 3,724 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-03 20:09:02.043574 |