DOJ-OGR-00021399.jpg
Extracted Text (OCR)
Case 22-1426, Document 77, A995 3536038, Page227 of 258
Case 1:20-cr-00330-AJN Document 204-3 Filed 04/16/21 Page 225 of 348
questions,” she wanted to “make sure that they . . . feel like they can trust me.” Villafafia directed
the FBI case agents to hand deliver the letters “as they were conducting interviews.” Villafafia
told OPR that the USAO had “no standardized way to do any victim notifications prior to” the
filing of federal charges, and therefore Villafafia did not use a template or VNS-generated letter
for content, but instead used a letter she “had created and crafted [herself] for another case.”?”’
The letters contained contact information for Villafafia, the FBI case agent, and the
Department’s Office for Victims of Crime in Washington, D.C., and itemized the CVRA rights.
The USAO letters described the case as “under investigation” and stated that the victim would be
notified “[1]f anyone is charged in connection with the investigation.” The letters stated that, in
addition to their rights under the CVRA, victims were entitled to counseling, medical services, and
potential restitution from the perpetrator, and that, upon request, the government would provide a
list of counseling and medical services.””> Lastly, the letters advised that investigators for the
defense might contact the victims and those who felt threatened or harassed should contact
Villafafia or the FBI case agent.
Although the USAO letters did not contain any language limiting CVRA rights to the post-
arrest or indictment stage, Villafafia told OPR that she did not intend for the letters to activate the
USAO’s CVRA obligations, which she believed attached only after the filing of a criminal charge.
Villafafia told OPR that she did not think that victims potentially recetving both an FBI letter and
a USAO letter would be confused about their CVRA rights because the USAO letter “was coming
with an introduction from the agents [who were hand delivering them].” Later, in the course of
the CVRA litigation, Villafafia stated that she and the investigative team “adopted an approach of
providing more notice and assistance to potential victims than the CVRA may have required, even
before the circumstances of those individuals had been fully investigated and before any charging
decisions had been made.”?”
Villafafia informed Lourie and Sloman about the letters, but the letters were not reviewed
by any of Villafafia’s supervisors, who considered such correspondence to be a non-management
task. Acosta told OPR, “I’ve had no other case where I’m even aware of victims being notified,
because I assume it all operates without it rising to management level.” Similarly, Menchel told
OPR,
27 Villafafia told OPR that she thought that “at one point,” she showed the letter to the USAO’s Victim Witness
Specialist who “said it was fine.” The USAO’s Victim Witness Specialist told OPR that because the USAO did not
file a charging document in the Epstein matter, the USAO did not obtain VNS information from the FBI and did not
assume responsibility for victim contact. The USAO’s Victim Witness Specialist had no contact with Epstein’s
victims, and OPR’s examination of VNS data revealed no USAO case number linked to the FBI’s VNS data
concerning the Epstein investigation. OPR did locate some victim contact information in the VNS relating to the
USAO’s case number associated with the Epstein-related CVRA litigation filed in July 2008.
ans Through its administration of the Crime Victims Fund, the Department’s Office for Victims of Crime
supports programs and services to help victims of crime.
28 Villafafia informed OPR that, as the USAO Project Safe Childhood Coordinator [focusing on prosecutions
of individuals who exploit children through the internet], she “treated the [Guidelines] as a floor and tried to provide
a higher standard of contact.”
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DOJ-OGR-00021399
Extracted Information
Dates
Document Details
| Filename | DOJ-OGR-00021399.jpg |
| File Size | 995.1 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 94.1% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 3,894 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-03 20:12:06.696556 |