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Extracted Text (OCR)
Case 22-1426, Document 77, 342 3536038, Page244 of 258
Case 1:20-cr-00330-AJN Document 204-3 Filed 04/16/21 Page 242 of 348
her a victim for purposes of the federal charges, and continued to treat her as a victim because she
wanted “to go above and beyond in terms of caring for the victims.”*!°
E. December 19, 2007: Acosta Advises the Defense That the USAO Will Defer to
the State Attorney the Decision Whether to Notify Victims of the State Plea
Hearing, but the USAO Would Notify Them of the Federal Resolution, “as
Required by Law”
On December 11, 2007, Starr transmitted to Acosta two lengthy submissions authored by
Lefkowitz presenting substantive challenges to the NPA and to “the background and conduct of
the investigation” into Epstein. Regarding issues relevant to victim notification, in his transmittal
letter, Starr asserted that the “latest episodes involving [§] 2255 notification to the alleged victims
put illustratively in bold relief our concerns that the ends of justice, time and time again, are not
being served.” By way of example, Starr complained the government had recently inappropriately
provided “oral notification of the victim notification letter” to one girl’s attorney, even though it
was clear from the girl’s recorded FBI interview that she “did not in any manner view herself as a
victim.”
In his submissions, Lefkowitz argued that the government was not required to notify
victims of the § 2255 provision:
Villafafia’s decision to utilize a civil remedy statute in the place of
a restitution fund for the alleged victims eliminates the notification
requirement under the Justice for All Act of 2004, a federal law that
requires federal authorities to notify victims as to any available
restitution, not of any potential civil remedies. Despite this fact,
[she] proposed a Victims Notification letter to be sent to the alleged
federal victims.
Lefkowitz also argued that a victim trust fund would provide a more appropriate
mechanism for compensating the victims than the government’s proposed use of 18 U.S.C. § 2255,
and a trust fund would not violate Epstein’s due process rights. Lefkowitz took issue with the
government’s “assertion” that the USAO was obligated to send a victim notification letter to the
alleged victims, or even that it was appropriate for the USAO to do so. Lefkowitz further argued
that the government misinterpreted both the CVRA and the VRRA, because neither applied to a
public, state court proceeding involving the entry of a plea on state charges.
In a letter from Villafafia to Lefkowitz, responding to his allegations that she had
committed misconduct, she specifically addressed the “false” allegations that the government had
318 As noted previously, in April 2007, this victim gave a video-recorded interview to the FBI that was favorable
to Epstein. Villafafia told OPR she was instructed by either Sloman or Acosta “not to consider [this individual] as a
victim for purposes of the NPA because she was not someone whom the Office was prepare[d] to include in” a federal
charging document. Accordingly, the victim who became “Jane Doe #2” was not included on the victim list ultimately
furnished to the defense. The attorney who was representing this victim at the time of her FBI interview was paid by
Epstein, and she subsequently obtained different counsel.
216
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Extracted Information
Phone Numbers
Document Details
| Filename | DOJ-OGR-00021416.jpg |
| File Size | 899.5 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 95.3% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 3,368 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-03 20:12:24.192785 |