EFTA00655447.pdf
PDF Source (No Download)
Extracted Text (OCR)
JEFFREY EPSTEIN v. SCOTT ROTHSTEIN - Vol. I
December 20, 1990
Page 1
1
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
FIFTEENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR
2
PALM BEACH COUNTY, FLORIDA
3
CASE NO. 50-2009-CA-040800-XXXX-MB-AG
4
5
6
JEFFREY EPSTEIN,
Plaintiff/Counter-Defendant,
vs.
7
8 SCOTT ROTHSTEIN, individually, and
BRADLEY J. EDWARDS, individually,
9
10
Defendants/Counter-Plaintiffs.
11
12
TRANSCRIPT OF HEARING
13
Volume 1 of 1
14
Pages 1 - 19
15
DATE:
Monday, June 5, 2013
16
TIME:
8:55 o'clock,
PLACE:
Palm Beach County Courthouse
17
205 North Dixie Highway
West Palm Beach, Florida 33401
18
BEFORE:
Honorable David Crow,
Circuit Court Judge
19
20
This cause came on to be heard at the time
and place aforesaid. The following proceedings
21 were reported by:
22
23
Roger Watford, RPR/FPR
U.S. Legal Support, Inc.
444 West Railroad Avenue
EFTA00655447
24
25
Suite 300
West Palm Beach, Florida 33401
(561) 835-0220
EFTA00655448
Page 2
1
APPEARANCES:
2 FOR THE PLAINTIFF/COUNTER-DEFENDANT:
3
LAW OFFICES OF TONJA HADDAD COLEMAN,
4
315 Southeast 7th Street
Suite 301
5
Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33301
954-467-1223
6
BY: TONJA HADDAD COLEMAN, ESQ.
7
8 FOR THE DEFENDANT/COUNTER-PLAINTIFF:
9
SEARCY, DENNEY, SCAROLA, BARNHART
& SHIPLEY, III.
10
2139 Palm Beach Lakes Boulevard
West Palm Beach, Florida 33409
11
561-686-6300
BY: JACK SCAROLA, ESQ.
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
EFTA00655449
Page 3
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
The above-styled cause came on for
hearing before the Honorable David Crow,
Circuit County Court Judge, at the Palm Beach
County Courthouse, 205 North Dixie Highway,
West Palm Beach, Florida, on June 5, 2013,
commencing at 8:55 o'clock,
., as follows:
THE COURT: Good morning. This is
Epstein versus Rothstein. Actually, this is a
status conference, as well as I think the
plaintiff filed a motion for clarification. I
read the motion. Do you want to add anything
else to the written motion?
MS. COLEMAN: No, Judge. I brought all
the case law with me, but I attached your
previous March 11th order, as well as the
subsequent May 17th order, which was the
portion with which we took issue for the
clarification.
THE COURT: I am not sure what the
clarification is. Let me just say I thought
the order was clear. Here's what it said.
It said very simply that I initially
ordered you to produce a privilege log for
anything that was an non-constitutional
privilege and you do not have to provide a
EFTA00655450
Page 4
1
privilege log which in and of itself may be
2
incriminating. I understood that that was
3
your position.
4
I expected there would be a list of
5
documents, which only was an objection based
6
on some non-constitutional privilege. What I
7
got, what was provided, was essentially,
8
although you did produce some documents,
9
substantially all the documents were objected
10
to not only on the Fifth Amendment privilege
11
but also on the basis of work product,
12
attorney/client privilege and various other
13
non-constitutional privileges.
14
We had a hearing on that, and I think I
15
asked counsel what do I do under these
16
circumstances, and I don't recall the direct
17
response, but it was not a lot of information
18
I got from you.
19
So what I did is I went back and I had
20
some of our cracker-jack legal staff here do
21
some independent research for me, and after
22
reviewing that information I understand the
23
law to be, as I set forth in my order, that a
24
blanket objection on Fifth Amendment
25
constitutional grounds is generally
EFTA00655451
Page 5
1
unacceptable, and the Courts have outlined a
2
methodology by which the Court can test the
3
legitimacy of a Fifth Amendment claim when
4
it's basically a broad brush.
5
And that methodology, as outlined in the
6
cases I cited, is that you ask for and obtain
7
an in camera privilege log, one that is not
8
provided to the other side, an in camera
9
privilege log directed to the Court alone that
10
outlines; one, the document, and provides me a
11
copy of the document; two, the privilege that
12
you are asserting, whether it be
13
constitutional or non-constitutional; and the
14
third, the basis that you feel, at least on
15
constitutional grounds, that the production,
16
for example, is, in fact, testimonial and that
17
you have a reasonable basis to believe that
18
producing the document, if it's an individual
19
or a corporation, would, in fact, incriminate
20
the client.
21
As I understand the case law, the Court
22
is then to look at that in camera production,
23
nobody gets a copy of it, I take a look at it,
24
I make a decision whether or not there is, in
25
fact, a good faith basis for a constitutional
EFTA00655452
Page 6
1
objection on Fifth Amendment grounds.
2
Also I look at the documents to determine
3
whether or not the other privileges apply, the
4
attorney/client privilege, work product
5
privilege, accountant privilege, and, if I
6
can, I make rulings based upon that internal
7
privilege log or in camera privilege log.
8
In fact, the case law goes forward from
9
there and actually says, if I can't determine
10
it from that, I can actually have an in camera
11
hearing where I can have you and your client
12
appear and produce additional information to
13
me to allow me to make that decision as to
14
whether or not the documents in good faith are
15
constitutional.
16
No one is trying to abrogate your
17
client's Fifth Amendment privilege, but there
18
has to be a method to test whether there's a
19
good-faith basis for it and to rule on the
20
other privileges, and if I need a further
21
hearing, I can have a further hearing. Mr.
22
Scarola is not a part of that. Then I make a
23
ruling.
24
And the pragmatic and practical reason
25
for that is not only to determine whether or
EFTA00655453
Page 7
1
not there is a Fifth Amendment privilege,
2
like, for example, as I understand, the
3
production of documents, the actual production
4
itself must be testimonial, not the document
5
necessarily, and there are various different
6
things I have to look at, and I recognize that
7
your client deserves, you know, the utmost
8
protection of his constitutional rights.
9
But the pragmatic reason I thought out
10
loud in my order was that, what happens then,
11
I would be able to rule on your
12
non-constitutional privileges, because at
13
trial, very simply, what can happen is, you
14
can't ask somebody at trial an attorney/client
15
privilege question, you can't ask them a work
16
product privilege question, so if the only
17
privilege remaining is, in fact, subject to
18
self-incrimination under the Fifth Amendment,
19
that can be asked of the witness on the stand,
20
and he must assert his right at the time of
21
trial, and the jury can take whatever they
22
want to from that.
23
That's the reason I set forth this
24
procedure.
sorry it wasn't clear. That's
25
the procedure i set up. But do you want me to
EFTA00655454
Page 8
1
reconsider that theory or you just didn't
2
understand what I was doing?
not sure I
3
understand what you're asking.
4
MS. COLEMAN: I understood your order,
5
but it was in direct contravention with your
6
first order, and it --
7
THE COURT: Well, the initial order
8
contemplated that there would be a subset of
9
documents which were privileged based upon
10
non-constitutional grounds that I could look
11
at and make determinations on, but the reality
12
is that they apply to all of them, so there's
13
no way I can look at the documents and make
14
determinations on work product, attorney/
15
client, accountant privilege, I am not sure of
16
all the other privileges, without looking at
17
the document, and that's what I asked and did
18
research on, to determine how I look at a
19
document that is claimed to be Fifth Amendment
20
privileges.
21
And the Federal Courts have set up a way
22
to do that because, otherwise, people would
23
just have a blanket assertion. In fact, there
24
are two Supreme Court cases I think I cited,
25
one where they said, yeah, the other one said,
EFTA00655455
Page 9
1
no, and then there's a lower court setting
2
forth a procedure to do it.
3
MS. COLEMAN: The problem with which we
4
are faced with, Judge, is this:
5
We did not assert a blanket Fifth
6
Amendment privilege. It was very specific as
7
to certain requests to which we argued. And
8
the interrogatories was the other portion of
9
which we were requesting clarification of, but
10
I will address that momentarily.
11
If the documents are provided to you,
12
even for an in camera review, the Fifth
13
Amendment privilege is waived. Respectfully,
14
Judge, hypothetically speaking, if you saw
15
something --
16
THE COURT: You mean I got it totally
17
wrong?
18
MS. COLEMAN: Judge, I am not trying to
19
say you got it totally wrong, but the case law
20
research, my case law research and the
21
research that the criminal defense attorneys
22
with whom
working, states that --
23
THE COURT: What case are you relying
24
upon? Actually, I ran this by somebody who
25
teaches this that's a colleague of mine,
EFTA00655456
Page 10
1
teaches federal prosecutors the issue. Which
2
case are you relying upon?
3
MS. COLEMAN: I am looking at Pisciotti
4
versus Stephens; 940 So.2d, 1217; Maged versus
5
Winter, 664 So.2d --
6
THE COURT: Where in your motion is it?
7
MS. COLEMAN:
on page 3 of my motion
8
for clarification.
9
THE COURT: Okay. And it's Maged versus
10
Winter?
11
MS. COLEMAN: If you turn to page 3,
12
Judge, that entire page, it discusses --
13
THE COURT: It says the production in
14
camera to the Court to determine the validity
15
of the Fifth Amendment privilege waives the
16
privilege?
17
MS. COLEMAN: It does, Judge. If you
18
would allow me to finish, I will explain to
19
you the issue.
20
THE COURT: Okay,
sorry.
21
MS. COLEMAN: Hypothetically speaking,
22
let's say the documents are given to you and
23
you see something that in and of itself would
24
constitute a reason to assert the Fifth
25
Amendment, it could possibly be deemed
EFTA00655457
Page 11
1
criminal, respectfully, this Court cannot
2
confer immunity upon my client from
3
prosecution of that.
4
In fact, I believe under the Judicial
5
Canons, you would be obligated to turn it
6
over. And we proffered this, and I did cite
7
case law in our motion for clarification in
8
which we asserted that a proffer from the
9
attorney is specific enough, and we have laid
10
it out many times.
11
THE COURT: Which case is that?
12
MS. COLEMAN: The proffer from the
13
attorney would be sufficient, ironically, it's
14
in regards to Rothstein versus Albert, which
15
is cited on page 6 of our motion. And, in
16
addition, Judge, there are cases where, if you
17
look at all the other cases to which we refer,
18
it's a realistic fear of future prosecution.
19
We have delineated in here, this is a
20
unique situation, Mr. Edwards is actively
21
seeking to overturn a non-prosecution
22
agreement between Mr. Epstein and the United
23
States government. Part of the allegations by
24
the United States government, and again of
25
course I am not saying they are true, part of
EFTA00655458
Page 12
1
the allegations to which the government was
2
referring included financial crimes.
3
As such, if any of this financial
4
information is provided to this Court and/or
5
if Mr. Edwards is successful in his quest to
6
do this, the docket is 427 entries long, it's
7
an active case, Mr. Epstein runs the risk of
8
being prosecuted for these things should there
9
be anything incriminating therein.
10
The biggest issue with which we are
11
faced, Judge, is if the mere act of producing
12
these documents or identifying these documents
13
would waive his Fifth Amendment privilege,
14
then he has lost that Fifth Amendment
15
privilege.
16
I do appreciate the concern with respect
17
to the other privileges, and I don't have an
18
answer, if I had been able to find one I would
19
have given it to you, but the risk we're faced
20
with today is that if he must lose all those
21
other privileges, accountant/client,
22
attorney/client, work product, and only be
23
permitted to assert the Fifth, then that's
24
what he is going to have to do, because I
25
don't see any way in which the client can
EFTA00655459
Page 13
1
produce the documents.
2
Again, I don't read any of these cases to
3
state that an in camera review of a privilege
4
log would not waive the Fifth Amendment
5
privilege, I don't see that in any of these
6
cases, which is why we were asking for the
7
clarification.
8
THE COURT: Okay.
going to have to
9
look at it again. This is complex stuff.
10
MS. COLEMAN: It is very complex, I don't
11
disagree.
12
THE COURT: Okay, Mr. Scarola.
13
MR. SCAROLA: I thought that I just heard
14
counsel offer to agree that the only
15
applicable privilege for purposes of this
16
proceeding would be the Fifth Amendment
17
privilege, and if that is what counsel is
18
prepared to agree to, that is an acceptable
19
stipulation.
20
That's what we have been asserting from
21
the beginning of this controversy, that it is
22
necessary for the Court to implement a
23
procedure, which the Court has very clearly
24
outlined in Your Honor's order, which would
25
allow you to make a determination with regard
EFTA00655460
Page14
1
to the validity of other privileges, even
2
assuming that the Fifth Amendment privileges
3
were to apply.
4
If opposing counsel is agreeing that they
5
will waive privileges other than the Fifth
6
Amendment privilege, in order to avoid the
7
procedure that Your Honor has outlined, that
8
is acceptable, we accept that stipulation.
9
THE COURT: I don't think you are going
10
to get it, but...
11
MS. COLEMAN: Honestly, I don't know that
12
my client can be forced into that position.
13
The bigger issue is, respectfully, again this
14
Court can't confirm immunity upon Mr. Epstein,
15
and if there's anything in those documents to
16
which a crime or a link to a crime could be
17
possibly furnished, the Court would have an
18
ethical obligation to turn it over.
19
If we could get the United States
20
government, who is a party to this lawsuit
21
with Mr. Edwards, to come in here and confirm
22
immunity upon Mr. Epstein, I am sure there
23
would be no issue with making a privilege log
24
and providing all these documents. But Mr.
25
Edwards, respectfully, has created this
EFTA00655461
Page 15
1
situation under which my client can't turn
2
over any of these documents.
3
So by actively seeking to overturn this
4
non-prosecution agreement he places my client
5
in a legitimate fear that he could be
6
prosecuted for anything that could arise out
7
of this transactional event, including any
8
alleged financial crimes, because that is what
9
the government was initially alleging.
10
THE COURT: So your position, very
11
simply, is in a civil case where there are
12
multiple privileges asserted to almost all the
13
documents there is no methodology or method by
14
which the Court can determine the validity of
15
those assertions and, therefore, Mr. Scarola
16
can't ask your client any questions?
17
MS. COLEMAN: Judge, again, I have not
18
seen a case -- I don't have an answer for
19
you. We can try to give you an answer on
20
Monday. We have a one hour special set
21
hearing.
22
THE COURT: I asked for that before I
23
thought. I didn't get a lot of help. I tried
24
to do it on my own.
25
MS. COLEMAN: Because there's not a
EFTA00655462
Page 16
1
simple answer out there, Judge, and I can't
2
just blanketly waive my client's rights to all
3
his privileges without conferring with him,
4
but the situation with which we are faced is
5
my client is now being put in a position where
6
he has to potentially waive any other
7
privilege he may be able to assert or waive
8
his constitutional privilege.
9
THE COURT: Okay, here's what I am going
10
to do. I am going to stay production of the
11
documents until I have a chance to look at
12
this. Unfortunately,
in the middle of a
13
rather lengthy trial right now, and I will get
14
to it as soon as I can, but it won't be
15
tomorrow, it will be some time next week at
16
the earliest. But I will get you something
17
out as to what we're going to do here.
18
MS. COLEMAN: Judge, the last part of the
19
clarification is, your order does speak to the
20
interrogatories, but you never actually said
21
whether or not you expected further responses
22
to the interrogatories, and I cited some case
23
law in our motion for clarification in which
24
the law is clear that interrogatories, because
25
they must be verified and sworn to, are
EFTA00655463
Page 17
1
testimonial in nature. So that might be a
2
little easier to answer, but please note that
3
that was something with which we were also
4
seeking clarification.
5
THE COURT: Okay. Well, there are two
6
categories of documents here, as i understand
7
it. One is documents in the possession or
8
alleged to be in the possession of your
9
client, the other is documents which are in
10
the possession of or are corporate documents
11
or something like that.
12
MS. COLEMAN: No, Judge, that was another
13
portion of it. There are no corporate
14
documents. All of the requests are to Mr.
15
Epstein.
16
THE COURT: I don't mean corporate
17
documents, but documents that are not personal
18
to him necessarily.
19
MS. COLEMAN: I think the easiest way to
20
go through this might be to look at each
21
request individually, rather than trying to
22
make these blanket or combination assertions,
23
because --
24
THE COURT: The problem is you make
25
blanket objections.
EFTA00655464
Page 18
1
MS. COLEMAN: We didn't, Judge. We
2
objected to each one individually.
3
THE COURT: In the same objection, like
4
you just mimeographed it. Well, y'all are too
5
young to remember mimeographs.
6
MR. SCAROLA: Not all of us.
7
MS. COLEMAN: No, Judge, not to all of
8
them. Some of them, for example, may have a
9
work product type privilege or a third party
10
privacy right privilege. I'll just give you
11
an example: Any account on which Mr. Epstein
12
would have signatory authority.
13
THE COURT: Okay, I have to move on. I
14
will take a closer look at it. I have already
15
taken a close look at it. I will take a
16
magnifying glass to it, I guess, and get you
17
something out.
18
MS. COLEMAN: Thank you, Judge.
19
MR. SCAROLA: Thank you, Your Honor.
20
21
22
23
24
25
EFTA00655465
Page 19
1
CERTIFICATE OF REPORTER
2
3
4
I, Roger Watford, Florida Professional
5
Reporter, certify that I was authorized to and
6
did stenographically report the foregoing
7
proceedings and that the transcript is a true
8
and complete record of my stenographic notes.
9
10
I further certify that I am not a
11
relative, employee, attorney or counsel of any
12
of the parties, nor am I a relative or
13
employee of any of the parties' attorneys or
14
counsel connected with the action, nor am I
15
financially interested in the action.
16
17
Dated this 21st day of June, 2013.
18
19
20
Roger Watford, FPR/RPR
21
22
23
24
25
EFTA00655466
EFTA00655467
Document Preview
PDF source document
This document was extracted from a PDF. No image preview is available. The OCR text is shown on the left.
This document was extracted from a PDF. No image preview is available. The OCR text is shown on the left.
Extracted Information
Phone Numbers
Document Details
| Filename | EFTA00655447.pdf |
| File Size | 821.3 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 19,982 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-11T23:20:05.476688 |