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Case 1:20-cr-00330-PAE Document 204-3 Filed 04/16/21 Page 52 of 348
forward with charges in this case. Lourie forwarded a copy of the prosecution memorandum to
Menchel. Lourie’s transmittal message read:
Marie did a 50 [sic] page pros memo in the Epstein case. I am going
to start reading it tonight. ... It’s a major case because the target is
one of the richest men in the country and it has been big news. He
has a stable of attorneys, including Dershowitz, [Roy] Black,
Lefcourt, Lewis, and Lily [sic] Sanchez. Jeff Sloman is familiar
with the investigation. The state intentionally torpedoed it in the
grand jury so it was brought to us. I am going to forward the pros
memo to you so you can start reading it at the same time I do. The
FBI is pushing to do it in Mid [sic] May, which I think is not critical,
but we might as well get a jump on it. I have some ideas about the
indictment (needs to be ultra lean with only clean victims), so I am
not sending that yet.
Lourie explained to OPR that by “clean” victims, he meant those for whom the defense did not
have impeachment evidence to use against them.
A few days later, Lourie emailed Menchel, asking if Menchel had read the prosecution
memorandum. Lourie directed Menchel’s attention to particular pages of the prosecution
memorandum, noting that the “keys” were whether the USAO could prove that Epstein traveled
for the purpose of engaging in sexual acts, and the fact that some minor victims told Epstein they
were 18.3” Lourie asked for Menchel’s “very general opinion as to whether this is a case you think
the office should do,” and reminded Menchel that the State Attorney’s Office “went out of their
way to get a no-bill on this . . . and thus only charged adult solicitation, which they would bargain
away to nothing.”
During his OPR interview, Menchel said that Lourie’s email transmitting the prosecution
memorandum was his “official introduction” to the case and at that point in time, he had never
heard of Epstein and had no information about his background. He recalled that the USAO had
been asked to review the case because the state had not handled it appropriately. Menchel told
OPR, however, that he had little memory about the facts of the case or what contemporaneous
opinions he formed about it.
Acosta told OPR that he could not recall whether he ever read Villafafia’s prosecution
memorandum, explaining that he “would typically rely on senior staff,’ who had more
prosecutorial experience, and that instead of reading the memorandum, he may have discussed the
case with Sloman, Menchel, and Lourie, who he assumed would have read the document. Acosta
37 In various submissions to the USAO, the defense contended that the federal statute required proof that
engaging in a sexual act was the “paramount or dominant purpose” of Epstein’s travel, but that Epstein’s travel was
motivated by his desire to live outside of New York for over half of each year for tax purposes. The defense also
asserted that the federal statutes at issue required proof that the defendant knew the victims were under 18, but that
Epstein “took affirmative steps to ensure that every woman was at least 18 years of age.” In her prosecution
memorandum, however, Villafafia set forth her conclusion that the statute only required proof that engaging in a sexual
act was one of the motivating factors for the travel. She also concluded that the statutes did not require proof that the
defendant knew the victims were minors.
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Document Details
| Filename | DOJ-OGR-00003228.jpg |
| File Size | 1036.3 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 94.8% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 3,514 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-03 16:32:41.411926 |