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KIRKLAND & ELLIS LLP
John Roth, Esq.
June 19, 2008
Page 2
As you are likely aware, the Department’s prior review of this matter was incomplete
and, by its own admission, not “de novo.” See Tab 38, May 15, 2008 Letter from A. Oosterbaan.
Without considering the Non Prosecution Agreement that left this matter to be resolved in the
State or any of the misconduct, CEOS reviewers, tasked with reviewing some of their own
previously expressed opinions, assessed only whether the United States Attorney would “abuse
[his] discretion” if he pursued this case. While we appreciate CEOS’s willingness to examine
these limited issues, its conclusion that a prosecution would not be an “abuse of discretion” rings
particularly hollow in light of CEOS’s admirably candid concessions that we have raised
“compelling” objections and that a prosecution on these facts would require “novel” applications
of federal law. Indeed, even a brief review of CEOS’s own mission statement reveals how
inapposite a federal prosecution is to the facts in this case.
Importantly, we note that the CEOS review was conducted prior to the Supreme Court’s
very recent decisions in Santos and Cuellar, which we believe—illuminating as they do the
Court’s interpretive methodology when it comes to federal criminal law—powerfully
demonstrate the substantive vulnerability of the USAO’s unprecedented employment of three
federal laws. That Office’s interpretation would never pass muster under the Supreme Court’s
recent pronouncements and should not be countenanced. That is all the more true under the
circumstances where the duly appointed U.S. Attorney opined that, in effect, the “unitary”
Executive Branch was driving this prosecution. We now know that is not so.
What I respectfully request, and what I hope you will provide, is a truly “de novo”
review—that is, an independent assessment of whether federal prosecution of Mr. Epstein is both
necessary and warranted in view of the legal and evidentiary hurdles that have been identified,
the existence of a State felony plea and sentence that have been advocated by the State Attorney
for Palm Beach County, and the many issues of prosecutorial misconduct and overzealousness
that have permeated the investigation. I also request that you provide us with the opportunity
during your review to meet with you in person to answer any questions you may have and to
elucidate some of the issues in our submission.
We believe that an independent review will confirm our strong belief that federal
prosecutors would be required to stretch the plain meaning of each element of the enumerated
statutes, and then to combine these distorted elements in a tenuous chain, in order to convict Mr.
Epstein. Indeed, just this week (and after two years of federal involvement in this matter),
Assistant United States Attorney Villafana re-initiated the federal grand jury investigation—in
direct contravention of the parties’ Non Prosecution Agreement—and issued yet another
subpoena seeking evidence in this case. See Tab 19, Subpoena to a In the
subpoena, AUSA Villafana directs MMto appear on July 1, 2008 to give testimony
and produce documents to FGJ 07-103 West Palm Beach. The attachment to the subpoena seeks
documents such as photographs, emails, telephone billing information, and contact information
that relate to Mr. Epstein as well as specific other people who received protection from federal
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| Filename | HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_012137.jpg |
| File Size | 0.0 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 3,445 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-04T16:15:54.308979 |