HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_012165.jpg
Extracted Text (OCR)
2a
26.
KIRKLAND & ELLIS LLP
Tab 18, December 13, 2007 Letter from M. Villafana (admitting that the notification
occurred “shortly after the signing”).
AUSA Villafana Misleads Mr. Epstein In An Attempt To Refer Plaintiffs to Her
Boyfriend’s Close Friend
On September 25, Ms. Villafana recommended a local products-liability defense
attomey, Humberto “Bert” Ocariz, Esq., for the highly lucrative post of attorney
representative for the government’s list of as-yet-undisclosed “victims.”
(a) Ms. Villafana wrote to the defense, “I have never met Bert, but a good friend in
our appellate section and one of the district judges in Miami are good friends
with him and recommended him.” See Tab 28, September 25, 2007 Email from
M. Villafana to J. Lefkowitz (bottom email) (emphasis added).
(b) Ms, Villafana failed to disclose that this “good friend in our appellate section”
was her live-in boyfriend. See Tab 18, December 13, 2007 Letter from M.
Villafana (conceding the “relationship” with “my boyfriend”).
(c) Beyond her clear conflict-of-interest and affirmative effort to conceal it, it is
unimaginable that AUSA Villafana would have engaged in an ex-parte
communication with a United States District Judge in the same district about the
details of a pending grand-jury investigation without prior disclosure and
supervisory approval.
(d) Later, it became clear that Ms. Villafana also had at least one other ex-parte
communication with that same United States District Judge about the grand jury’s
investigation. See Tab 29, October 5, 2007 Email from M. Villafana to J.
Lefkowitz (stating that “one of the District Judges in Miami mentioned [retired
Judge Joseph Hatchett] as a good choice” to decide any fee disputes concerning
Epstein’s paying for a lawyer to represent the unnamed women in claims against
Epstein).
The next day, AUSA Villafana advised the defense that she was removing one of the
alternatives to Mr. Ocariz from our consideration, on the basis that “one of his partners is
married to an AUSA here,” and explained that, because of that personal relationship,
These actions were improper. As you know, the Department prohibits employees from using any nonpublic
information to secure private benefits of any kind: “An employee shall not ... allow the improper use of
nonpublic information to further his own private interest or that of another, whether through advice or
recommendation, or by knowing unauthorized disclosure.” 5 C.F.R. § 2635.703 (emphasis added). Among
the examples of prohibited disclosure specifically illustrated by this regulation is the disclosure of nonpublic
information to “friends” to further their financial interests, id., at Example 1, and the disclosure of nonpublic
information to a newspaper reporter, id., at Example 5 (see allegations below regarding the leak to the New York
Times). Furthermore, the Justice Department prohibits its employees from using their position to benefit friends
or relatives. See 5. C.F.R. § 2635.702; see also 5. C.F.R. § 2535.502.
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_012165
Extracted Information
Document Details
| Filename | HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_012165.jpg |
| File Size | 0.0 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 3,050 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-04T16:15:59.054340 |