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KIRKLAND & ELLIS LLP same individual had previously fled the home of another neighbor after entering that house uninvited, when, looking for the bedroom of their 17-year-old daughter, he mistakenly entered the bedroom of their 14-year-old daughter, touched her on the leg and startled her awake. State of Florida v. Johnathan Jeffrey Zirulnikoff, Case No. F078646 (June 28, 2007). After a thorough review by the Miami State Attorney’s Office, and sex-crimes prosecutor Laura Adams, the investigation revealed that the defendant and both the neighbor’s 17- year-old daughter and Mr. Sloman’s daughter were previously acquainted. The defendant was charged with simple trespass in connection with his unauthorized entry into the neighbor’s house. Jd. FAUSA Sloman, however, demanded that the young man be registered as a sex offender and objected to any sentence short of incarceration. The Assistant State Attorney in charge of the sex-crimes unit reported Mr. Sloman’s conduct during the proceedings as “outrageous.” The defendant’s attorney described Mr. Sloman as being “out of control.” Shortly after, Mr. Sloman began publicly deriding the elected State Attorney, his office and the state process for prosecuting sex offenses, as “‘a joke.” Unauthorized Tactics in Disregard of the United States Attorney’s Manual are Used In June 2007, AUSA Villafana subpoenaed the investigating agent of Epstein’s attomey, Roy Black, in a clear effort to invade the defense camp. The subpoena was specifically drafted to discover the investigator’s contacts, with all prospective witnesses, Mr. Epstein and his attorneys.! Not surprisingly, Ms. Villafana issued this subpoena without the requisite prior approval by the DOJ’s Office of Enforcement Operations. See United States Attorneys’ Manual, § 9-13.410. When confronted, she misleadingly responded that she had consulted with the Department of Justice and was not required to obtain OEO approval because her subpoena was not directed to “an office physically located within an attorney’s office.” See Tab 18, December 13, 2007 Letter from M. Villafana at 4n.1. This answer clearly suggests that Ms. Villafana had intentionally misled the Department officials about the items that her subpoena sought.” The subpoena sought, among other things: “All documents and information related to the nature of the relationship between [the investigator and/or his firm] and Mr. Jeffrey Epstein, including but not limited to. . . records of the dates when services were performed . . . telephone logs or records of dates of communications with Mr. Epstein (or with a third party on Mr. Epstein’s behalf); appointment calendars/datebooks and the like (whether in hard copy or electronic form) for any period when work was performed on behalf of Mr. Epstein or when any communication was had with Mr. Epstein (or with a third party on Mr. Epstein’s behalf) . See Tab 17, June 18, 2007 Subpoena to William Riley/ Riley Kiraly, ] 3. Indeed, we are aware of two other recent instances in which Villafana placed serious misrepresentations before a court. On July 31, 2007, in the grand-jury litigation arising out of this case, she filed the “Declaration of Joseph Recarey,” attaching the state detective’s affidavit in support of a search warrant for Epstein’s house. See In Re Grand Jury Subpoenas Duces Tecum OLY-63 and OLY-64, No. FGJ 07-103(WPB) (S.D. Fla. July 31, 2007). At the time she filed Detective Recarey’s affidavit, she knew it contained numerous material misrepresentations, including gross misstatements of witness statements and other evidence. Second, we (Continued...) HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_012161

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Filename HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_012161.jpg
File Size 0.0 KB
OCR Confidence 85.0%
Has Readable Text Yes
Text Length 3,646 characters
Indexed 2026-02-04T16:15:59.254594