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Case 1:20-cr-00330-PAE Document 293-1 Filed 05/25/21 Page 261 of 349
When asked why the USAO did not simply notify the victims of the change of plea hearing,
Sloman responded that he “was more focused on the restitution provisions. I didn’t get the sense
that the victims were overly interested in showing up . . . at the change of plea.”
Also, in late June, Villafafia drafted a victim notification letter concerning the June 30,
2008 plea.*©° Villafafia told OPR that, because “Mr. Acosta had agreed in December 2007 that we
would not provide written notice of the state change of plea, the written victim notifications were
prepared to be sent immediately following Epstein’s guilty plea.”°*! As she did with prior draft
victim notification letters, Villafafia provided the draft to the defense for comments.*
Although Epstein’s plea hearing was set for June 30, 2008, Villafafia took steps to facilitate
the filing of federal charges on July 1, 2008, in the event he did not plead guilty in state court.
OPR reviewed voluminous Epstein-related files that the State Attorney’s Office made
available online, but OPR was unable to locate any document establishing that before the hearing
date, the state informed victims of the June 30, 2008 plea. On March 12, 2008, the State Attorney’s
Office issued trial subpoenas to three victims and one non-law enforcement witness commanding
the individuals to “remain on call” during the week of July 8, 2008. However, the Palm Beach
County Sheriff was unable to serve one of the victims in person because the victim was “away [at]
college.”
XI. JUNE 30, 2008: EPSTEIN ENTERS HIS GUILTY PLEAS IN A STATE COURT
HEARING AT WHICH NO VICTIMS ARE PRESENT
On June 30, 2008, Epstein appeared in state court in West Palm Beach, with his attorney
Jack Goldberger, and pled guilty to an information charging him with procuring a person under 18
for prostitution, as well as the indictment charging him with felony solicitation of prostitution. The
information charged that between August 1, 2004, and October 9, 2005, Epstein “did knowingly
and unlawfully procure for prostitution, or caused to be prostituted, [REDACTED], a person under
the age of 18 years,” and referred to no other victims. The indictment did not identify any victims
and alleged only that Epstein engaged in the charged conduct on three occasions between August
1, 2004, and October 31, 2005. Although the charges did not indicate whether they applied to
multiple victims, during the hearing, Assistant State Attorney Belohlavek informed the court that
“Tt]here’s several” victims. When the court asked Belohlavek whether “the victims in both these
cases [were] in agreement with the terms of this plea,” Belohlavek replied, “I have spoken to
several myself and I have spoken to counsel, through counsel as to the other victim, and I believe,
360 Sloman forwarded the draft victim notification letter to Acosta, who responded with his own edited version
stating, “What do you think?” Villafafia edited it further.
361 The letter began with the statement, “On June 30, 2008, Jeffrey Epstein . . . entered a plea of guilty.” A week
after Epstein’s state guilty plea, Villafafia notified Acosta, Sloman, and other supervisors that “[Epstein’s local
attorney] Jack Goldberger is back in town today, so I am hoping that we will finalize the last piece of our agreement—
the victim list and Notification. If I face resistance on that front, I will let you know.”
362 According to Villafafia, either Acosta or Sloman made the decision to send the notifications following the
state plea and to share the draft notification letters with the defense.
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Document Details
| Filename | DOJ-OGR-00004558.jpg |
| File Size | 1113.0 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 94.4% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 3,678 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-03 16:50:22.025909 |