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Extracted Text (OCR)
Honorable Mark Filip
May 19, 2008
Page 2
By way of background, we were informed by Mr. Acosta that, at his request, CEOS
would be conducting a review to determine whether federal prosecution was both appropriate
and, in his words, “fair.” That is not what occurred. Instead, CEOS has now acknowledged that
we had raised “many compelling arguments” against the ISAO’s suggested “novel application”
of federal law in this matter. Even so, CEOS concluded, in minimalist fashion, that “we do not
see anything that says to us categorically that a federal case should not be brought” and that the
ULS. Attorney “would not be abusing his prosecutorial discretion should he authorize federal
prosecution of Mr. Epstein” thus delegating back to Mr. Acosta the decision of whether federal
prosecution was warranted (emphasis added). Rather than assessing whether prosecution would
be appropriate, CEOS, using a low baseline for its evaluation, determined only that “it would not
be impossible to prove . . .” certain allegations made against Mr. Epstein. The CEOS review
failed to address the significant problems invoiving the appearance of impermissible selectivity
that would necessarily result from a federal prosecution of Mr. Epstein.
We respect CEOS’s conclusion that its authority to review “misconduct” issues was
precluded by Criminal Division practice. We further respect CEOS’s view that it understood its
mission as significantly limited. Specifically, the contemplated objective was to determine
whether the USAO would be abusing its discretion by bringing a federal prosecution rather than
making its own de novo recommendations on the appropriate reach of federal law. However, we
respectfully submit that a full review of all the facts is urgently needed at senior levels of the
Justice Department. In an effort to inform you of the nature of the federal investigation against
Mr. Epstein, we summarize the facts and circumstances of this matter below.
The two base-level concerns we hold are that (1) federal prosecution of this matter is not
warranted based on the purely-local conduct and the unprecedented application of federal
statutes to facts such as these and (2) the actions of federal authorities are both highly
questionable and give rise to an appearance of substantial impropriety. The issues that we have.
raised, but which have not yet been addressed or resolved by the Department, are more than
isolated allegations of professional mistakes or misconduct. These issues, instead, affect the
appearance and administration of criminal justice with profound consequences beyond the
resolution in the matter at hand.
* . * *
In a precedent-shattering investigation of Jeffrey Epstein that raises important policy
questions—and serious issues as to the fair and honorable enforcement of federal law-—-the
USAO in Miami is considering extending federal law beyond the bounds of precedent and
reason. Federal prosecutors stretched the underlying facts in ways that raise fundamental
questions of basic professionalism. Perhaps most troubling, the USAO in Miami, as a condition
of deferring prosecution, required a commingling of substantive federal criminal law with a
proposed civil remedy engineered in a way that appears intended to profit particular lawyers in
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| Filename | HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_025354.jpg |
| File Size | 0.0 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 3,319 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-04T16:56:52.079879 |