EFTA00213036.pdf
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KIRKLAND & ELLIS LLP
AND AFFILIATED PARTNERSHIPS
Jay P. Lelkowit. P.C.
To Call Writ r it ctly:
lefkowitz©kirkland.com
VIA FEDERAL EXPRESS
Citigroup Center
153 East 53rd Street
New York, New York 10022-4611
United States Attorney's Office
Southern District of Florida
500 South Australian Avenue, Suite 400
West Palm Beach, Florida 33401
Dear Marie,
www.k'rkland.com
June 19, 2009
Re: Jeffrey Epstein
Facsimile:
I appreciate your letter of June 17, 2009. I sincerely hope that any and all issues that
could generate an adversarial relationship between Mr. Epstein and the United States Attorney's
Office are in our past. Like you, we hope that the ongoing, complex, and at times vigorous
litigation will not again require your involvement, nor result in any belief on your part that any
legal position taken by Mr. Epstein's counsel conflicts with the Non-Prosecution Agreement
("NPA").
In order to avoid future misunderstandings, however, I would like to have a discussion
with you specifically about our ongoing obligations as you understand them under the NPA. As
you know from past experience, and as Mr. Acosta previously acknowledged in letters to my
partner Ken Starr (on December 4, 2007) and Lilly Ann Sanchez (on December 19, 2007), the
language of ¶ 8 is "far from simple," and, in certain respects, subject to significant ambiguity.
I believe it is both necessary and appropriate to seek immediate clarification from the
government about its understanding of a few provisions in the NPA. It is likely by no fault of our
own that these issues will come before a judge or an independent third party, whose job it will be
to interpret the intent of the parties. In those circumstances, I think the court would most likely
turn to both of us and directly seek our views, as the drafters of the agreement, before rendering
its own opinion. Therefore, I believe it would bring about the finality that we both seek in a
much reduced time frame if we could discuss several of the more ambiguous provisions
contained in the NPA.
Chicago
Hong Kong
London
Los Angeles
Munich
San Francisco
Washington, D.C.
EFTA00213036
Ms. A. Marie Villafana, Esq.
June 19, 2009
Page 2
One specific example comes to mind. First, we clearly understood during the course of
negotiating the NPA, and believe that both the language of the NPA and our prior
correspondence with your Office confirm, that the waiver of liability set forth in Paragraph 8 at
most was designed to allow an identified individual the right to assert a single violation of a
section 2255 predicate. The waiver of liability does not embrace situations where a particular
plaintiff asserts multiple violations. Thus, compliance with paragraph 8's waiver of liability
would require at most that Mr. Epstein stipulate to the existence of a single enumerated predicate
that would entitle an otherwise eligible plaintiff to actual damages (or the applicable statutory
minimum damages where actual damages fall short of that floor), leaving aside the issue of
whether the waiver is applicable to contested litigation or only the cases where there would be
agreed damage resolutions. In addition, if we believe that a predicate act is time-barred, as
indeed we understand was the case with respect to all such acts in relation to one plaintiff, a
proper construction of the waiver of liability would not preclude the reliance on a statute of
limitations defense.
Given your Office's prior acknowledgements that the language of the NM is far from
clear, we very much would appreciate an opportunity to discuss Paragraph 8 with you in the very
near future in order to clarify a few pivotal questions raised by the NPA. I assure you that
Mr. Epstein intends to abide fully by the terms of the NPA. And it is my sincere hope that our
discussion can avert future risks that anything we do will cause you to believe that there has been
a breach of the NPA.
Finally, I enclose a letter in response to your June 15 letter in order to provide you with
our perspective on the issues you raised. I hope our differing views on certain events over the
past several years as reflected in my letter will not in anyway divert us from a common goal of
having Mr. Epstein complete his NPA obligations without further tension with your Office.
Sincerely,
P.
Jay P. Lefkowitz, P.C.
Enclosures
EFTA00213037
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| Filename | EFTA00213036.pdf |
| File Size | 246.5 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
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| Text Length | 4,408 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-11T11:15:37.236650 |