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FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION FOI/PA DELETED PAGE INFORMATION SHEET Civil Actionff 17-cv-03956 Total Deleted Page(s) = 258
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(Rev. 01-31-2003)
Precedence: ROUTINE
From. Miami
Squad PB-2,
Contact: SA
Approved By:
Drafted By:
Case ID #: 31E-MM
Title: JEFFREY .EPSTE
N;
Attn: SSA
Synopsis: To request case be opened
PEM
C I
b
WHO. b6 _2
3
OiiittiA le - DATE 22V/A b7A 11 b.7c 1,
L_and assigned. 4--40 5,4
Details: From March 2005 through February 2006, the Palm
Beach County Police Department conducted an investigation
DOB DOlifl lEps ein 1177777-is-. b3 b6 b7C b3 -1 b6 -1, -3 b7C -1, -3 a'o 3eo14&0116C"
Hr.( .4.108'004'4 I
03956-17
Re: 31E-MM, 07/24/2006
It is requested by SA captioned case be opened and assigned.
2
b3 -1 b6 -1, -3 b7C -1, -3 that the above b6 -2 b7C -2
03956-18
ObbableCauseAffidavit •
Palm Beach Police Department
Agency ORI# FLO 500600
Police Casett: 05-368 (1)
Defendant:
Race/Sex:
DOB:
Charges:
Jeffrey Epstein
White Male b6 -1 b7C -1
From March 15, 2005, through February 2006, the Palm Beach Police Department conducted a sexual
battery investigation involving Jeffrey Epstein, iPalm Beach.
b3 -1 b6 -1, -3 b7C -1, -3
The facts, as reported, are as follows:
b3 -1 b6 -1, -3 b7C -1, -3 b7D -1
The foregoing instrument was sworn to or affirmed before me this r day of May, 2006 by
DM' who is personally known to me.
b6 -4 b7C -4
State of Florida
County of Palm Beach
Signature/Arresting Officer
Signature of Police Officer (F.S.S. 117.10) Date: 05/01/2006 b3 -1 b6 -1, -3 b7C -1, -3 b7D -1
Page of 22 fogoi,o2.5_)1.956-19
jC
fAbable Cause Affidavit
Palm Beach Police Department b3 -1
Agency ORI# FLO 500600 b6 -1, -3 b7C -1, -3
On November 21, 2005 I intervie e stated he was b3 -1 b6 b70 b7D -1, -1, -1 -3, -3, -5 -5
On January 4, 2006 I interviewed another former houseman, Mr Alfredo Rodriguez. During a sworn
taped statement, Mr. Rodriguez stated he was employed by Jeffrey Epstein for approximately six months, from
November 2004 through May of 2005. His responsibilities as house manager included being the butler,
Co. ouse an rim errands for E • stein and rovide for E • stein's ests. I asked Rodriguez about
The foregoing instrument was sworn to or affirmed before me this lst day of May, 2006 by
Deti lvvho is personally known to me.
Signature of Police Officer (F.S.S. 117.10) b6 -4 b7C -4
State of Florida
County of Palm Beach
Signature/Arresting Officer
Page of 22
03956-39
4 '1" k ibable Cause Affidavit
Palm Beach Police Department
Agency ORM PLO 500600 b3 -1 b6 -1, -3 b7C -1, -3 b7D -1 b3 -1 b6 -1, -3 b7C -1, -3 b7D -1
b3
b6 b7C b7D -1, -1, -2 -3 -3 b7E -1 b6 -1 b7C -1 b7D -2 b7E -1
Therefore, as Jeffrey Epstein, who at the time of these incidents was b3 -1 b6 -1, -3 b7C -1, -3
The foregoing instrument was sworn to or affirmed before me this r day of May, 2006 by
Pet____________who is personally known to me.
b6 -4 b7C -4
State of Florida
County of Palm Beach
Signature/Arresting Officer
Signature of Police Officer (F.S.S. 117.10) Date: 05/01/2006
Page of 22
03956-40
Mystery money man faces soliciting charge
By NICOLE AMOK
Palm Beach Post Ste Wnter
Part-time Palm Beacher who has socialized with Donald Trump, Bill
Clinton and Kevin Spacey was jailed early Sundaywith accused drug dealers
drunken drivers and wife beaters after he was charged with soliciting a prosti-
tute.
Manhattan money manager Jeffrey
Epstein, 53, was picked up at his home on El Brillo Way at 1:45 a.m. He was
released hours later on $3,000 bond.
Epstein was indicted last week by a state grand jury, according to state at-
torney's spokesman Mike Edmondson.
Despite Epstein's arrest, the indictment containing the allegations remained
sealed Sunday and Edmondson provided no details.
Unlike most accused johns, Epstein was charged with a third-degree felony
instead of a misdemeanor. Under state law, a solicitation charge usually is ele-
vated to a more-serious felony when the defendant has at least two solicitation
convictions.
However, checks of court records here and in New York Sunday turned up
no such convictions.
Epstein could not be reached. 1mondson said he was being representiii by West Palm Beach attorney Jack
Goldberg, who declined comment
Epstein is the president of J Epstein
& Co., a money management company based in Manhattan that caters to ultra-
wealthy clientele, according to pub-
See SOUCMNG, 68 toeffrey Epstein
Indictment related to prostitution.
'Mysterious billionaire' has been on probation
SOLICITING from is lished reports. National magazines have described him as a "mysterious billionaire" who lives in a 45,000square-foot New York City
mansion.
He has been in trouble before. In 1993, he and two other defendants were
charged in federal court with three counts of postal larceny and theft and one count of property theft. Epstein plead guilty to a single charge of
conspiring to steal U.S.
Treasury checks from residential . mailboxes and received 5 years' probation.
The remaining charges were dropped.
Since then, Epstein's name has turned up in New
York City's tabloids. The New
York Post noted he flew President Clinton and Kevin
Spacey to Africa on his private Boeing 727. In 2003, the paper dubbed him one of the
Big Apple's "top studs."
In 2004, Epstein bid against Trump for a 43,000square foot Palm Beach es-
tate once owned by healthcare magnate Abe Gosman.
Trump topped Epstein with a
$41.35 million bid.
Stu) f Researcher Angelica
Cortez contributed to this story.
•C) nicolejanok@pbpostcom
>7;
C',
03956-63 f- 210301- NIA--31q
4E4 THE PALM BEACH POST • TUESDAY, !MY 25,2006
Indictment: Billionaire solicited 3 times
Palm Beach police will report
today about their prostitution probe of the money manager.
By LARRY KELLER
Palm Beach Post Ste Miter
Billionaire money manager and
Palm Beach part-time resident Jeffrey
Epstein solicited orprocured prostitutes three or more times between Aug. 1 and
Oct 31 of last year, according to an indictment charging him with felony so-
licitation of prostitution.
Epstein, 53, was booked at the Palm
Beach County jail at 1:45 am. Sunday.
He was released on $3,000 bond.
Epstein's case is unusual in that suspected prostitution johns are usually
charged with a misdemeanor, and even a felony charge is typically made in a
criminal information - an alternative to an indictment charging a person with
the commission of a crime.
His attorney, Jack
Goldberger, declined to discuss the charge.
State attorney's office spokesman Mike
Edmondson also had little to say.
"Generally speak- Epstein ing, there is a case that has a number of different aspects to it,'
Edmondson said of a prostitution related charge being submitted to a grand jury. `We first became aware of the case months ago by Palm Beach
police."
Prosecutors and police worked together to bring the case to the grand jury, he said.
Palm Beach police confirmed that and said the department will release a
report today regarding its investigation.
Epstein has owned a five-bedroom,
71/2-bath, 7,234-square-foot home with a pool and a boat dock on the Intracoastal
Waterway since 1990, according to property records. A man answering the
door there Monday said that Epstein wasn't home. A Cadillac Escalade reg-
istered to him was parked in the driveway, which is flanked by two massive
gargoyles.
Epstein sued Property Appraiser
Gary Nikolits in 2001, contending that the assessment of his home exceeded
its fair market value. He dismissed his lawsuit in December 2002.
A profile of Epstein in Vanity Fair magazine said he owns what are be-
lieved to be the largest private homes in
Manhattan - 51,000 square feet - and in New Mexico - a 7,500-acre ranch.
Those are in addition to his 70-acre island in the U.S. Virgin Islands and fleet
of aircraft.
Epstein's friends and admirers, according to the magazine, include prom-
inent businessmen, academics and scientists and famed Harvard law professor
Alan Dershowitz.
oiany_keller@pbpostcom
Mount Clipping in Space Below)
03956-64
(1.81-9 .A8):00GC-433
P0-350 (Rev. 5-6-81)
•It
After long probe, billionaire faces solicitation charge
Palm Beach Post Staff Writer
Palm Beach billionaire Jeffrey Epstein paid to have underage girls and young
women brought to his home, where he received massages and sometimes sex, ac-
cording to an investigation by the Palm Beach Police
Department.
Palm Beach police spent months sifting through Epstein's trash and watching
his waterfront home and
Palm Beach International
Airport to keep tabs on his private jet An indictment charging Epstein, 53, was
unsealed Monday, charging him with one count of felony solicitation of prostitutbn.
Palm Beach police thought there was probable cause to charge Epstein with un-
lawful sex acts with a minor and lewd and lascivious molestation.
Police Chief Michael Reiter was so angry with State Attorney Barry Krischer's han-
dling of the case that he wrote a memo
See EPSTEIN, 5B
Epstein
(Indicate page, name of newspaper, city and state.)
8, 58 / The Palm Beach Post
West Palm Beach, FL
Edition:
Title: After long probe, billionaire faces solicitation charges
Character
or
Classification 31 E-MM-108062
Submitting Office: MM ndexing:
03'5.1/4-6.5
31 C- Alk - )080(22. - Ce w s c THE PALM BEACH POST • WEDNESDAY, JULY 26, 2006 5B
Police kept watch on home, airport, sifted through trash
Ow EPSTEINfrom1n suggesting the county's top prosecutor disqualify himself
"I must urge you to examine the unusual course that your office's handling of this
inematter has taken and consider
Erisegood and sufficient reason exists to require your disqualification from the prose-
cution of these cases," Reiter wrote in a May 1 memo to
Krischer.
While not commenting specifically on the Epstein case, Mike Edmondson,
spokesman for the state at-
torney, said his office pre-
sents eases other than murders to a grand jury when there are questions about
witnesses' credibility and their ability to testify.
By the nature of their jobs, police officers look at evince from a "one-sided per-
t
...oective," Edmondson said.
"A prosecutor has to look at it in a much broader fashion," weighing the veracity of wit-
nesses and how they may fare under defense attorneys' questioning, he said.
Epstein's attorney, Jack
Goldberger, said his client committed no crimes.
'The reports and statements in question refer to false accusations that were
not charged because the Palm
Beach County state attorney questioned the credibility of the witnesses," Goldberger
said. A county grand jury
"found the allegations wholly unsubstantiated and not credible," and that's why his
client was not charged with sexual activity with minors, he said.
Goldberger said Epstein passed a lie detector test administered by a reputable
polygraph examiner in which he said he did not know the girls were minors. Also, a
search warrant served on
Epstein's home found no evidence to corroborate the girls' allegations, Goldberger
said.
According to police documents:
• A Palm Beach Community College student said she gave Epstein a massage in the
nude, then brought him six girls, ages 14 to 16, for massage and sex-tinged sessions
at his home.
• A 27-year-old woman who worked as Epstein's personal assistant also facili-
tated the liaisons, phoning the PBCC student to arrange for girls when Epstein was
coming to town. And she es corted the girls upstairs when they arrived, putting fresh
sheets on a massage table and placing massage oils nearby.
• Police took sworn statements from five alleged victims and 17 witnesses.
They contend that on three occasions, Epstein had sex with the girls.
The chiefs letter
See the letter Palm Beach Police
Chief Michael Reiter wrote to
State Attorney Barry Krischer on the Epstein case.
PalmBoachPost cam
A money manager for the ultra-rich, Epstein was named one of New York's most eligi-
ble bachelors in 2003 by The
New York Pont. He reportedly hobnobs with the likes of former President Clinton,
former Harvard University
President Lawrence Summers and Donald Trump, and has lavish homes in Manhat-
tan, New Mexico and the Virgin Islands.
He has contributed tens of thousands of dollars to Dens ocratic Party candidates and
organizations, including Sen.
John Kerry's presidential bid, and the Senate campaigns of
Joe Lieberman, Hillary Clin-
ton, Christopher Dodd and
Charles Schumer.
Goldberger is one of five attorneys Epstein has re tamed since he became the
subject of an investigation,
Edmondson said. Among the others: Alan Dershowitz, the well-known Harvard law pro-
fessor and author, who is a friend of Epstein. Dershowitz could not be reached for
comment
Police said the woman who enlisted young girls for
Epstein was [REDACTED], '
20, of Royal Palm Beach.
Robson has worked at an Olive Garden restaurant in
Wellington and said she was a journalism major at Palm
Beach Community College when she was questioned by police last October. She has
an unlisted phone number and could not be reached for comment.
Robson said she met Epstein when, at age 17, a friend asked her if she would like to
make money giving him a massage. She said she was driven to his five-bedroom,
71h-bath home on the Intracoastal Waterway, then es corted upstairs to a bedroom
with a massage table and oils.
Epstein and Robson were both naked during the massage, she said, but when he
grabbed her buttocks, she said she didn't want to be
touched.
Epstein said he'd pay her
to bring him more girls - the younger the better, Robson
told police. When she tried once to bring a 23-year-old woman to him, Epstein said
she was too old, Robson said.
Robson, who has not been charged in the case, said she eventually brought sirgirls to
Epstein who were paid $200 each time, Robson said. "I'm hie a Heidi Fleiss," police
quoted her as saying. The girls knew what to expect when they were taken to Ep-
stein's home, Robson said.
Give a massage - maybe naked - and allow some
touching.
One 14-year-old girl Robson took to meet Epstein led police to start the investiga-
tion of him in March 2005. A relative of the girl called to say she thought the child had re cently engaged in sex with a
Palm Beach man. The girl then got into a fight with a classmate who accused her of
being a prostitute, and she couldn't explain why she had
$300 in her purse.
The girl gave police this account of her meeting with
Epstein:
She accompanied Robson and a second girl to Epstein's house on a Sunday in Febru-
ary 2005. Once there, a woman she thought was Epstein's assistant told the girl to follow
her upstairs to a room featuring a mural of a naked woman, several photographs of naked
women on a shelf, a hot pink and green sofa and a massage table.
She stripped to her bra and panties and gave him a massage.
Epstein gave the 14-yearold $300 and she and the other girls left, she said. She said
Robson told her that Epstein paid her $200 that day.
Other girls told similar stories. In most accounts,
Epstein's personal assistant at the time, Sarah Kellen, now
27, escorted the girls to Epstein's bedroom.
Kellen, whose most re cent known address is in
North Carolina, has not been charged in the case.
Palm Beach police often conducted surveillance of
Epstein's home, and at Palm
Beach International Airport
to see if his private jet was there, so they would know when he was in town. Police
also arranged repeatedly to receive his trash from Palm
Beach sanitation workers, collecting papers with names and phone numbers, sex toys
and female hygiene products.
One note stated that a female could not come over at 7 p.m. because of soccer. An-
other said a girl had to work
Sunday - "Monday after school?" And still another note contained the work
hours of a girl, saying she leaves school at 11:30 am.
and would come over the next day at 10:30 an.
Only three months before the police department probe began, Epstein donated
$90,000 to the department for the purchase of a firearms simulator, said Jane Struder,
town finance director. The purchase was never made.
The money was returned to
Epstein on Monday, she said.
Staff writers Andrew Mama and Tim O'Meilia and St mf researcher ibmelica Cortez con-
tributed to this story.
0 lany_kelletiPpbpostcam
..03956-66
FD-350 (Seg. 5-8-81)
Police say lawyer tried
to discredit teenage girls
Palm Bead Post Staff Writer
Famed Harvard law professor Alan
Dershowitz met with the Palm Beach
County State Attorney's Office and provided damaging information about teen-
age girls who say they gave his client,
Palm Beach billionaire Jeffrey Epstein, sexually charged massages, according to
police reports.
The reports also state that another
Epstein attorney agreed to a plea bargain thatwould have allowed Epstein to have no
criminal record His current attorney denies this happened.
And the documents also reveal that the father of at least one girl complained that
private investigators aggressively followed his car, photographed his home and
chased off visitors.
Police also talked to somebody who said she was offered money if she refused to cooperate with the Palm Beach Police
Department probe of Epstein.
The state attorney's office said itpresented the
Epstein case to a county grand jury this month rather than directly charging Epstein because of concerns about the girls' credibility. The
grand jury indicted Epstein, 53, on a single count of felony solicitation of prostitution, which carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison.
Police believed there was probable cause to charge Epstein with the more
serious crimes of unlawful sex acts with a minor and lewd and lascivious molesta-
tion. Police Chief Michael Reiter was so angry that he wrote State Attorney Barry
Krischer a memo in May suggesting he disqualify himself from the case.
Epstein: His former attorney agreed to a plea bargain, police say.
(Indicate page, name of newspaper, city and state.)
113, 7B / The Palm Beach Post
West Palm Beth, PL
Edition:
Title: Police say lawyer tried to discredit teenage girls.
Character
Or
Classification: 31E-MM-108062
Submitting Office: MM
Indexing:
The case originally was going toe presented to the grand jury in February,
but was postponed after Dershowitz produced information gleaned from the Web
site myspace.com showing some of the alleged victims commenting on alcohol
and marijuana use, according to the police report prepared by Detective Joseph Re-
carey.
[REDACTED], a 20-year-old Royal
Palm Beach wonaau who told police she recruited girls for Epstein, also is profiled
on myspace.com. Her page includes pho-
tos of her and her friends, including one
See EPSTEIN, 713
0395r-67
31e-Rm --vocw",
Polygraph shows he didn't know girls' ages, lawyer says
EPSTEIN from 1B using the name "Pimpin'
Made EZ." Robson, who was not charged in the case, is a potential prosecution wit-
ness.
According to Recarey, prosecutor Lanna Belohlavek offered Epstein attorneys
Dershowitz and GuyFronstin a plea deal in April. Fronstin, after speaking with Epstein,
accepted the deal, in which
Epstein would plead guilty to one count of aggravated assault with intent to commit a
felony, be placed on five years' probation and have no criminal record. The deal al-
so called for Epstein to submit to a psychiatric and sexual evaluation and have no
unsupervised visits with minors, according to Recarey's report. The plea bargain was
made in connection with only one of the five alleged victims, the report states.
Fronstin - who declined
to comment on the case -
• was subsequently fired and veteran defense attorney
Jack Goldberger was hired.
Ile denies there was any agreement by any of Epstein's attorneys to a plea
deal.
'We absolutely did not agree to a plea in this case," he said. Neither Belohlavek
nor a state attorney's spokesman could be reached for comment
The parent or parents of alleged victims who cornplained of being harassed by
private investigators provided license tag numbers of two of the men. Police found the
vehicles were registered to a private eye in West Palm
Beach and another in Jupiter, according to Recarey's report.
"I have no knowledge of it," defense attorney Goldberger said.
The report also says a woman connected to the Epstein case was contacted by
somebody who was still in
touch with Epstein. That person told her she would be compensated if she didn't
cooperate with police, Recarey's report says. Those who did talk "will be dealt
with," the woman said she was told. Phone records show the woman talked with
the person who allegedly intimidated her around the time she said, Recarey re-
ported.
Phone records also show that the person said .to have made the threat then placed a
call to Epstein's personal assistant, who in turn called a
New York corporation affiliated with Epstein, the report states.
The issue in the Epstein case is not whether females came to his waterfront home,
but whether he knew their ages.
"He's never denied girls came to the house," Goldberger said. But when Ep-
stein was given a polygraph test, "he passed on knowledge of age," the attorney
said.
After the indictment against Epstein was unsealed this week, Police Chief Reiter
referred the matter to the
FBI. 'We've received the referral, and we're reviewing it," said FBI spokeswoman
Judy Orihuela in Miami.
The chief himself has come under attack from Epstein's lawyers and friends in
New York, where he has a home. The New York Post quoted Epstein's prominent
New York lawyer, Gerald
Lefcourt, as saying his client was indicted only "because of the craziness of the police chief."
Reiter has declined to comment on the case. ,
Prosecutors have not presented a sex-related case like Epstein's to a grand jury
before, said Mike Edmondson, spokesman for the state attorney's office. 'That's what
you do with a case that falls into a gray area," he said.
The state attorney's office did not recommend a particular criminal charge on
which to indict Epstein, Edmondson said. The grand juiy was presented with a list of
charges from highest to lowest, then deliberated with the prosecutor out of the room,
he said.
"People are surprised at the grand jury proceeding,"
West Palm Beach defense attorney Richard Tendler said. "It's a way for the pros-
ecutor's office to not take the full responsibility for not ffiing the (charge), and not doing what the Palm Beach Police Department wanted. I
think something fell apart with those underage witnesses."
Defense attorney Robert
Gershman was a prosecutor for six years. 'Those girls must have been incredible or
untrustworthy, I don't know," he said.
Other attorneys said Epstein's case raises the issue of whether wealthy, connected
defendants like Epstein - whose friends include former
President Clinton and
Donald Trump - are treated differently from others. Once he knew he was the subject of
a criminal probe, Epstein hired a phalanx of powerful attorneys such as Dershowitz
and Lefcourt, who is a past president of the National Association of CriminalDefense
Lawyers.
Miami lawyer Roy Black
- who became nationally known when he successfully defended William Kennedy
Smith on a rape charge in
Palm Beach - also was involved at one point
Said defense attorney
Michelle Suskauer: "I think it's unfortunate the public may get the perception that
with power, you may be treated differently than the average Joe." lany_keller@pbPost.com
03956-68
Date; 08/01/2006
PB2/PBCRA
Contact: SA
Approved By:
Drafted By:
Case ID #: 31E-MM-108062 (EcAi-g)
Title: JEFFREY EPSTEIN;
b3 -1
1,6 -1, -2 b70 -1, -2
Synopsis: To request the opening of sub-files in captioned case.
Details: It is requested that the following sub-files be opened
to assist in document management in captioned case.
SUB - SOP to capture subpoena request.
SUB - FE' to capture forfeiture related materials.
s-Frs o Ec_
3 ye, ict _woof/16-69_
FD-350 (Rev. 5-8-81)
o
Indicate page, name of newspaper, city and state.)
208 / The Palm Beach Post
West Palm Beach, FL
Edition:
Title: He was over 50
And they were girls
Character
Or
Classification 31E-MM-108062
Submitting Office: MM
He was over 50. And they were girls lithe women whom Palm Beach police say a part-time town resident invited to his home and paid for
sex acts were, in fact, women, the solicitation charge against Jeffrey
Epstein might feel more sufficient
But, according to police records, they weren't. He was over 50. And they were girls.
14.
15.
16.
17-year-old girls.
That should count for something - the difference between prostitution and
pedophilia.
So, it is baffling that Mr. Epstein, who was indicted last month by a grand jury on one
felony count of solicitation of prostitution, has not been charged, as
Palm Beach police strenuously urged, with unlawful sex acts with a minor and lewd and lascivious molestation.
Conviction of crimes against minors would mean steeper penalties than the maximum five-year prison term Mr. Epstein faces if convicted
of the single count of felony solicitation. It also would help carry a mes-
sage of intolerance to perverts who prey on girls.
Prosecutors did not pursue charges against Mr Epstein reflecting the age of the victims because they assumed a jury would view the girls
not as victims but as promiscuous, untrustworthy, willing participants.
The presumption is offensive.
Mt Epstein, a 53-year-old Manhattan money manager who has hired Harvard law professor Alan
Dershowitz and defense attorney Jack Goldberger, has denied knowing how old the girls were.
Elise
Cramer
Jury should have decided i f Epstein is a pedophile.
But police interviews with five alleged victims and 17 witnesses under oath, as well as phone messages, a high school transcript and
other items that police found from searching Mr Epstein 's trash and
7,234-square-foot waterfront home, provide evidence that he knew the girls were teenagers.
One girl couldn't show up when
Mr. Epstein wanted because she had soccer. Another time, Mr. Epstein had to wait for his 'Massage" session because the girl he wanted
was still in class.
Why didn't State Attorney Barry
Krischer let a jury decide whether
to believe the teenagers - including a 16-yea1told who went to
Mr. Epstein 's house to "work" in
December 2004 after being asked whether she needed to make money for Christmas gifts?
Prosecutors gave greater weight
to the details Mr Dershowitz provided about the girls in an apparent effort to assail their character. Mr.
Dershowitz pointed out to prosecu-
tors that some of the teenagers had talked on myspace.com about marijuana and alcohol use.
The 20-year-old Royal Palm
Beach woman who told police she recruited girls for Mr. Epstein has a Web page on myspace.com that features one girl using the name
"Pimpin' Made El"
Although no charges of witness tampering have been filed, the parents of at least one of the teenage victims complained to police of be-
ing followed and intimidated by two men. Police determined that their vehicles were registered to two private investigators. Mr Goldberger
denied knowing anything about it.
Police also note in their reports that the state attorney's office of-
fered Mr. Epstein a plea deal that would have placed him on probation for five years, allowing him ultimately to walk away with no
criminal record at all.
I asked Mr. Krischer's spokesman, Mike Edmondson, why the case was referred to a grand jury in-
stead of Mr. Epstein being charged and facing a trial before a jury And
shouldn't the victim& credibility be a factor to determine whether a crime's been committed, not whether a jury will convict? (After all, as
Mr Goldberger told The Palm Beach
Post of Mt Epstein, "He never denied girls came to the house.")
Especially, I asked Mr. Edmondson to explain: Why shouldn't the public look at this case and think there are two kinds of justice - one
for the wealthy and one for the rest of us?
Mt Edmondson said he could not comment on the case because it is active, but on the latter point, he offered, for the sake of "philosophi-
cal debate": "Whether wealth buys a different standard of justice across
the country ... the answer to that would, of course, be yes."
But in this case, he said, "regardless of the battery of attorneys, the
outcome would be the same. Every issue that was debated in public was debated in our office before this case went to the grand jury"
In this case, it is not the victims' credibility but the state attorney's
that deserves questioning.
Elisa Cramer is an editorial writer for The Palm Beach Post. Her e-mail 036-7
is ei address elisa_cramer@pbpost.com •
1
th)-380 (Rev. 5-8-81)
Mount Capping in Space Below)
Expert: Ignorance of age isn't defense in sex cases
Palm Beach Post Staff Writer
Even if Palm Beach money manager Jeffrey Epstein didn't know that girls who
police say gave him sexual massages at his Intracoastal home were under the legal
age, that alone wouldn't have exempted him from criminal charges of sexual activity with
minors.
"Ignorance is not a valid defense," said Bob Dekle a legal skills professor who was
a Lake City prosecutor for nearly 30 years, half of that time specializing in sex
crimes against children.
"There is no knowledge element as far as the age is concerned? Dekle said.
After an 11-month investigation, Palm Beach police said there was probable cause
to charge Epstein, 53, with unlawful sex acts with a minor
Epstein: Two polificians have returned donations since he was charged with soliciting minors.
and lewd and lascivious moestation. They contend that
Epstein - friend of the rich and fatuous and financial patron of Democratic Party or-
ganizations and candidates - committed those acts with five underage girls.
In the past week, New
York Attorney General and gubernatorial candidate Eliot
Spitzer has returned about
$50,000 in campaign contributions he received from Epstein, and Mark Green, a
candidate to replace Spitzer in
See EPSTEIN, 513
(Indicate page, name of newspaper, city and state.)
I B / 58 lThe Palm Beach Post
West Palm Beach, FL
Edition:
Title:
Expert Ignorance of age isn't defense in sex cases
Character
OT
lassification.31E-MM-108062
Submitting Office: MM ndexing:
03956-76
31&-14N-- /06O72ft
-
Lawyer: Juroft often believe Alas over kids
EPSTEIN from 113 his current job, has returned
$10,000 to him because of the
Palm Beach scandal, the New
York Daily News has reported.
Rather than file charges, the state attorney's office presented the case to a
county grand jury. The panel indicted Epstein last week on a single, less serious charge
of felony solicitation of prostitution.
The case raised eyebrows because the state attorney's office rarely, if ever, kicks
such charges to a grand jury.
And it increases the difficulty of prosecuting child sex abuse cases, especially when
the defendant is enormously wealthy and can hire highpriced, top-tier lawyers.
At least one of Epstein's alleged victims told police he knew she was underage
when the two of them got naked for massages and sexual activity. She was 16 years
old at the time and said Epstein asked her questions about her high school, ac-
cording to police reports.
A girl who, said she met
Epstein when she was 15 said he told her if she told anybody what happened at his
house, bad things could happen, the police reports state.
Epstein's youngest alleged victim was 14 when she says she gave him a massage
that included some sexual activity. She is now 16. The girl's father says he doesn't
know whether she told Epstein her age.
"My daughter has kept a lot of what happened from me because of sheer embarrass-
ment," he said. "But she very much looked 14. Any prudent man would have had second
thoughts about that"
Defense attorney Jack
Goldberger maintains that not only did Epstein pass a polygraph test showing he
did not know the girls were minors, but their stories weren't credible. The state
attorney's office also implied that their credibility was an issue when it decided not to charge Epstein directly, but instead give the case to the
grand jury.
"A prosecutor has to look at it in a much broader fashion," a state attorney's
spokesman said last week.
Epstein hired Harvard law Professor Alan Dershowitz when he became aware he was under investigation, and Dershowitz gave prosecutors information that
some of the alleged victims had spoke of using alcohol and marijuana on a popular
Web site, according to a Palm
Beach police report.
Prosecutors typically consider two things m deciding whether to charge some
with sex-related offenses againstminors - whether there is sufficient evidence
and whether there is a public interest in doing so, Dekle said.
Child sex abuse cases often are difficult
to prosecute, an attorney says.
If two teens are in a sexual relationship and the boy turns 18 before the girl, he
could be charged with a sex crime if the sex continues.
There would be no public interest in pursuing that, Dekle said.
But where there is a large gap in ages - and especially in cases of teachers with stu-
dents - there is a public interest in prosecuting, he said.
Likewise if the accused has a track record of sex with minors.
Still there is a "universal constant" in prosecuting these cases, Dekle said. Men
who exploit underage children for sex often carefully choose their victims in ways
that will minimize the risk to them, he said.
'Victims usually are from a lower social status, and they may suffer from psychologi-
cal problems, Dekle said.
"Lots of child sexual abuse victims have been victimized by multiple people
over a period of time. Then the act of abuse produces behavior in the victims that
further damages their credibility." Examples include promiscuous behavior and
drug abuse.
Some of the alleged victims in the Epstein case returned to his home multiple
times for the massage sessions and the $200 to $300 he typically paid them per visit
'That would be a definite problem for the prosecutor," said Betty Resch, who prose-
cuted crimes against children in Palm Beach County for five years and now is in private
practice in Lake Worth.
'The victim becomes less sympathetic" to a jury, Resch said. "But she's a victim nev-
ertheless. She's a kid."
Most men charged with sex crimes against minors look normal, Dekle said. A
jury expecting to see a monster seldom will. And the vie-
Ems' ages work against them and in favor of the defendant in a trial, Dekle said.
If a child and an adult tell different stories and both swear they're telling the
truth, adult jurors are more likely to believe the adult,
Dekle said
"You have all these things working against you in a child sex abuse case. Prosecutors
normally try to be very careful in filing those cases because they know what they're
getting into. There is no such thing as an iron-clad child sexual abuse case"
0 Ianykelie @pbpostcom
03956-77
Palm Beach chief focus of fire in Epstein case
Defendant's lawyers take him on; he slams state attorney
Palm Rwrh Post Ske Miter
In the case of Pan
Beach financier Jeffrey Epstein, it seems, at times, as if two men are accused of
wrongdoing: Epstein and
Palm Beach Police Chief
V -to) 090' -}H-'
Michael Reiter.
Epstein, 53, was indicted last month on a charge of felony solicitation of prosti-
tution solely because of Reiter's "craziness," one of
Epstein's lawyers said. His department disseminated
"a distorted view of the case" and behaved in a
"childish" manner when the grand jury didn't indict Epstein on the charges it
sought, another Epstein lawyer complained.
To hear the Epstein camp tell it, Reiter, 48, is a loose cannon better suited
to be the sheriff of Mayberry. They whisper that he's embroiled in a messy di-
vorce.
Reiter did in fact file for divorce from his wife, Jill, last year, after 24 years of
marriage. They have a son,
18, and a daughter, 14. The couple is scheduled to go to mediation Wednesday.
Nothing in the court file suggests their split is particularly ugly.
Reiter incurred the wrath of the Epstein camp as well as the state attor-
See REITER, 7B I.
a
co
03956-78
Colleagues cite chief's professionalism, integrity
Ow:REITER from m ney's office for two reasons.
First, he pressed for Epstein
to be charged with the more serious crimes of sexual activitywith minors. Second, he
slammed State Attorney BarryKrischer in blunt language seldom used by one law-
enforcement official concerning another because of what he perceived as that of-
fice's mishandling of the case.
Lr In a letter to Krischer
Mitten May 1, Reiter called his actions it the Epstein case "highly unusual." He
added, "I must urge you to...
consider if good and sufficient reason exists to require your disqualification from the
prosecution of these cases."
In short, Reiter told the county's top prosecutor for the past 13 years that he
ought to get off the case. "It looks like a departure from professionalism," Miami-
Dade State Attorney
Katherine Fernandez Rundle said of Reiter's letter.
Following Epstein's indictment, Reiter referred the case to the FBI to determine
whether the super-rich, super-connected defendant had violated any federal laws.
Reiter won't discuss the case or the broadsides aimed at him. But others almost
uniformly use one word to describe the chief: professional.
"I have always been impressed by Mike's professionalism and his leader-
ship," said Rick Lincoln, chief of the Lantana Police Department and a Palm Beach
County cop for 32 years.
"The town of Palm Beach has a very professional police department. We all consider
Mike to be our peer and a man of integrity."
Reiter Town
Manager Peter
Elwell says the
Palm Beach police chiefs well worth his
$144,000 salary.
Juno Beach Police Chief
H.C. Clark II agreed. Although he doesn't know Reiter well, he has metwith him
on countywide law enforcement issues. "I've never seen him lose his cool. I've never
seen anything but a professional demeanor from him."
Reiter joined the Palm
Beach Police Department in
1981, leaving a $20,000-a-year patrol job at the University of
Pittsburgh. His personnel jacket shows consistently excellent job evaluations.
Posh Palm Beach is no hotbed of crime, and in his first year on the job, a resi-
dent confined to his home with a sick child thanked Reiterfor delivering afew Cokes
to the house. Reiter refused payment for the beverages.
Another resident thanked
Reiter for shutting off his car's headlights in his driveway, saying a valet must have
been at fault
Reiter worked everything
from road patrol to organized crime, vice and narcotics.
And he's no novice at investigations involving the island's rich and famous. He was the
lead detective probing the drug overdose death of David
Kennedy in 1984. He also was one of the officers who worked the investigation of
William Kennedy Smith, who was charged in 1991 - and later acquitted - with raping
a woman at the Kennedy family compound in Palm
Beach.
Reiter, who has a master's degree in human resource development from Palm
Beach Atlantic University, at-.
so has attended the FBI National Academy in Quantffio,
Va., and management coursa es at Harvard. He's been acW five in countywide interagen-
cy law enforcement organizations and has a "top secret" national security
clearance.
"He has a perspective that's broader than just addressing the needs of the
town" said Town Manager
Peter Elwell, who promoted
Reiter from assistant chief to chief in March 2001. Reiter makes more than $144,000 as
the town's top cop. Elwell thinks he's worth it
"He's very businesslike, very straightforward. He's not easily agitated or flam-
boyant. He's about the work,'W
Elwell said. "I think that his service as chief has been outstanding in five-plus
years."
0 'arty kelleapbpastcam
03956- 79 ,FD-350 tRev. 5-8-81)
West Palm Beach, FL
Edition:
Title:
The man who had everything
Character
or
Classification 31E-MM-108062
Submitting Office: MM
0
CO
(Indicate page, name of kb
co
newspaper, city and state.) On
IA/ 6A / The Palm Beach Post rn
0
Indexing:
in's Palm Beach mansion at 358 El Brillo Way.
31e- tifrt- (&S%'z-fs
Jeffrey Epstein has donated more than $100,000
to Democratic candidates' campaigns, including John Kerry's presidential bid,
the reelection campaign of New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson and the Senate bids
of Joe Lieberman, Hillary Clinton, Christopher Dodd and Charles Schumer.
WINGED GARGOYLES guarded the gate at Jeffrey
Epstein's Palm Beach mansion. Inside, hidden cameras trolled two rooms, while the girls came and went.
For the police detectives who sifted through the garbage outside and kept
records of visitors, it was the lair of a troubling target.
Epstein, one of the most mysterious of the country's mega-rich, was known as
much for his secrecy as for his love of fine things: magnificent homes, private jets,
beautiful women, friendships with the world's elite.
But at Palm Beach police headquarters, he was becoming known for something
else: the regular arrival of teenage girls he hired to give him massages and, police
say, perform sexual favors.
Epstein was different
from most sexual abuse suspects; he was trir more powerful. He counted among his
friends former President Bill
Clinton, Donald Trump and
Prince Andrew, along with some of the most prominent legal, scientific and business
minds in the country.
When detectives started
See EPSTEIN, 6A
Epstein's mysterious lifestyle began to unravel after claims of sexual activity with minors.
03956-81
A life of luxury and secrecy
1INA FINEBERG/The Assmated Ness
Jeffrey Epstein's Manhattan townhouse dominates a block on the Upper East
Side. Thought to be the largest private residence M Manhattan, it is reported
to have closed-cimult television and a heated sidewalk ts melt fallen snow.
Powerful legal team stymies detectives.
Women in his life
Ghislaine Maxwell, a fixture at elite parties and the intensely private daughter of a media tycoon, dated
Epstein in the 1990s.
'I'm like a Heidi
Reiss: [REDACTED]
told police she took at least six girls to visit
Epstein, all between the ages of 14 and 16.
PalmBeachPost.com
Read previous stories on the Epstein investigation.
03956-82
EPSTEIN from 1A • tittle is known or said about asking questions and teenage girls
started talking, a wave of legal resistance followed.
If Palm Beach police didn't know quite who Jeffrey Epstein was, they found out soon enough.
Epstein, now 53, was a quintes-
sential man of mystery. He amassed his fortune and friends quietly, always in the background as he navigated New York high society.
When he first attracted notice in the early 1990s, it was on account of
the woman he was dating: Ghislaine
Maxwell, daughter of the late British media tycoon Robert Maxwell.
In a lengthy article, headlined
"The Mystery of Ghislaine Maxwell's Secret Love," the British Mail an Sunday tabloid laid out speculative stories that the socialite's beau
was a CIA spook, a math teacher, a concert pianist or a corporate head-
hunter.
"But what is the truth about him?" the newspaper wondered.
"Like Maxwell, Epstein is both flamboyant and intensely private."
The media frenzy did not begin in full until a decade later. In September 2002, Epstein was flung into the limelight when he flew Clinton
and actors Kevin Spacey and Chris
Tucker to Africa on his private jet
Suddenly everyone wanted to know who Epstein was. New York magazine and Vanity Fair published
lengthy profiles. The New York Post listed him as one of the city's most
eligible bachelors and began describing him in its gossip calming with adjectives such as "mysterious" and "reclusive."
Although Epstein gave no interviews, the broad strokes of his past started to come into focus.
Building a life of extravagance
He was born blue-collar in 1953, the son of a New York City parks department employee, and raised in
Brooklyn's Coney Island neighborhood. He left college without a bachelor's degree but became a math teacher at the prestigious
Dalton School in Manhattan.
The story goes that the father of one of Epstein's students was so impressed with the man that he put him in touch with a senior partner at
Bear Steams, the global investment bank and securities firm.
In 1976, Epstein left Dalton for a job at Bear Stearns. By the early
1980s, he had started J. Epstein and
Co. That is when he began making his millions in earnest
Epstein's business except this: Ik manages money for the extremely
' wealthy. He is said to handle accounts only of $1 billion or greater.
, It has been estimated he has roughly 15 clients but their identities are the subject of only speculation. All except for one: Leslie Wex-
ner, founder of The Limited retail chain and a former Palm )3eacher who is said to have been a mentor to
Epstein.
Wexner sold Epstein one of his most lavish residences: a massive
townhouse that dominates a block on Manhattan s Upper East Side. It is reported to have, among its finer featm-es, closed-circuit television
and a heated sidewalk to melt away
Mien snow.
That townhouse, thought to be the largest private residence in
Manhattan, is only a piece of the extravagant world Epstein built over
time.
In NewMeidco, he constructed a
27,000-square-foot hilltop mansion on a 10,000-acre ranch outside Santa
Fe. Manybelieved it to be the largest home in the state.
In Palm Beach, he bought a waterfront home on El Brillo Way.
And he owns a 100-acre private island in the Virgin Islands.
Perhaps as remarkable as his lavish homes is his extensive network of friends and associates at the highest echelons of power. This
includes not only socialites but also business tycoons, media moguls, politicians, royalty and Nobel Prizewinning scientists whose research
he often funds.
"Just like other people collect art, he collects scientists," said
Martin Nowak, who directs the
Program for Evolutionary Dynamics at Harvard University and was reportedly the recipient of a $30 million research donation from
Epstein.
Epstein is said to have befriended former Harvard President Larry Summers, prominentlaw
Professor Alan Dershowitz, Donald
Trump and New York Daily News
Publisher Mott Zuckerman.
And yet he managed for decades
to maintain a low profile. He avoids eating out and was rarely photo-
-grirehed.
"The odd thing is I never met him, said Dominick Dunne, the famous chronicler of the trials and
tribulations of the very rich. "I wasn't even aware of him," except fora
Vanity Fair article.
Epstein'sfriendship with Clinton has attracted the most attention.
Epstein met Clinton as early as
1995, when he paid tens of thousands of dollars to join him at an intimate fund-raising dinner in Palm
Beach. But from all appearances, they did not become close friends until after Clinton leftthe Oval Office and moved to New York.
Epstein has donated more than
$100,000 to Democratic candidates' campaigns, including John Kerry's presidential bid, the reelection campaign of New Mexico Gov. Bill
Richardson and the Senate bids of
Joe Lieberman, Hillary Rodham
Clinton, Christopher Dodd and
Charles Schumer.
Powerful friends and enemies
A Vanity Fair profile found cracks in the veneer of Epstein's life story. The 2003 article said he left
Bear Stearns in the wake of a federal probe and a possible Securities and
Exchange Commission violation. It also pointed out that Citibank once sued him for defaulting on a $20 million loan.
The article suggested that one of his business mentors and previous employers was Steven Hoffenberg, now serving a prison term after
"bilking investors out of more than
$450 million in one of the largest
Ponzi schemes in American historT"
As he amassed his wealth,
Epstein made enemies in disputes both large and small. He sited the man who in 1990 sold him his multimillion-dollar Palm Beach home over a dispute about less than
$:46,000 in furnishings.
03956-83 irrner friend claimed Epstein out of a promise to reimgurse him hundreds of thousands of dollars after their failed investment
in Texas oil wells. A judge decided
Epstein owed him nothing.
"It's a bad memory. I would rather not have ever met Jeffrey
Epstein," said Michael Stroll, the retired former president of Williams
Electronics and Sega Corp. "Suffice it to say I have nothing good to say
about him."
Among the characteristics most attributed to Epstein is a penchant for women.
He has been linked to Maxwell, a fixture on the high-society party circuits in both New York and London. Previous girlfriends are said to
include a former Ms. Sweden and a
Romanian model.
"He's a lot of fun to be with,"
Donald Trump told New York magazine in 2002. "It is even said that he likes beautiful women as much as I do, and many of them are on the
younger side. No doubt about it,
Jeffrey enjoys his social life."
Investigation leads to Epstein
Although he was not a frequenter of the Palm Beach social scene, he made his presence felt
Among his charitable donations, he gave $90,000 to the Palm Beach
Police Department and $100,000 to
Ballet Florida,
In Palm Beach, he lived in luxury. Three black Mercedes sat in his garage, alongside a green Harley-
Davidson. His Jet waited at a hangar at Palm Beach International Airport
At home, a private chef and a small staff stood at the ready. From a window in his mansion, he could look out on the Intracoastal Water-
way and the West Palm Beach skyline. He seemed to be a man who had everything.
e' But extraordinary wealth can
Ifuel extraordinary desires.
llIn March 2005, a worried mother ntacted Palm Beach police. She said another parent had overheard a conversation between their chil-
dren.
Now the mother was afraid her
14-year-old daughter had been molested by a man on the island.
The phone call triggered an extensive investigation, one that
' would lead detectives to Epstein but
• leave them frustrated.
Palm Beach police and the state attorney's office have declined to discuss the case. But a Palm Beach police report detailing the criminal
probe offers a window into what detectives faced as they sought to close in on Epstein.
Detectives interviewed the girl,
• who told them a friend had invited
Iher to a rich man's house to perform a massage. She said the friend told
her to say she was 18 if asked.At the house, she said she was paid $300
after stripping to her panties and massaging the man while he masturbated.
Police interview 5 alleged victims
The investigation began in full after the girl identified Epstein in a
photo as the man who had paid her.
Police arranged for garbage trucks
to set aside Epstein's trash so police could sift through it. They set up a
video camera to record the comings and goings at his home. They monitored an airport hangar for signs of his private jet's arrivals and depar-
tures.
They quickly learned that the woman who took the 14-year-old girl
to Epstein's house was [REDACTED], a Palm Beach Community College student from Loxahatchee. In a sworn statement at police head-
quarters, Robson, then 13, admitted she had taken at least six girls to visit
Epstein, all between the ages of 14 and 16. Epstein paid her for each visit she said.
During the drive back to her house, Robson told detectives, Wm like a Heidi Fleiss."
Police interviewed five alleged victims and 17 witnesses. Their report shows some of the girls said they had been instructed to have sex
with another woman in front of
Epstein, and one said she had direct intercourse with him.
In October, police searched the
Palm Beach mansion. They discovered photos of naked, young-looking females, just as several of the girls
I had described in interviews. Hidden cameras were found in the garage
area and inside a clock on Epstein's desk, alongside a girl's high school
transcript.
Two of Epstein's former employees told investigators that young-looking girls showed up to
perform massages two . i or three times a day when Epstem was n
town.
They said the girls were permitted many indulgences. A chef cooked for them. Workers gave
them rides and handed out hundreds of dollars at a time.
One employee told detectives he was told to send a dozen roses to one teenage girl after a high school drama performance. Others .were
given rental cars. One, according to police, received a $200 Christmas
bonus.
The cops moved to cement their case. But as they fried to tighten the noose, they encountered other forces at work.
hi Orlando they interviewed a possible victim who told them nothing inappropriate had .happened between her and Epstein. They
asked her whether she had spoken.
to anyone else. She said yes, a private investigator had asked her the
same questions.
When they subpoenaed one of
Epstein's former employees, he told them the same thing. He and a pri-
vate eye had met ata restaurant days earlier to go over what the man would tell investigators.
Detectives received complaints that private eyes were posing as police officers. When they told
Epstein's local attorney, Guy Fronstin, he said the investigators worked
for Roy Black, the high-powered
Miamilawyer who has defended the likes of Rush Limbaugh and William
Kennedy Smith.
While the private eyes were conducting a parallel investigation,
Dershowitz, the Harvard law professor, traveled to West Palm Beach with information about the girls.
From their own profiles on the popular Web site MySpace.com, he obtained copies of their discussionsabout their use of alcohol and mari-
juana
He took his research to a meeting with prosecutors in early 2006, where he sought to cast doubt on the teens' reliability.
- The private eyes had dug up
03956-84
• enough dirt rm the girls torn prosecutors skeptical. Not only did some of the girls have issues with drugs or alcohol but also some had
criminal records and other troubles,
Epstein's legal team claimed. And at least one of them, they said, lied
when she told police she was younger than 18 when she started performing massages for Epstein.
After the meeting, prosecutors postponed their decision to take the case to a grand jury.
In the following weeks, police received complaints that two of the victims or their families had been harassed or threatened. Epstein's
legal team maintains that its private investigators did nothing illegal or
unethical during their research.
By then, relations between police and prosecutors were fraying.
At a key meeting with prosecutors and the defense, Detective Joseph
Recarey, the lead investigator, was a no-show, according to Epstein's attorney.
"The embarrassment on the prosecutor's face was evident when, the police officer never showed up for the meeting," attorney Jack
Goldberger said.
Later in April, Recarey walked into a prosecutor's office at the state
attorney's office and learned the case was taking an unexpected turn.
• The prosecutor, Lerma
Belohlavek, told Recarey the state attorney's office had offered Epstein
a plea deal that would not require him to serve jail time or receive a
felony conviction.
Recarey told her he disapproved of the plea offer.
The deal never came to pass, however.
Future unclear after charge
On May 1, the department asked prosecutors to approve warrants to arrest Epstein on four counts of unlawful sexual activity with a minor
and to charge his personal assistant,
Sarah Kellen, now 27, for her alleged role in arranging the visits. Police
officials also wanted to charge Robson, the self-described 11.1di Fleiss,
with lewd and lascivious acts.
By then, the department was frustrated with the way the state attorney's office had handled the case. On the same day the warrants
were requested, Palm Beach Police
Chief Mrchael Reiter wrote a letter
to State Attorney Barry Krischer suggesting he disqualify himself
from the case if he would not act
Two weeks later, Recarey was
told that prosecutors had decided once again to take the case to the grand jury. '
It is not known how many of the girls testified before the grand jury.
But Epstein's defense team said one girl who was subpoenaed - the one
who said she had sexual intercourse with Epstein - never showed up.
The grand jury's indictment was handed down in July. It was not the one the police department had wanted.
Instead of being slapped with a charge of unlawful sexual activity with a minor, Epstein was charged with one count of felony solicitation •
of prostitution, which carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison. He was booked into the Palm
Beach County Jail early July 23 and released hours later.
Epstein's legal team "doesn't iglispute that he had girls over for
Massages," Goldberger said. But he said their claims that they had sex-
ual encounters with him lack credibility.
"They are incapable of being believed," he said. "They had criminal records. They had accusations of theft made against them by their
employers. There was evidence of drug use by some of them."
What remains for Epstein is yet
to be seen.
The Palm Beach Police Department has asked the FBI to investigate the case. It also has returned the $90,000 Epstein donated in 2004.
In New York, candidates for governor and state attorney general have vowed to return a total of at least $60,000 in campaign contribu-
tions from Epstein. Meanwhile,
Epstein's powerful friends have remained silent as tabloids and ,
Internet .blogs feast on the public ' details of the police investigation.
Goldberger maintains Epstein's innocence but says the legal team has not ruled out a future plea deal.
He insists Epstein will emerge in the end with his reputation untarnished.
"He will recover from this," he said.
Staff writer Larry Keller and stet researehets Bridget Bulger, Angelica
Cortez, Amy Hanaway and Melanie '
Mena contributed to this story.
andrecmana@pbpost.com
03956-85
Epstein camp calls female accusers liars
Palm Beach Post Staff Wilter
Attorneys and publicists for
Palm Beach financier Jeffrey
Epstein went on the offensive
Monday, contending that teenage girls who have accused Epstein of sexual she-
nanigans at his waterfront home are liars and saying that the Palm Beach Police De-
partment is "childish."
"There never was any sex between Jeffrey Epstein and any underage women," his lead attorney,
Jack Goldberger, said
from Idaho where he was vacationing with his faith-
Epstein ly.
Epstein did have young women come to his house to give him massages, Goldberg-
er said. "Mr. Epstein absolutely insisted anybody who came
to his house be over the age of
18. How he verified that, I don't know. The question is, did anything illegal occur. The law was not violated here."
He had no explanation as to why Epstein would pay girls or women with no massage train-
ing - as the alleged victims said was the case - $200 to
$300 for their visits. 'The credibility of these witnesses has been seriously pies-
'Mr. Epstein absolutely insisted anybody who came to his house be over the age of 18:
Epstein's lead attorney tioned," Goldberger said.
Epstein, 53, was indicted by a county grand jury last month on a charge of felony
solicitation of prostitution. After an 11-month investigation that included sifting through
Epstein's trash and surveillirig his home, Palm Beach police concluded there was enough evidence to charge him with sexual activity with minors.
When the grand jury indicted
Epstein on the less serious charge, Police Chief Michael
Reiter referred the case to the
FBI to determine whether there were federal law violations.
After a spate of stories about the case last week, New
York publicist Dan Flores - whose client list has included
Paris Hilton andJennifer Lopez
- said on Saturday that Epstein's camp was ready "to get .
their story out"
See EPSTEIN, 93
)'-
(L8-8"9 "Ae40gVadP!
03956-94
4
Attorney: Police gave media 'distorted view'
III. EPSTEIN from is
They did that Monday via Goldberger and a Los Angeles publicist for Miami criminal defense attorney
Roy Black, who also has represented
Epstein in the case.
"We just think there has been a distorted view of this case in the me-
dia presented by the Palm Beach police," Goldberger said.
Reiter has consistently declined
to comment on the case and did not respond to a request for comment
Monday.
The implication that State Attorney Barry Krischer was easy on Epstein by presenting the case to a grand jury rather than filing charges
directly against him is wrong, Goldberger said.
The Palm Beach Police Department was "happy and ecstatic" that the panel was going to review the evidence. "I think what happened is
they weren't happy with the result.
They decided to use the press to embarrass Mr. Epstein."
But records show that Reiter wrote Krischer on May 1 - well before the case went to the grand jury - suggesting that Krischer "consider if
good and sufficient reason exists to require your disqualification from the
prosecution of these cases."
Rather than fiat-out decline to charge Epstein, Krischer referred the case to the grand jury to "appease" the chief, Goldberger said.
A state attorney's spokesman would say only that the office refers cases to the grand jury when there are issues with the viability of the
evidence or witnesses' credibility.
Both the state attorney and the grand jury concluded there was not sufficient evidence that Epstein had sex with minors, according to Gold-
berger. "It was just a childish performance by the Palm Beach Police
Department," Goldberger said.
The defense attorney said one of the alleged victims who claimed she was a minor was in fact over the age of 18. Another alleged victim who
was subpoenaed to testify to the grand jurk failed to do so. Epstein's
Epstein investigation
Read a letter from Palm Beach Police
Chief Michael Reiter to State Attorney
Barry Krischer on the Epstein probe.
PalmBeachPost.com accusers, he added, have histories of drug abuse and thefts. 'These wom-
en are liars. We've established that"
But why would they all invent their stories about meeting Epstein for sexual massages?
"I don't have an answer as to what was the motivation for these women
to come forward and make these allegations," Goldberger said.
0 lany keller@pbpostcom
4fr
03956-95
Miami-FIG
From. Miami
Squad PB-2 PBCRA
Contact: SA
Attn: SSA
SIA
Approved By: 1,3 -1 b6 -1, -2
Drafted By: auk b7C -1, -2
Case ID
Title:
: 31E -MM -108062 (DL.R.IiLgH
Synopsis: To request analytical assistance regarding b7E -1
Enclosure(s):
b6 -1 b7C -1 b7D -2 b7E -1
Details: An ongoing federal investigation has revealed that
Enclosed for analytical review are b3 -1
1,6 -1, -3 b7C -1, -3 b3 -1 b6 b7C b7D -1, -1, -2 -3 -3 b7E -1
"2.(0(ey,k,40,e(p3956-96
. 31E- f-t."-L -1°1°4 -//7
Re: 31E-MM-108062, 09/13/2006
Please contact SA
_lat should any further n orma on be needed.
2
b6 -1 b7C -1 b7D -2 b7E -1 b6 -2 b7C -2
03956-97
P3-2/West Palm Beach
Contact: SA
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Approved By: __________________
Drafted By: 1 las*
Case ID #:
Pending Inactive)
(PcAding) b7A -1 ePema-p...g.) b7E -3
(Pon ing) frcAliAyl
(Pen ing)
(Rending)
Title: Case update.
Synopsis: Delayed Investigation.
Details: For information of the file, investigation in this matter has been delayed due to writer's assignment to a
kidnaping investigation1 1 since 1/17/2006.
b6 -2 b7C -2 b7E -3
-Htt
FD-350 (Rev. 5-8-121)
(Indicate page, name of newspaper, city and state.)
Belo
Edition: PALM BEACH POST
Title: BILLIONAIRE FACES CHARGE OF
Billionaire faces charge of solicitation of minors
MONDAY: Palm Beach billionaire Jeffrey
Epstein paid to have underage girls and young women brought to his home,
where he received massages and sometimes sex, according to an investigation by the Palm
Beach Police Department An indictment was unsealed that charged Epstein, 53,
with one count of felony
Epstein solicitation of prostitution, which carries a maximum penally of five years in pris-
on. He was released on $3,000 bond.
Epstein's attorney, Jack Goldberger, said his client, a money manager for the
wealthy, committed no crimes and passed a lie detector test in which he
said he did not know the girls were minors.
Character: 3 IE-MM108062
or
Classification:
Submitting Office:
Indexing:
O396 -1Q
Prom: Miami
PB2/PBCRA
Contact: SA
Approved By:
Drafted By:
Case ID #: 31E-MM-108062
Title: JEFFREY EPSTEIN.
Attn:
(Pontiing)
Crimes Against Children
SSAI
Squad C-20
Synopsis: To set lead for captioned investigation.
b3 -1 b6 -1, -2 b7C -1, -2
Enclosure(s): One Grand Jury Subpoena forl
(FBI), Palm Beach County esident Agency (PBCRA), opened an
Details: On lthe Federal Bureau of Investigation investigation involving multi-millionaire Jeffery Epstein and
captioned subjects. The investigation involves b3 -2 b3 -1 b6 -1, -3 b7C -1, -3 b7E -4 b6 -1 b7C -1 hi' ,26/1r5 el. EC-
_fi)coe,2395-7!
Re: 31E-MM-108062, 09/18/2006
FBI Miami, PBCRA, request
Division, b3 -2 b6 -2 b7C -2
Any questions or concerns contact
SA Miami
PBCRA, biographical information is the following:
Name DOB SSAN b6 -1 b7C -1
Hair
Eyes
Height
Weight
2
03956-102
To:
Re:
New York From. Miami
31E-MM-108062, 09/18/2006
LEAD(s):
Set Lead 1: (Action)
NEW YORK
AT NEW YORK
It is requested that FBI New Yorkl addition, if needed, serve the enclosed subpoena.
3
b3 -2 b6 -1 b7C -1
03956-103
Automated Serial Permanent Charge-Out
FD-5a (1-5-94)
Case ID: 31E-MM-108062 Serial: 20
Description of Document:
Type :
b3 -2
Date :
To :
From : US DIST COURT
Topic: EXECUTED FGJ SUBPOENA
Reason for Permanent Charge-Out:
transfer to subpoena sub
Transferred to:
Case ID: 31E-MM-108062-SBP Serial: 62
Employee:
b6 -2 b7C -2
31e- Aitt-/oft2e0-1-,ao
03956-104
(Rev:01-31-2003)
Precedence: ROUTINE Date: 10/17/2006
PB2/PECRA
From. New York
Squad C-20
Contact: SA
Approved By:
b3 -1
Drafted By: b6 -1, -2
Case ID #: 31E -MM-108062 4-pend-i-F±g4 b7C __.2 5-- -1, -2
Title: JEFFREY EPSTEIN-
Synopsis: Lead covered for captioned investigation; Grand Jury subpoena served'
Reference: 31E-MM-108062 Serial 19
Enclosure(s): Enclosed for Miami is the server copy of the referenced Grand Jury subpoena issued by the United States
District Court, Southern District of Florida on 10/06/2006 and served___________________________on 10/16/2006.
Details: On 10/16/2006, SA received from SA
Federal Express delivery subpoena. On that date. SA1 land SA' service, the referenced Grand via
Jury b3 -2
[repeated 3 times] b6 -2, -5 b7C -2, -5
03956-14
3IC- MA-4 - / of PC0,2
• xis sir
Re: 31E-MM-108062, 10/17/2006
States District Courthouse
Palm Beach, Florida.
located at 701 at the United
Clematis Street, West
At this time, no further action will be taken by the
New York Office in this matter. Lead is covered.
2
b3 -2 b6 -5 b7C -5
03956-110
United States District kart
TO:
FGJ 05-02(WPB)-Fri./No. OLY-19
SUBPOENA FOR b3 -2
YOU AREHEREBY COMMANDED to appear and testifybefore theGrand Jury of theUnited StatesDistrict
Court at the place, date and time specified below.
PLACE:
United States District Courthouse
701 Clematis Street
West Palm Beach, Florida 33401
ROOM:
Room 4-A
DATE AND TIME:
YOU ARE ALSO COMMANDED to bring you the following document(s) o object(s):
Please coordinate your compliance of this subpoena and confirm the date and time of your
appearance with Special lent_____________________Federal Bureau of Investigation,
Telephone:_________________ b3 -2 b6 -2
_b7C -2
This subpoena shall remain in effect until you are granted leave to depart by the court or by an officer acting on behalf
of the court.
This subpoena is issued upon application
*If not applicable, enter "none."
DATE:
October 6, 2006
Name Address and Phone Number of Assistant U.S. Attorney
Assistant U.S. Attorney
500 So. Australian Avenue, Suite 400 b7C -6
West Palm Beach, FL 33401-6235
Fax (561) 802-1787
T be used in lieu of A0110
FORM ORD-227
JAN .86
03956-111
PB2/West Palm Beach RA
Contact: SAI
Approved By:
Drafted By:
Case ID\ #:
_r
31E-MM-108062 - S3 b7C -1, -2
Title: JEFFREY EPSTEIN;
ItWSTA
- ROSTITUTION
Synopsis. Request that SA____________________________ receive holiday pay on November 10, 2006,
a Federal Holiday.
with SOC#
Veteran's
Day,
Details: SAI Iwill be working on gathering data for the Intelligent Analyst that will be coming to the Palm Beach RA
on Monday.
4.
b6 -2
-2
b7C -2 b6 -2 b7C -2 j/C- MM g/Z)40,950-a.
IN RE Search Warrant, Affidavit and Application for Search
Warrant, and Inventory and Return
DATED AND SIGNED: 10-19-05
AFFIANTS: Det. Palm Beach Police b6 -4 b7C -4
THIS CAUSE having come before the Court and the Court having been appraised,
IT IS HEREBY ORDERED pursuantto Florida Statues Chapter 119.07(3)(b)thatthe
Affidavit and Application forSearch Warrant signed by Investigator as affiant
dated and related Search Warrant dated October 18,2005 hereby sealed until further order
of the Court.
The Clerk of Court, Criminal Division is hereby ordered to seal said Search Warrant
and Affidavit and Application for Search Warrant until further order of the Court.
It is further
ORDERED that the Inventory and Return for Said Search Warrant shall be sealed
when filed with the Clerk of Court until further order of the Court.
DONE AND ORDERED this 19th day of October at West Palm Beach, Palm Beach
County, Florida.
XC:
Laura Johnson
Circuit Court Judge
Assistant State Attorney b6 -7 b7C -7 b6 -4 b7C -4
(CON
03956-235