Skip to main content
Skip to content
Case File
kaggle-ho-023001House Oversight

Jeffrey Epstein case timeline reveals non‑prosecution deal, FBI probe, and high‑level contacts

Jeffrey Epstein case timeline reveals non‑prosecution deal, FBI probe, and high‑level contacts The document outlines concrete actions – e.g., a sealed non‑prosecution agreement negotiated by U.S. Attorney Alexander Acosta, FBI Operation "Leap Year," grand‑jury subpoenas, and flight‑log evidence linking Epstein to senior politicians. These details provide specific names, dates, locations, and procedural steps that can be followed up by investigators, and they implicate powerful officials (Acosta, former President Trump’s labor secretary, former President Clinton, former national security adviser Sandy Berger, Prince Andrew). If verified, the leads would spark major public outcry and legal scrutiny. Key insights: Acosta met Epstein’s lawyer Jay Lefkowitz at the West Palm Beach Marriott to discuss a sealed non‑prosecution agreement.; FBI opened a federal investigation "Operation Leap Year" in July 2006, later interviewing witnesses across multiple states.; Grand‑jury subpoenas for Epstein’s computers were issued in 2007, but the devices were removed before the search.

Date
Unknown
Source
House Oversight
Reference
kaggle-ho-023001
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

Jeffrey Epstein case timeline reveals non‑prosecution deal, FBI probe, and high‑level contacts The document outlines concrete actions – e.g., a sealed non‑prosecution agreement negotiated by U.S. Attorney Alexander Acosta, FBI Operation "Leap Year," grand‑jury subpoenas, and flight‑log evidence linking Epstein to senior politicians. These details provide specific names, dates, locations, and procedural steps that can be followed up by investigators, and they implicate powerful officials (Acosta, former President Trump’s labor secretary, former President Clinton, former national security adviser Sandy Berger, Prince Andrew). If verified, the leads would spark major public outcry and legal scrutiny. Key insights: Acosta met Epstein’s lawyer Jay Lefkowitz at the West Palm Beach Marriott to discuss a sealed non‑prosecution agreement.; FBI opened a federal investigation "Operation Leap Year" in July 2006, later interviewing witnesses across multiple states.; Grand‑jury subpoenas for Epstein’s computers were issued in 2007, but the devices were removed before the search.

Tags

kagglehouse-oversighthigh-importancesex-traffickingnon‑prosecution-agreementfbi-investigationpolitical-connectionsflight-logs
0Share
PostReddit

Related Documents (6)

House OversightUnknown

Timeline of Jeffrey Epstein legal actions reveals repeated plea negotiations, non‑prosecution agreements, and alleged involvement of high‑profile officials

Timeline of Jeffrey Epstein legal actions reveals repeated plea negotiations, non‑prosecution agreements, and alleged involvement of high‑profile officials The document outlines a detailed chronology of federal and state investigations, plea‑bargain talks, and a non‑prosecution agreement that involved U.S. Attorney Alexander Acosta, former Deputy Attorney General Jay Lefkowitz, and mentions of President Bill Clinton, former NSC adviser Sandy Berger, and Prince Andrew. It provides concrete dates, names, and procedural steps that could be pursued for deeper investigation into possible misconduct, abuse of prosecutorial discretion, and undisclosed victim notifications. While many details are already public, the specific references to internal DOJ discussions and the alleged secret addendum to the non‑prosecution deal constitute a moderately strong lead. Key insights: Repeated negotiations between Epstein’s legal team and DOJ officials (Acosta, Lefkowitz) from 2005‑2008.; Reference to a non‑prosecution agreement that allegedly required victim non‑notification and a special master to represent victims.; FBI involvement noted in 2006‑2009, including a butler’s testimony about a “black book” of underage girls.

1p
House OversightFBI ReportNov 11, 2025

Jeffrey Epstein case timeline reveals non‑prosecution deal, FBI probe, and high‑level contacts

The document outlines concrete actions – e.g., a sealed non‑prosecution agreement negotiated by U.S. Attorney Alexander Acosta, FBI Operation "Leap Year," grand‑jury subpoenas, and flight‑log evidence Acosta met Epstein’s lawyer Jay Lefkowitz at the West Palm Beach Marriott to discuss a sealed non‑pr FBI opened a federal investigation "Operation Leap Year" in July 2006, later interviewing witnesse

8p
House OversightFBI ReportNov 11, 2025

Timeline of Jeffrey Epstein legal actions reveals repeated plea negotiations, non‑prosecution agreements, and alleged involvement of high‑profile o...

The document outlines a detailed chronology of federal and state investigations, plea‑bargain talks, and a non‑prosecution agreement that involved U.S. Attorney Alexander Acosta, former Deputy Attorne Repeated negotiations between Epstein’s legal team and DOJ officials (Acosta, Lefkowitz) from 2005‑2 Reference to a non‑prosecution agreement that allegedly required victim non‑notification and a spe

5p
House OversightFinancial RecordNov 11, 2025

Extensive court filing outlines alleged Jeffrey Epstein abuse network, non‑prosecution deal, and potential ties to high‑profile figures (Clinton, T...

The document provides a dense compilation of alleged facts, emails, deposition excerpts, and discovery requests that link Jeffrey Epstein’s sexual‑abuse operation to a “pyramid” recruitment scheme, a Epstein allegedly ran a “pyramid” scheme paying underage victims $200‑$300 per recruited girl. A 2007 non‑prosecution agreement (NPA) with the U.S. Attorney’s Office allegedly shielded Epstein fr Ema

39p
DOJ Data Set 9OtherUnknown

Case 09-34791-RBR

39p
House OversightFinancial RecordNov 11, 2025

Alfredo Rodriguez’s stolen “golden nugget” – a bound book linking Jeffrey Epstein to dozens of world leaders and billionaires

The passage describes a former Epstein employee, Alfredo Rodriguez, who allegedly stole a bound book containing the names, addresses and phone numbers of high‑profile individuals (e.g., Henry Kissinge Rodriguez claims the book lists names, addresses and phone numbers of dozens of influential individu He tried to sell the book to an undercover FBI agent for $50,000, indicating awareness of its valu

88p

Forum Discussions

This document was digitized, indexed, and cross-referenced with 1,400+ persons in the Epstein files. 100% free, ad-free, and independent.

Annotations powered by Hypothesis. Select any text on this page to annotate or highlight it.