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This is an FBI investigation document from the Epstein Files collection (FBI VOL00009). Text has been machine-extracted from the original PDF file. Search more documents →

FBI VOL00009

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36 pages
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SDNY News Clips, Wednesday, July 31, 2019 
SDNY News Clips 
Wednesday, July 31, 2019 
Contents 
Public Corruption 
2 
Epstein 
2 
Collins 
 17 
Securities and Commodities Fraud 
19 
Stewart 
19 
Thompson 
21 
Pinto-Thomaz 
23 
Narcotics 
25 
Castro 
25 
Rochester Drug Company 
27 
Civil 
29 
Life Spine 
29 
Matters of Interest 
31 
The U.S. said a California cherry-picker went to Pakistan for terrorist training. Now the case has collapsed 31 
Fed Cuts Interest Rates for First Time Since 2008 Crisis 
34 
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Public Corruption 
Epstein 
Jeffrey Epstein Hoped to Seed Human Race With His DNA 
New York Times 
By James B. Stewart, Matthew Goldstein and Jessica Silver-Greenberg 
7/31/19 
Jeffrey E. Epstein, the wealthy financier who is accused of sex trafficking, had an unusual dream: He hoped to 
seed the human race with his DNA by impregnating women at his vast New Mexico ranch. 
Mr. Epstein over the years confided to scientists and others about his scheme, according to four people familiar 
with his thinking, although there is no evidence that it ever came to fruition. 
Mr. Epstein's vision reflected his longstanding fascination with what has become known as transhumanism: the 
science of improving the human population through technologies like genetic engineering and artificial 
intelligence. Critics have likened transhumanism to a modem-day version of eugenics, the discredited field of 
improving the human race through controlled breeding. 
Mr. Epstein, who was charged in July with the sexual trafficking of girls as young as 14, was a serial illusionist: 
He lied about the identities of his clients, his wealth, his financial prowess, his personal achievements. But he 
managed to use connections and charisma to cultivate valuable relationships with business and political leaders. 
Interviews with more than a dozen of his acquaintances, as well as public documents, show that he used the 
same tactics to insinuate himself into an elite scientific community, thus allowing him to pursue his interests in 
eugenics and other fringe fields like cryonics. 
Lawyers for Mr. Epstein, who has pleaded not guilty to the sex-trafficking charges, did not respond to requests 
for comment. 
Mr. Epstein attracted a glittering array of prominent scientists. They included the Nobel Prize-winning physicist 
Murray Gell-Mann, who discovered the quark; the theoretical physicist and best-selling author Stephen 
Hawking; the paleontologist and evolutionary biologist Stephen Jay Gould; Oliver Sacks, the neurologist and 
best-selling author; George M. Church, a molecular engineer who has worked to identify genes that could be 
altered to create superior humans; and the M.I.T. theoretical physicist Frank Wilczek, a Nobel laureate. 
The lure for some of the scientists was Mr. Epstein's money. He dangled financing for their pet projects. Some 
of the scientists said that the prospect of financing blinded them to the seriousness of his sexual transgressions, 
and even led them to give credence to some of Mr. Epstein's half-baked scientific musings. 
Scientists gathered at dinner parties at Mr. Epstein's Manhattan mansion, where Dom Perignon and expensive 
wines flowed freely, even though Mr. Epstein did not drink. He hosted buffet lunches at Harvard's Program for 
Evolutionary Dynamics, which he had helped start with a $6.5 million donation. 
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Others flew to conferences sponsored by Mr. Epstein in the United States Virgin Islands and were feted on his 
private island there. Once, the scientists — including Mr. Hawking — crowded on board a submarine that Mr. 
Epstein had chartered. 
The Harvard cognitive psychologist Steven Pinker said he was invited by colleagues — including Martin 
Nowak, a Harvard professor of mathematics and biology, and the theoretical physicist Lawrence Krauss — to 
"salons and coffee klatsches" at which Mr. Epstein would hold court. 
While some of Mr. Pinker's peers hailed Mr. Epstein as brilliant, Mr. Pinker described him as an "intellectual 
impostor." 
"He would abruptly change the subject, A.D.D.-style, dismiss an observation with an adolescent wisecrack," 
Mr. Pinker said. 
Another scientist cultivated by Mr. Epstein, Jaron Lanier, a prolific author who is a founding father of virtual 
reality, said that Mr. Epstein's ideas did not amount to science, in that they did not lend themselves to rigorous 
proof. Mr. Lanier said Mr. Epstein had once hypothesized that atoms behaved like investors in a marketplace. 
Mr. Lanier said he had declined any funding from Mr. Epstein and that he had met with him only once after Mr. 
Epstein in 2008 pleaded guilty to charges of soliciting prostitution from a minor. 
Mr. Epstein was willing to finance research that others viewed as bizarre. He told one scientist that he was 
bankrolling efforts to identify a mysterious particle that might trigger the feeling that someone is watching you. 
At one session at Harvard, Mr. Epstein criticized efforts to reduce starvation and provide health care to the poor 
because doing so increased the risk of overpopulation, said Mr. Pinker, who was there. Mr. Pinker said he had 
rebutted the argument, citing research showing that high rates of infant mortality simply caused people to have 
more children. Mr. Epstein seemed annoyed, and a Harvard colleague later told Mr. Pinker that he had been 
"voted off the island" and was no longer welcome at Mr. Epstein's gatherings. 
Then there was Mr. Epstein's interest in eugenics. 
On multiple occasions starting in the early 2000s, Mr. Epstein told scientists and businessmen about his 
ambitions to use his New Mexico ranch as a base where women would be inseminated with his sperm and 
would give birth to his babies, according to two award-winning scientists and an adviser to large companies and 
wealthy individuals, all of whom Mr. Epstein told about it. 
It was not a secret. The adviser, for example, said he was told about the plans not only by Mr. Epstein, at a 
gathering at his Manhattan townhouse, but also by at least one prominent member of the business community. 
One of the scientists said Mr. Epstein divulged his idea in 2001 at a dinner at the same townhouse; the other 
recalled Mr. Epstein discussing it with him at a 2006 conference that he hosted in St. Thomas in the Virgin 
Islands. 
The idea struck all three as far-fetched and disturbing. There is no indication that it would have been against the 
law. 
Once, at a dinner at Mr. Epstein's mansion on Manhattan's Upper East Side, Mr. Lanier said he talked to a 
scientist who told him that Mr. Epstein's goal was to have 20 women at a time impregnated at his 33,000-
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square-foot Zorro Ranch in a tiny town outside Santa Fe. Mr. Lanier said the scientist identified herself as 
working at NASA, but he did not remember her name. 
According to Mr. Lanier, the NASA scientist said Mr. Epstein had based his idea for a baby ranch on accounts 
of the Repository for Germinal Choice, which was to be stocked with the sperm of Nobel laureates who wanted 
to strengthen the human gene pool. (Only one Nobel Prize winner has acknowledged contributing sperm to it. 
The repository discontinued operations in 1999.) 
Mr. Lanier, the virtual-reality creator and author, said he had the impression that Mr. Epstein was using the 
dinner parties — where some guests were attractive women with impressive academic credentials — to screen 
candidates to bear Mr. Epstein's children. 
Mr. Epstein did not hide his interest in tinkering with genes — and in perpetuating his own DNA. 
One adherent of transhumanism said that he and Mr. Epstein discussed the financier's interest in cryonics, an 
unproven science in which people's bodies are frozen to be brought back to life in the future. Mr. Epstein told 
this person that he wanted his head and penis to be frozen. 
Southern Trust Company, Mr. Epstein's Virgin Island-incorporated business, disclosed in a local filing that it 
was engaged in DNA analysis. Calls to Southern Trust, which sponsored a science and math fair for school 
children in the Virgin Islands in 2014, were not returned. 
In 2011, a charity established by Mr. Epstein gave $20,000 to the Worldwide Transhumanist Association, which 
now operates under the name Humanity Plus. The group's website says that its goal is "to deeply influence a 
new generation of thinkers who dare to envision humanity's next steps." 
Mr. Epstein's foundation, which is now defunct, also gave $100,000 to pay the salary of Ben Goertzel, vice 
chairman of Humanity Plus, according to Mr. Goertzel's résumé. 
"I have no desire to talk about Epstein right now," Mr. Goertzel said in an email to The New York Times. "The 
stuff I'm reading about him in the papers is pretty disturbing and goes way beyond what I thought his misdoings 
and kinks were. Yecch." 
Alan M. Dershowitz, a professor emeritus of law at Harvard, recalled that at a lunch Mr. Epstein hosted in 
Cambridge, Mass., he steered the conversation toward the question of how humans could be improved 
genetically. Mr. Dershowitz said he was appalled, given the Nazis' use of eugenics to justify their genocidal 
effort to purify the Aryan race. 
Yet the lunches persisted. 
"Everyone speculated about whether these scientists were more interested in his views or more interested in his 
money," said Mr. Dershowitz, who was one of Mr. Epstein's defense lawyers in the 2008 case. 
Luminaries at Mr. Epstein's St. Thomas conference in 2006 included Mr. Hawking and the Caltech theoretical 
physicist Kip S. Thorne. One participant at that conference, which was ostensibly on the subject of gravity, 
recalled that Mr. Epstein wanted to talk about perfecting the human genome. Mr. Epstein said he was fascinated 
with how certain traits were passed on, and how that could result in superior humans. 
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Mr. Epstein appears to have gained entree into the scientific community through John Brockman, a literary 
agent whose best-selling science writers include Richard Dawkins, Daniel Goleman and Jared Diamond. Mr. 
Brockman did not respond to requests for comment. 
For two decades, Mr. Brockman presided over a series of salons that matched his scientist-authors with 
potential benefactors. (The so-called "billionaires' dinners" apparently became a model for the gatherings at Mr. 
Epstein's East 71st Street townhouse, which included some of the same guests.) 
In 2004, Mr. Brockman hosted a dinner at the Indian Summer restaurant in Monterey, Calif., where Mr. Epstein 
was introduced to scientists, including Seth Lloyd, the M.I.T. physicist. Mr. Lloyd said that he found Mr. 
Epstein to be "charming" and to have "interesting ideas," although they "turned out to be quite vague." 
Also at the Indian Summer dinner, according to an account on the website of Mr. Brockman's Edge Foundation, 
were the Google founders Sergey Brin and Larry Page and Jeff Bezos, who was accompanied by his mother. 
"All the good-looking women were sitting with the physicists' table," Daniel Dubno, who was a CBS producer 
at the time and attended the dinner, was quoted as saying. Mr. Dubno told The Times that he did not recall the 
dinner or having said those words. 
Mr. Brockman was Mr. Gell-Mann's agent, and Mr. Gell-Mann, in the acknowledgments section of his 1995 
book "The Quark and the Jaguar," thanked Mr. Epstein for his financial support. 
However impressive his roster of scientific contacts, Mr. Epstein could not resist embellishing it. He claimed on 
one of his websites to have had "the privilege of sponsoring many prominent scientists," including Mr. Pinker, 
Mr. Thorne and the M.I.T. mathematician and geneticist Eric S. Lander. 
Mr. Pinker said he had never taken any financial or other support from Mr. Epstein. "Needless to say, I find 
Epstein's behavior reprehensible," he said. 
Mr. Thorne, who recently won a Nobel Prize, said he attended Mr. Epstein's 2006 conference, believing it to be 
co-sponsored by a reputable research center. Other than that, "I have had no contact with, relationship with, 
affiliation with or funding from Epstein," he said. "I unequivocally condemn his abhorrent actions involving 
minors." 
Lee McGuire, a spokesman for Mr. Lander, said he has had no relationship with Mr. Epstein. "Mr. Epstein 
appears to have made up lots of things," Mr. McGuire said, "and this seems to be among them." 
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Some of Jeffrey Epstein's victims don't want new charges in South Florida 
South Florida Sun Sentinel 
By Marc Freeman 
7/30/19 
Financier Jeffrey Epstein has been branded a pervert and an abuser, but not all of his victims want to see him 
prosecuted further in South Florida. 
Some of the girls Epstein assaulted at his Palm Beach mansion before 2008 have already reached financial 
settlements with him and fear they'll lose their anonymity. Federal prosecutors — the ones who approved his 
lenient plea deal to begin with — say they fully support that position. 
Epstein faces separate federal sex trafficking charges in New York, but the debate about prosecuting him in 
South Florida will be resolved soon enough. A federal judge in West Palm Beach is considering whether to 
strike down parts of a controversial 2007 deal that gave him and unnamed co-conspirators immunity from 
federal charges. 
U.S. District Judge Kenneth Marra ruled in February that Epstein's non-prosecution agreement violated the 
federal Crime Victims' Rights Act. Dozens of victims were improperly kept in the dark about it until after it had 
been finalized. 
Marra must decide how to rectify this violation 12 years later, after receiving arguments from lawyers for two 
of Epstein's victims, prosecutors and Epstein. 
The victims in the case, cited as Jane Does, say the necessary remedy is for Epstein to face what they say are 
long overdue charges in Florida. 
"To be sure, Jane Doe 1 and 2 very much appreciate the laudable efforts of the diligent prosecutors in New 
York," their lawyers wrote. "But those New York charges, important though they are, still leave Epstein's 
crimes in Florida uncharged and all of his co-conspirators at large." 
Lawyers for the U.S. government disagree. 
They concede that prosecutors back then "fell short" of treating victims properly as they reached a settlement 
with Epstein. But the attorneys now contend "the past cannot be undone" and the deal must be upheld under We 
law. 
Among their arguments is that many victims clearly want to let it go, because they are content with financial 
settlements they obtained from Epstein, and his 2008 guilty plea to two state prostitution charges. That plea 
resulted in 13 months in Palm Beach County Jail and registering as a sex offender. 
The prosecutors say they reached this position based on "conversations" with the victims and their lawyers, 
without giving a specific number. 
Attorney Spencer Kuvin of West Palm Beach said he represents one victim who met with the U.S. Attorney's 
Office in April. 
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"She said she'd like to see him prosecuted and put in jail," Kuvin said. "She said, 'I don't know if that's a 
realistic possibility, but that's what I want.'" 
He said it's not surprising that other victims are less inclined to participate. 
"When you have so many victims, you're going to have just as many different opinions as to how it should be 
handled," Kuvin said. "But that shouldn't stop the prosecution of a predator. One victim that wants to come 
forward ... is enough to put him away." 
The federal prosecutors explained that while some victims "would like to see Epstein prosecuted for his crimes, 
they valued anonymity above all and were not willing to speak with law enforcement or otherwise participate in 
any criminal or civil litigation due to the risk that their involvement may become known to family, friends, or 
the public." 
This is not to say there aren't many victims who are eager to see Epstein face new charges in South Florida, 
wrote Byung J. Pak, U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Georgia, and Jill E. Steinberg and Nathan P. 
Kitchens, special attorneys for the Southern District of Florida. 
But they conclude that reopening their cases against Epstein in South Florida still "exacerbates the harm to 
victims who have attempted to readjust their lives in the interim." 
Kuvin said he agrees, "It's a valid concern for some of the victims." 
Attorneys for two victims in the pending Crime Victims' Right Act litigation blasted the government's 
reasoning to leave Epstein's non-prosecution agreement in place. 
Lawyers Bradley Edwards, Paul Cassell and Jack Scarola say any South Florida victims who are not willing to 
prosecute Epstein because of privacy concerns can simply decline to do so and remain anonymous. 
The lawyers say there's no way that prosecuting Epstein for some victims would harm other victims unless the 
prosecutors somehow disclose their identities in the process. 
"The Government's argument thus boils down to a stop-us-before-we-do-something-bad claim that deserves no 
credence from the Court," wrote Edwards and his co-counsel on behalf of the two women, identified as Jane 
Doe 1 and Jane Doe 2. 
They also pointed out that the prosecutors weren't asserting the alleged "risk" to some victims outweighs 
obtaining justice for their clients. 
"But in any event, on closer examination, the Government's argument turns out to be vaporous," they wrote this 
month. 
Epstein's lawyers told the judge they support the South Florida prosecutors' arguments that the once-secret deal 
shouldn't be blown up to allow new charges. 
Jeffrey Epstein faces 'a million pages' of evidence: defense lawyer 
New York Post 
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By Andrew Denney and Bruce Golding 
7/31/19 
Prosecutors have I million pages of evidence against Jeffrey Epstein, his lawyer revealed in court Monday —
without shedding any new light on the jailhouse incident that left the convicted pedophile with bruises on his 
neck. 
No marks were visible on Epstein's neck, and he never appeared to be in pain during the 15-minute hearing in 
Manhattan federal court. 
The judge overseeing the case tentatively scheduled Epstein's trial for June 2020 after a prosecutor said the 
child sex-trafficking charges against him should be resolved as "swiftly as possible." 
"We don't think any delay in this is in the public interest," Manhattan Assistant US Attorney 
said. 
Epstein's trial is expected to last four to six weeks, and the defense will have all the prosecution's evidence 
against the multimillionaire financier by Oct. 31, she said. 
Defense lawyer Martin Weinberg objected to starting the trial before September 2020, saying, "We need time to 
review a million pages of discovery." 
But Judge Richard Berman said he was blocking out time in June 2020 on the presumption that the defense 
would be ready by then. 
Weinberg didn't make any mention of the July 23 incident in which law enforcement sources have said Epstein, 
66, was found sprawled on the floor of his cell in the Metropolitan Correctional Center, where he's being held 
without bail. 
Weinberg declined to answer questions about the incident outside court. 
Epstein, who wore dark blue jail scrubs over a brown T-shirt, didn't speak during the hearing. 
He's pleaded not guilty to accusations he sexually abused dozens of underage girls - some as young as 14 —
in his Upper East Side townhouse and his waterfront mansion in Palm Beach, Florida, between 2002 and 2005. 
Berman set a Sept. 13 deadline for defense motions in the case, and Weinberg said he planned to seek dismissal 
of a conspiracy charge on grounds of double jeopardy tied to allegations that underpinned a non-prosecution 
agreement that Epstein struck in 2008 with then-Miami US Attorney Alex Acosta. 
That deal was exposed last year in an award-winning series of stories by the Miami Herald, and controversy that 
erupted following Epstein's July 6 arrest forced Acosta to resign as President Trump's labor secretary. 
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Jeffrey Epstein appears in court for first time since reported jail injuries 
The Guardian 
By Victoria Bekiempis 
7/31/19 
Financier Jeffrey Epstein looked physically healthy when he appeared in court in New York on Wednesday in 
his sex trafficking case, about a week after reportedly being found unconscious in his jail cell with neck injuries. 
He wore dark blue jail scrubs during his brief appearance in Manhattan federal criminal court on Wednesday 
morning, in a proceeding scheduled before the apparent incident behind bars last week. 
There were no signs of injuries that had been reported at the time and he appeared well and more neatly 
presented than at some previous hearings. 
The Jeffrey Epstein scandal 
His lawyers did not bring up the incident in court and refused to comment on the topic following the hearing, 
which focused on scheduling issues. 
Prosecutor 
asked for a June 2020 trial date to be set, telling the judge: "We don't think that any 
delay in this case is in the public interest." 
The Manhattan US attorney's office alleged earlier in July that Epstein "sexually exploited and abused dozens 
of minor girls" from 2002 to 2005. Some of his victims were just 14 years old, prosecutors alleged. 
The disgraced financier, who was arrested on 6 July, pleaded not guilty several weeks ago. 
Epstein has long been accused of sexually abusing underage girls. He also has purported connections to Donald 
Trump, Bill Clinton and Prince Andrew, and moved in elite circles, including for several years in a relationship 
with Ghislaine Maxwell, daughter of the late British media tycoon Robert Maxwell. 
Epstein and the Miami US attorney's office, headed at the time by Alexander Acosta, brokered a plea deal in 
2008 that closed a federal inquiry involving at least 40 teenage girls. 
Under this arrangement, Epstein pleaded guilty to state charges, which presented far less potential jail time than 
if he had faced federal charges. The Miami Herald reporter Julie K Brown exposed the secretive nature of this 
agreement. Acosta resigned from his post as Trump's labor secretary following extensive criticism of the deal. 
Epstein has unsuccessfully requested bail while awaiting trial. The 66-year-old, who registered as a sex offender 
following the Florida case, had maintained through lawyers that he neither posed a danger nor risk of flight. 
In rejecting Epstein's request, Judge Richard Berman said, "the government has established danger to others 
and to the community by clear and convincing evidence", adding: "I doubt that any bail package can overcome 
a danger to the community." 
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Epstein's lawyers are appealing against the decision, according to court filings. 
Late last week, Judge Berman also ruled in favor of prosecutors' proposed protective order, which will keep 
case materials relating to "the government's ongoing investigation of uncharged individuals" under wraps. 
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Judge sets tentative date for Jeffrey Epstein's trial 
Associated Press 
By Larry Neumeister and Jim Mustian 
7/31/19 
A subdued Jeffrey Epstein listened passively in court Wednesday as a judge said he won't face trial on sex 
trafficking charges before June 2020, and more likely a few months afterward. 
There was no mention at the Manhattan federal court appearance or any visible sign of injuries after the 66-
year-old financier was found on the floor of his cell last week with neck bruises. 
Epstein's lawyer, Martin Weinberg, refused to say what might have left his client with neck bruises after the 
court hearing. 
Assistant U.S. Attorney 
urged a June trial date for the man accused of arranging to have sex with 
girls as young as age 14, saying there is "a public interest in bringing this case to trial as swiftly as possible." 
But Weinberg said the case is far from "ordinary," adding the defense team won't be ready before Labor Day 
2020. He said prosecutors delayed bringing charges that relate to alleged crimes that occurred in the early 2000s 
at Epstein's residences in Manhattan and Florida. 
U.S. District Judge Richard M. Berman said a trial projected to last four to six weeks could tentatively begin 
June 8, but he'll likely defer to defense lawyers' needs if they are not ready. 
Epstein's demeanor in court was noticeably different from previous appearances, when he was actively engaged 
with his lawyers and looking through papers. 
On Wednesday, he sat quietly, his hands folded in front of his face through much of the 20-minute proceeding. 
Occasionally, he looked toward courtroom artists and reporters seated in a jury box. 
Epstein has remained at the Metropolitan Correction Center, which is adjacent to the downtown Manhattan 
courthouse. 
He has pleaded not guilty to sex trafficking charges that carry the potential for up to 45 years in prison. 
Berman refused bail after concluding he is a danger to the community and a flight risk. Prosecutors have said 
they fear he might try to influence a growing number of witnesses who support charges that he recruited and 
abused dozens of girls in New York and Florida in the early 2000s. His lawyers had argued he should be 
allowed to stay under house arrest in his Manhattan mansion. 
His lawyers say an agreement reached with federal prosecutors a dozen years ago disallows the charges and 
they say he has committed no new crimes. 
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The lawyers agreed to file written arguments about the agreement and double jeopardy claims by Sept. 13. Oral 
arguments will occur in October. 
The non-prosecution deal was reached before he pleaded guilty in state court in Florida to prostitution-related 
charges involving underage girls. Afterward, he was required to register as a sex offender and pay restitution to 
many victims. While he served a 13-month jail term, he was permitted to leave jail to work for 12 hours a day, 
six days a week. 
Epstein was arrested July 6 when he arrived at a New Jersey airport on a private jet from Paris, where he has a 
home. 
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Did Jeffrey Epstein try to kill himself? He and his lawyer, back in court, aren't saying 
Miami Herald 
By Miami Herald Staff 
7/31/19 
Victims of Jeffrey Epstein share the emotional toll that sexual abuse has taken on them — even years after the 
abuse occurred. Miami Herald reporter Julie K. Brown interviewed the young women, most speaking for the 
first time about Epstein. BY EMILY MICHOT I JULIE K. BROWN 
For the first time since he was found semi-conscious in his jail cell with telltale bruise marks on his neck, 
accused sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein appeared in a Manhattan court room. 
Epstein — onetime friend of the rich and powerful, including current President Donald Trump and past 
President Bill Clinton — learned Wednesday that he will not face trial until at least next June. 
The multimillionaire part-time resident of Palm Beach sat subdued in front of U.S. District Court Judge Richard 
M. Berman. The 66-year-old defendant wore dark blue jail scrubs and glasses. 
His lawyer, Martin Weinberg, declined to reveal any details about the incident at the Metropolitan Correctional 
Center, which occurred July 23, including whether it was a suicide attempt, an attack by a fellow detainee or 
something else. His client is being held without bond. 
Wednesday's hearing in New York City lasted just 15 minutes. 
Epstein, a financier who owns homes around the world, including a waterfront estate in Palm Beach, was 
arrested July 6, nearly eight months after the Miami Herald published Perversion of Justice, a two-year 
investigation of a much-reviled secret plea deal in 2007-2008 that spared Epstein a sweeping federal indictment 
despite allegations of sexual abuse by nearly three dozen underage girls. 
He had just arrived from France at New Jersey's Teterboro airport on his private jet when authorities met him 
and took him into custody. 
During the early- and mid-2000s, Epstein allegedly ran what amounted to a sexual pyramid scheme, using 
recruiters to lure girls as young as 14 to his lavish Palm Beach and Manhattan mansions with the promise that 
they would receive $200 to give a man a massage. The girls have alleged that they were coerced into sex. 
The girls were paid additional money if they would recruit others girls, police and court records allege. Epstein 
had assistants schedule as many as three visits a day. 
Rather than face federal charges that could have put him away for life, Epstein pleaded guilty in state court to 
minor prostitution charges and served just a year in the county stockade — which permitted him to leave the 
lockup for his luxurious downtown West Palm Beach office for 12 hours a day, six days a week. This "work 
release" arrangement, highly unusual for a sex offender, is now under criminal investigation by order of the 
Palm Beach sheriff, Ric Bradshaw, who oversees the stockade and approved the work release. 
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Although Assistant U.S. Attorney 
said it is important to move swiftly ahead with Epstein's court 
case, his defense attorney said he needs time in light of the approximately one million pages of documents that 
that comprise the evidence collected against his client. 
Labor Secretary Alex Acosta held a press conference to defend his role in handling the Jeffrey Epstein sexual 
abuse case. Acosta was a U.S. Attorney who approved the Epstein plea deal in 2008. By CSPAN 
In the meantime, Epstein will be given a chance to argue that the non-prosecution agreement, executed in 2008, 
gave him, his schedulers, his alleged madam and others immunity from federal charges and that the new 
charges constitute impermissible double jeopardy. 
In its series of articles, the Herald highlighted the role of Alexander Acosta, then-U.S. attorney for the Southern 
District of Florida, in approving the immunity agreement, including a controversial stipulation that Epstein's 
accusers not be told of the arrangement. Facing searing criticism after Epstein's arrest, Acosta resigned his post 
as President Trump's labor secretary. 
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Jeffrey Epstein could face sex trafficking trial next June 
Reuters 
7/31/19 
Financier Jeffrey Epstein could go to trial on charges of sex trafficking involving dozens of underage girls as 
early as next June, though his lawyers told a court on Wednesday they may need more time. 
At a hearing in Manhattan federal court, prosecutors sought a June 2020 trial date, while a lawyer for Epstein 
asked that it wait another three months. 
The lawyer, Martin Weinberg, said Epstein and his legal team needed more time to review evidence, expected 
to total more than 1 million pages. 
U.S. District Judge Richard Berman said he would tentatively set aside time for a trial beginning June 8, but 
revisit the issue later. He said he normally allowed defendants more time to prepare if they wished. 
Assistant U.S. Attorney 
said a trial is expected to last four to six weeks. 
Prosecutors have accused Epstein of arranging for girls under the age of 18 to perform nude "massages" and 
other sex acts, and of paying some girls to recruit others. Epstein has pleaded not guilty. 
Wednesday's hearing occurred one week after Epstein was reportedly found unconscious and with neck injuries 
in his jail cell at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in downtown Manhattan. 
Epstein, dressed in blue jail scrubs, had no visible injuries on Wednesday. His lawyers declined to comment on 
the reports after the hearing. 
Epstein is appealing Berman's July 18 denial of his request to remain under house arrest in his $77 million 
mansion on Manhattan's Upper East Side while awaiting trial. 
The charges against Epstein focus on alleged misconduct from at least 2002 to 2005. 
They followed Epstein's 2008 guilty plea to state prostitution charges in Florida, in exchange for the Justice 
Department's agreement not to prosecute him on similar charges. 
Epstein served 13 months in jail and agreed to register as a sex offender under the 2008 agreement, which is 
now widely considered too lenient. 
His lawyers have argued this month that the agreement barred federal prosecutors in Manhattan from pursuing 
the current case over the same conduct. Weinberg said at Wednesday's hearing that they intended to file 
motions on the issue. 
U.S. Attorney Geoffrey Berman, whose office is overseeing the current case, has said there is no such bar. 
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Epstein Lawyers Ask for a Year to Review a Million Pages 
Bloomberg 
By Chris Dolmetsch , Bob Van Voris , and Patricia Hurtado 
7/31/19 
Jeffrey Epstein's lawyers say they need at least a year to review a blizzard of documents prosecutors have 
gathered against the fund manager as they prepare to defend him against charges of sex trafficking in minors 
and conspiracy. 
Prosecutors asked a judge to schedule Epstein's trial for next June, but defense attorney Martin Weinberg said 
his team wanted to wait until September 2020, because they haven't yet begun to receive documents from the 
government. 
"We need time to receive a million pages of discovery and prepare to defend a four- to six-week trial," 
Weinberg said during a brief hearing in Manhattan on Wednesday. "We need time to assess events that occurred 
14 to 17 years ago." 
The judge set a tentative trial date of June 8 and asked the parties to keep him updated on their progress. 
Epstein, who didn't speak in court, was arrested on July 6 after stepping off his private plane in New Jersey 
from a trip to Paris. He has pleaded not guilty and said he has fully complied with the law for more than 14 
years. 
Marks on Neck 
Epstein is accused of molesting teenage girls from 2002 to 2005. He pleaded guilty in 2008 to Florida state 
charges of soliciting prostitution, after striking a non-prosecution agreement with the U.S. Federal prosecutors 
in New York say they are not bound by the deal as they now pursue their own charges. 
In court Wednesday, there was no discussion of what happened to the 66-year-old Epstein last week at New 
York's Metropolitan Correctional Center, where he has been held since his arrest. People familiar with the 
matter said he was found injured and unresponsive in his cell, with marks on his neck. Authorities are 
investigating whether he was assaulted, possibly by another inmate, or whether the injuries were self-inflicted. 
Weinberg declined to respond to questions about the incident outside court. 
Also in court was Gloria Allred, the activist lawyer who has represented women accusing Roy Moore, Bill 
Cosby and President Donald Trump of sexual assault. After the hearing, she said she was representing other 
Epstein accusers who "were not in the Florida case." She said other women have approached her about their 
experiences with Epstein but were reluctant to discuss them for fear of retaliation. 
The U.S. attorney in Manhattan, Geoffrey Berman, has urged others who may be victims to come forward and 
cooperate with the government. Allred declined to say whether her clients have spoken to prosecutors. 
The case is U.S. v. Epstein, 19-cr-490, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York (Manhattan). 
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Collins 
Editorial: Failures of ethics 
Buffalo News 
By News Editorial Board 
7/29/19 
The ethics specialists are right and so are the members of a special ethics panel, including both Democrats and 
Republicans, who are paying attention. Good for them. The conduct of Rep. Chris Collins, R-Clarence, exposed 
a range of issues Congress needs to treat as tumors, and cut them out. 
Collins was indicted last year on allegations of insider trading. But he was routinely smashing ethical standards 
— of both formal and common sense varieties — before he was ever charged with a crime. 
A year before Collins was indicted, the Office of Congressional Ethics reported that it found "a substantial 
reason to believe" that Collins violated federal law by touting the stock of Innate Immunotherapeutics, an 
Australian biotech firm, based on inside information. 
The office also said Collins may have broken House ethics rules by persuading National Institutes of Health 
officials to meet with a staffer from that company. 
At least as troubling are the actions Collins took that were not deemed to be ethical violations. Speaking to a 
bipartisan House task force charged with drawing up new ethics rules based on Collins' arrest, ethics experts 
worried about lawmakers who sit on the boards of privately owned companies, or who serve as partners in other 
businesses or who are directors of nonprofit organizations. Collins still does all three. 
Earlier this year, in response to Collins' arrest, the House barred lawmakers from serving on the boards of 
publicly traded companies. Collins did that, too, as a board member — and leading stockholder — of Innate 
Immunotherapeutics. It's how prosecutors say he obtained the insider information that led to his arrest. 
There was more. Collins authored a provision of the 2016 "21st Century Cures Act" that sped drug approval for 
companies like Innate. Collins, with a straight face, claimed there was no conflict because Innate had no 
business before U.S. regulators. But in 2017, the company practically beamed that it had "received clearance 
from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for the Company's Investigational New Drug (IND) application 
lodged last month." 
The fact that Collins' role in the legislation could also have benefited other companies — and may even have 
been worthy of passage — does nothing to change the associated fact that he was pushing for legislation whose 
adoption could have lined his pockets. It was classic self-dealing. 
The drug in question was meant to treat multiple sclerosis. It failed in clinical trials in 2017 and prosecutors say 
Collins illegally spread the word to family and others who were able to sell their stock before its price collapsed 
on the bad news. 
Collins has pleaded not guilty to the charges. His trial is scheduled for February. But regardless of what a judge 
or jury ultimately decides about Collins, he has shown himself to be indifferent to the need for a member of 
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Congress to conduct himself in a way that reflects well on the institution and on the voters who entrust him with 
public office. 
In that, he has shown Congress that it needs to act. It can't count on its members using good judgment, 
especially when millions of dollars are at stake. 
The good news is that it seems ready to meet that public obligation. It is considering measures that would 
prohibit lawmakers from serving as partners in limited liability corporations, joining committees that oversee 
their business interests and serving on the boards of nonprofit organizations. Staff members would also be 
barred. 
Sadly, some Republican members have defended Collins, despite the clear conflicts of interest. But the 
Republican on the ethics task force, Rep. Van Taylor of Texas, expressed no disagreement with the panel's 
Democrat, Pennsylvania Rep. Susan Wild, who said she expected to move "rather quickly" on writing new 
rules. 
Taylor sees the tasks as "very narrow," focused on preventing lawmakers from serving in outside positions that 
could pose conflicts. The remarkable thing is that those restrictions need to be put in writing. Thank Collins for 
that. 
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Securities and Commodities Fraud 
Stewart 
Southern District Will Pursue A Retrial Of "Silver Platter" Case 
Forbes 
By Walter Pavlo 
7/30/19 
Sean Stewart was indicted on insider trading charges back in May 2015 during U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara's 
reign over the Southern District of New York. Now, over four years since his indictment, Sean can reflect back 
on a wild journey of being convicted, sentenced to 3 years prison, having that conviction overturned, being 
released from prison halfway through his term and, now, having a new date to go back to trial to face the 
charges again. 
Sean Stewart was indicted on insider trading for passing material non-public information on potential deals to 
his father, Robert, who then passed it on to his former friend and trader, Richard Cunniffe. Sean, a Yale 
graduate who had worked in investment banking at JPMorgan Chase and Perella Weinberg, mentioned some 
details about his work while talking to Robert. Sean's information made it to Cunniffe who made over a million 
dollars on the trades, sharing a small amount (less $100,000) with Robert. How much did Sean make on the 
trades? ZERO dollars. He had no idea that Cunniffe traded because he did not even know who Cunniffe was. 
It was a clear case of misappropriation where information was used without Sean's knowledge, so it was not a 
"classical" insider trading case. However, Bharara's team of U.S. attorneys was looking for cases that targeted 
wealthy Wall Street traders who seemed to have an advantage over the average trader. Sean's case was a good 
fit. 
Cunniffe was busted by the FBI and soon became a government informant, taping calls and other meetings with 
Robert. In one of those calls, Robert stated that Sean said of the information he had passed on to Cunniffe, "I 
can't believe it. I handed you this on a silver platter and you didn't invest." So the primary evidence in the case, 
the case that came to be known as the "silver platter" case, was based on a statement that was attributed to Sean. 
It's a phrase that Sean's new defense team wants to be excluded from the proceedings. 
When Robert was arrested, under duress of FBI questioning, he said nine (9) times that Sean was not in on his 
scheme with Cunniffe (here is entire tape transcript here). Robert also admitted his own role and that of 
Cunniffe's during the interrogation. When it came to trial, neither that tape nor Robert's testimony was allowed 
because of legal maneuvering by prosecutors. The video tape was suppressed and Robert did not testify due to 
threats from prosecutors that he would be charged for perjury due to his conflicting accounts. Here is what the 
jury missed from that tape: 
FBI AGENT: Tell me about the first time that Sean gave you information on a deal. 
ROBERT STEWART: Well, uh, I wouldn't characterize any of these as — 
I mean Sean would mention stuff. 
I don't think he had any idea that I would trade on any of this stuff. Uh, I've never mentioned that I did, to him. 
Ummm 
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AGENT: If that's true, how do you explain the comment you made to Rick [Cunniffe] that Sean got angry with 
you when he gave you this information on a silver platter and you didn't invest. 
ROBERT: Uhh, I think I was just saying that to Rick because Sean said, oh, you know, ahh, all these deals, you 
know, you — 
if you were trading you could make like millions of dollars. And I said, you know, Sean, no 
one's going to trade and make millions of dollars on this stuff. That wasn't his intention. 
Robert took the 5th but did submit an affidavit that if he were to testify he would have said Sean did not know 
about the trades by Cunniffe. 
Looking back at the trial, there was not a single email, document, or text message that suggested that Sean was 
a knowingly participated in the trading scheme. This is interesting since there were so many incriminating 
documents between Cunniffe and Robert. There were no witnesses who gave testimony on Sean's knowledge 
and intent, including Cunniffe, the cooperator, who on the stand acknowledged that he never knew Sean. 
Furtnermore, trading records and actions undertaken by Sean suggest he did not know trading had taken place. 
Last fall, the 2nd Circuit overturned Sean's conviction, something rare in most cases, especially a reversal on an 
evidentiary ruling, which suggests the 2nd Circuit felt that Sean may be innocent and the judge's mistakes 
resulted in an unfair trial. The appellate court ruled that Robert's post-arrest video interrogation should have 
been allowed. Sean was released from prison and has been in legal limbo until the SDNY decided that they 
would move to move forward with another trial on the same charges. 
Stewart will have a new judge this time around. U.S. District Judge Laura Taylor Swain was replaced by Judge 
Rakoff, a man who seems to be on a mission to define insider trading laws himself He also has new attorneys 
Steven M. Witzel, Lawrence Gerschwer, R. David Gallo and Leigh G. Rome of Fried Frank Harris Shriver & 
Jacobson LLP. 
If Sean is found guilty, he would face the prospect of being sentenced to prison and returning to prison to 
complete a term. On the other hand, it would not be out of the question for Judge Rakoff to give him "time 
served" in prison even if Sean is found guilty. Rakoff, not a fan of the Federal Sentencing Guidelines, seems to 
be one of those judges that uses common sense in his approach to sentencing. Earlier this week, Rakoff 
sentenced a man to 14 months in prison for knowingly leaking insider information on Sherwin Williams' 
acquisition of Valspar. 
While Sean may have made some mistakes, these could have been handled by the companies he worked for 
and, at the most severe, an enforcement action by the Securities and Exchange Commission. The SDNY seems 
intent on trying to interpret insider trading laws by putting on elaborate trials with the threat of putting people in 
prison for years. It is a waste of resources. 
It looks like the ghost of Bharara still haunts the SDNY. 
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