Court Filing - Letter from Prosecutor to Defense Counsel: 701-1
Summary
The letter from the U.S. Attorney's Office to defense counsel outlines the expected testimony of Computer Forensic Examiner Stephen Flatley regarding his analysis of digital devices and metadata. Flatley's testimony is expected to cover the forensic examination of devices, the process of creating 'clones' of digital media, and the analysis of metadata associated with certain files. The government asserts that Flatley's testimony is based on his first-hand knowledge and does not require expert testimony under Rule 702 of the Federal Rules of Evidence.
This document is from the epstein-docs Archive.
View Source CollectionPersons Referenced (6)
Related Documents (6)
Court Filing - Letter from Prosecutor to Defense Counsel: 385-1
The letter from the US Attorney's office to defense counsel notifies them of evidence and witnesses the government may introduce at trial, including testimony about Jeffrey Epstein's activities and documentary evidence related to the charged crimes. The evidence is deemed admissible as direct evidence or under Rule 404(b). The letter is designated confidential under a protective order.
Court Filing: 541
The US Attorney's office submits a letter to Judge Alison J. Nathan arguing that a statement in an email is not admissible and requires additional context, and therefore refuses to enter into a stipulation regarding Robert Glassman's testimony. The government had previously conferred with defense counsel on the matter. The letter is in relation to the ongoing case against Ghislaine Maxwell.
Court Filing: 554
The document is a letter from the U.S. Attorney's Office to Judge Alison J. Nathan, arguing against certain jury instructions proposed by the defense in the case against Ghislaine Maxwell. The government opposes adding an instruction on the impeachment of witnesses by felony convictions and removing 'equally' from the instruction on uncalled witnesses.
Court Filing: 559
The document is a letter from the U.S. Attorney's Office to Judge Alison J. Nathan regarding the release of certain government exhibits in the Ghislaine Maxwell trial. The parties have agreed on the release of several exhibits with some requiring redactions to protect third-party privacy. The Government is submitting revised versions of certain exhibits into evidence.
Court Filing: 660
The US Attorney's Office files a motion to exclude time for Counts Seven and Eight under the Speedy Trial Act until the scheduled sentencing date of June 28, 2022, in the case against Ghislaine Maxwell. The government intends to dismiss these counts at sentencing but seeks the exclusion as a precaution. Defense counsel consents to this exclusion.
Court Filing: 661
The U.S. Attorney's Office requests that the court exclude time under the Speedy Trial Act for Counts Seven and Eight until June 28, 2022, the scheduled sentencing date for Ghislaine Maxwell. The government intends to dismiss these counts at sentencing but seeks this exclusion as a precaution. The court grants this request.
This document was digitized, indexed, and cross-referenced with 1,400+ persons in the Epstein files. 100% free, ad-free, and independent.