carmencita

Hmm. I always get suspicious when there is a fire or evidence is destroyed. Dr. Oz. Also in Broward County.

https://www.palmbeachdailynews.com/news/local/palm-beach-board-part-home-can-demolished/QZuZ83jw3RIN29ZUQozzuN/

millennial_vulcan

Dr Oz gives me major pedo vibes. Always has. He looks like he is into some sick twisted sh*t. God knows the intel he has on people.

Those docs who seek fame and limelight are not to be trusted. Same with those fame whore tv psychs.

carmencita

The evidence must have been extremely incriminating. Or he is building something new perhaps, to increase his enjoyment.

carmencita

If someone had not lost his life, I would be ROMFL. How many lawyers is that now? I know there was one found on the Beach. Then we had the Process Server Shawn Lucas, the list constantly grows. How convenient. The detective working on the Epstein Case. NTSHF. You know what that means. Nothing To See,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,

Are_we__sure

You claim his death was a mystery. The article doesn't say that.

He also retired from the police force like 5 years ago, so how does that fit into your suspicion he was murdered?

millennial_vulcan

his ghost is going to come back to haunt you, ya know. good luck not sleeping tonight!

septimasexta

HAIR BLUE. RICO. LOL! Joseph Recarey's cause of death is still a mystery to the public.

"A suspicion not shared by his family" What is your proof of this statement? If they did believe it, they might stay quiet. He has children. THEIR SILENCE PROVES NOTHING.

millennial_vulcan

ignore, he does this on every post. its amusing though!

letsdothis2

http://www.jaablaw.com/uncategorized/resignation-4/

Q. Why didn’t forensic expert court contractor write a report she was paid many thousands dollars to write ?

A. Ex- ASA Lana Belohlavek needed protection from the truth. Because a court contractor can not write a report detrimental to the court.

http://www.thesmokinggun.com/documents/crime/pervy-billionaire-agreed-plea-deal

Court contractors advertise in the private sector, enticing the public, (victims of the courts), to feed privy information regarding investigations into court sponsored, and supported pedophilia.

Archived Timothy Holmseth arrested in Broward County after posting this: Minnesota Court FBI Child Sex

Timothy Holmseth arrested in Broward County after posting this link…

Broward man sentenced for role in international child porn ring http://articles.sun-sentinel.com/2014-07-17/news/fl-oakland-park-child-porn-20140717_1_broward-man-newton-court-records

Jeffrey Epstein’s salacious trial a go without ‘stolen’ documents https://www.mypalmbeachpost.com/news/crime--law/jeffrey-epstein-salacious-trial-without-stolen-documents/5DtMVUc8dN7XgAKJnv7daM/

Despite allegations of wrongdoing against one of Palm Beach County’s most prominent law firms and complex issues involving imprisoned Ponzi schemer Scott RothsteinPonzi schemer Rothstein , Palm Beach County Circuit Judge Donald Hafele refused Epstein’s request to delay the civil trial that is scheduled to start Tuesday.

Ponzi schemer Rothstein: Wooing politicians, including Crist and McCain, key to success https://www.mypalmbeachpost.com/news/crime--law/ponzi-schemer-rothstein-wooing-politicians-including-crist-and-mccain-key-success/Iz51TrOFgrvAxo5UyAXN5O/

Before his law firm imploded in October 2009 and he was sentenced to 50 years in prison, he said he was able to dial up McCain. Such access came from hosting fund-raisers at his palatial Fort Lauderdale home for the Arizona Republican’s 2008 presidential bid. He became one of McCain’s biggest contributors nationwide — largely, he testified, because he broke campaign finance laws by bankrolling contributions that were sent by others.

Further, he said, he talked to Crist about who the governor should appoint to vacancies on the Broward County bench . He urged Crist to appoint those he believed would make favorable rulings for his law firm once they donned their judicial robes.

YogSoggoth

Fast forward to Michael Bloomberg Spending $80 Million To Flip House To Democrats

"In fairness, some Republicans have taken their constitutional and legislative responsibilities seriously, like my friend John McCain." - Michael Bloomberg

kazza64

sounds like a nice guy hillary must be mopping up evidence

YogSoggoth

That's closer to Debby Wassername's district.

septimasexta

Good catch!

And another death: "The only witness named in the documents is Alfredo Rodriguez, who was a houseman at Epstein’s Palm Beach mansion in 2004. That’s when Epstein regularly paid young women to give him sexually-charged massages, police said.

Rodriguez was convicted of obstruction of justice in 2010 and sentenced to 18 months in jail for trying to sell a journal he purloined from Epstein. Prosecutors said the journal detailed Epstein’s sexual dalliances. Rodriguez, who lived in Kendall, died in 2014.""

"...the FBI last week released what appears to be an explosive explanation for what many have long described as a sweetheart deal.

“Epstein has also provided information to the FBI as agreed upon,” agents wrote in one of dozens of heavily redacted, decade-old memos that were unexpectedly and inexplicably posted on an FBI website known as “The Vault.”" https://www.palmbeachdailynews.com/news/crime--law/fbi-epstein-files-say-gave-info-does-explain-sweetheart-deal/NdgitAifci1k6dJgpLV63O/

YogSoggoth

Was Alfredo Rodriguez even a citizen of the USA? I have yet to see a photo of this person of interest. No family.

millennial_vulcan

yep heavily discussed on voat in past.

letsdothis2

Seems Epstein also liked to get 'massages' from the Palm Beach Ballet.

letsdothis2

http://www.thesmokinggun.com/documents/crime/pervy-billionaire-agreed-plea-deal

According to an account by Detective Joseph Recarey, prosecutor Lana Belohlavek related to him the terms of the Epstein deal during an April 17 meeting in her West Palm Beach office. Recarey reported that Belohlavek, chief of the prosecutor's crimes against children unit, told him that Epstein had accepted the plea deal via criminal attorney Guy Fronstin (who has since been replaced). Belohlavek, according to Recarey, played for him a voicemail message from Fronstin in which the lawyer 'agreed to the deal' and requested that investigators 'call off the grand jury as they would accept this deal.'

It is unclear why the plea bargain was not formally struck at that point, but the report indicates that police investigators--who anticipated five felony counts being lodged against Epstein--were incensed at what they clearly viewed as a sweetheart prosecution offer.

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-politics/labor-pick-cut-deal-with-billionaire-in-sex-abuse-case-involving-40-underage-girls-a7645176.html

Donald Trump's nominee for Labour Secretary, Alexander Acosta, is at the centre of a Florida court battle over his decision a decade ago to cut a non-prosecution deal with a billionaire alleged to have sexually abused more than 40 underage girls

But Epstein's unusually light punishment – he was facing up to a life sentence had he been convicted on federal charges – has raised questions about how Acosta handled the case.

DRKStar00

I have seen articles and comments about Acosta giving Epstein a deal, but when I looked into some other articles, and read about what Acosta went through, it totally changed my opinion. It certainly seemed as if Epstein's dream team of attorneys put Acosta through quite an ordeal. I dont remember everything, but I vaguely remember there, at one point, being over 150 appearances/changes, and things seemed to drag on and on. I got the feeling he was extremely frustrated and upset that he had to deal with all the crap. He possibly "gave up" at some point, because dealing with all the changes every few days became overwhelming. Appearance after appearance after appearance, change after change, dispute after dispute.

I wouldnt fully trust those articles saying he was simply "cutting a cozy deal". There appeared to be way more to it.

septimasexta

Good comment. I read a bit about this case when it broke. The hidden hand of Epstein was just too powerful for the locals. Let's not forget that Trump spends lots of time in Palm Beach. Perhaps he saw that Acosta could be trusted to do the right thing given enough support.

DRKStar00

"Labor secretary nominee Alexander Acosta’s involvement in the saga could be personally or politically awkward for President Donald Trump. | AP Photo Trump’s Labor nominee oversaw ‘sweetheart plea deal’ in billionaire’s underage sex case

By JOSH GERSTEIN 02/16/17 02:22 PM EST Updated 02/16/17 03:17 PM

Acosta acknowledged to the media in 2011 that he came under extreme pressure from Epstein's high-powered defense team, which included legal heavyweights such as Harvard law professor Alan Dershowitz, former Whitewater independent counsel Kenneth Starr and Florida criminal defense attorney Roy Black. Acosta said Epstein's defense mounted "a yearlong assault on the prosecution and the prosecutors."

"I use the word assault intentionally, as the defense in this case was more aggressive than any which I, or the prosecutors in my office, had previously encountered," the former U.S. attorney wrote. He said his office stuck to its opening position in the case, but he also acknowledged that the ultimate punishment in the case may have been more lenient than Epstein deserved."

letsdothis2

Thanks for your comment. I wasn't paying too much attention at the time so your insight is useful.

DRKStar00

Labor secretary nominee Alexander Acosta’s involvement in the saga could be personally or politically awkward for President Donald Trump. | AP Photo Trump’s Labor nominee oversaw ‘sweetheart plea deal’ in billionaire’s underage sex case

By JOSH GERSTEIN 02/16/17 02:22 PM EST Updated 02/16/17 03:17 PM

Acosta acknowledged to the media in 2011 that he came under extreme pressure from Epstein's high-powered defense team, which included legal heavyweights such as Harvard law professor Alan Dershowitz, former Whitewater independent counsel Kenneth Starr and Florida criminal defense attorney Roy Black. Acosta said Epstein's defense mounted "a yearlong assault on the prosecution and the prosecutors."

"I use the word assault intentionally, as the defense in this case was more aggressive than any which I, or the prosecutors in my office, had previously encountered," the former U.S. attorney wrote. He said his office stuck to its opening position in the case, but he also acknowledged that the ultimate punishment in the case may have been more lenient than Epstein deserved.