H A D D O N MORGAN FOREMAN Haddon, Morgan and Foreman, P c Jeffrey S. Paglluca P11 IIIIIIIMPPOIMIIIMPIIIMPIO www.hmflaw.com August 9, 2020 VIA EMAIL Assistant United States Attorney New York, New York 10007 Re: Conferral Concerning Use of Discovery Materials GM_00000847-962 Dear Ms. Maxwell is actively litigating issues related to disclosure of confidential material in ME v. Ghislaine Maxwell, No. 15 Civ. 7433 (LAP) and a related appeal in the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, 20-2413. We intend to ask Judge Nathan for permission to refer to and attach, as exhibits, the above referenced discovery materials which relate to the Government's efforts to obtain civil litigation discovery material ("the Unsealing Materials") in two, settled, civil matters in which Ms. Maxwell was named a defendant. These materials would be disclosed to Judge Preska and designated as part of the appendix to Ms. Maxwell's appeal in the Second Circuit. We have no objection, at this point, to filing the materials under seal in both courts. In your letter to defense counsel dated August 5, 2020 you designated the Unsealing Materials as Confidential. We understand that the Unsealing Materials were filed ex parte and remain sealed in the miscellaneous actions. The documents, however, do not contain confidential information as that term is defined in paragraph 8 of the Protective Order entered by Judge Nathan. The Unsealing Materials are ex parte pleadings filed by the Government, transcripts of ex parte hearings regarding those pleadings, and ex parte rulings on the pleadings. As least one set of individuals outside this prosecution, the Boies, Schiller & Flexner lawyers cooperating with the Government, are aware of the Unsealing Materials. Moreover, these are the types of pleadings that the Second Circuit has characterized as judicial documents with a presumptive right of public access. See Brown v. Maxwell, 929 F.3d 41, 47 (2d Cir. 2019).