C. General 1. As to all of the foregoing matters, identify any disagreements or concerns expressed by government personnel as to these matters, the parties involved, how the disagreements were resolved, and any concerns you had about any such resolution and the individuals, if any, with whom you discussed your concerns. I raised a multitude of concerns during the investigation, negotiations, and enforcement periods. They ranged from the explicit — my July 2007 email exchange with about his violations of the USAM, CVRA, and Ashcroft Memo (Exhibit 3) — to the subtle — repeated requests to just meet with the victims. Here is one especially poignant request from January 31, 2008: Hi and - We just finished interviewing three of the girls. I wish you could have been there to see how much this has affected them. One girl broke down sobbing so that we had to stop the interview twice within a 20 minute span. She regained her composure enough to continue a short time, but she said that she was having nightmares about Epstein coming after her and she started to break down again, so we stopped the interview. The second girl, who has a baby girl of her own, told us that she was very upset about the 18 month deal she had read about in the paper. She said that 18 months was nothing and that she had heard that the girls could get restitution, but she would rather not get any money and have Epstein spend a significant time in jail. The FBI's victim-witness coordinator attended and she has arranged for counseling for several of the girls. Please reach out to to make her decision. These girls deserve so much better than they have received so far, and I hate feeling that there is nothing I can do to help them. We have four more girls coming in tomorrow. Can I persuade you to attend? (Exhibit C-1.) Many of the disagreements have been catalogued above, but I will try to collect them into general categories in chronological order. a. I did not want to mee