From: Jeffrey Epstein <[email protected]> To: "Dr. Henry Jarecki" < Subject: Date: Sat, 30 Jan 2010 23:30:42 +0000 October 16, 2002 Mr. Jeffrey Epstein J. Epstein & Company, Incorporated The Villard House 457 Madison Avenue, 4th Floor New York, New York 10022 Dear Jeffrey: I look forward to your building a house on Norman Island. I think it will be a great addition to the island and that your thinking will be a big help to me as I plan further (if I do). Inevitably, there will be a whole bunch of things that one must decide about, such as the infrastructure, building standards, staff policies, control of contiguous newcomers, and the like. You had suggested that I put together some notes on how to handle some of these issues and I am doing so in this letter: I. Infrastructure and its Costs. Having some buildings on the island will require the creation of an infrastructure. The primary elements and my suggestions for how they be handled, are as follows: a. Roads: I would put one large road along the spine of the island and an access road to it from the dock. Roads leading from the main road to a house-builder's property line would be paid for by that house-builder; if one person builds a road which another house-builder later taps into, the new house-builder should pay the first house-builder(s) his proportionate share of the cost of building the road to the point at which he taps in. Maintenance of a road is the financial responsibility of the persons who paid for it, though the island manager would supervise getting it done. b. Helipad: I will put up a helipad and a road to it from the road at the spine. Maintenance of the helipad would be reflected in the central maintenance cost of the island. c. Utilities: Until we have more than 2 residents on the island (you and me) - or at least more than two in our area - I suggest we either each get our own reverse osmosis and electricity units (bearing in mind that they have to be silent