TTERSON ‘or it; this is an adult male in his -act with children of the ages of somebody who we have to stop. aid, in the state attorney's office, yed to investigate and prosecute | didn’t have too many facts early | sut I knew that there were multi- p sctives they were believable. So ul E- CHAPTER 46 r. Epstein became aware of the . j 7 rs contacted the state attorney's and I believe it was Mr. Dershow- f ] q ior of the discussions of thiscase 9 —-~Detective Recarey: completely. [At] one point he sug- ‘% 4 ne My 2008 tein] a notice to appear, which 4 a ior. He just completely changed ie a hief Reiter’ copaatistt BbBUt a __when] He 4g q C affect s letter to the state attorney had no perceptible frey Epstein—till when he had = : Krischer did not recuse himself from the case. N tein’s reputation and his wealth, ; _ arrest warrant was issued. And on the afternoon of May 3 Det : ‘unusual. 3 4 tive Recarey received a telephone call from assistant state stor or knew him very well, the state j __ hey Daliah Weiss, who advised him that she had b wt -e he could not objectively make ~ | the Epstein case. ae Deen tales ath hat is why I wrote it. . q Weiss had been the perfect person to prosecute Epstein. As a 4 ' member of the special victims unit, she focused on sex elias 5 ; ol crimes against children, prosecuting high-profile cases involv- j 7 mg Tape, aggravated child abuse, and neglect. But Epstein had i pied another lawyer, a man named Jack Goldberger, and mad P poldberger his attorney of record. ) _ ; q Goldberger was friendly with Barry Krischer—and an asso- ] q ate of Goldberger’s was married to Daliah Weiss. it | 1 175 HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_010516