RSON FirtHy RicuH him to have the investigation appears to have gone through the house, gotten rid of incrimi- nating materials, but left many clues behind. icheonette, he explaines ee It was as if the things the police were seeing didn’t even reg- noney. At the time, it made no ister as wrong. susy man. He was going to get yolice into his home to install a the Palm Bea = pree There’s another feeling the cops can’t shake: the nagging sense ly one with ancess thes Sat : that they themselves are being investigated and tailed. erpalice lind notico® a BP ms First Reiter hears through the grapevine that Epstein’s law- smed to be camped out at the : yers have hired private investigators to perform background checks. len and Nadia Marcinkova. : A public-records demand has been filed in an effort to obtain tive of Epstein— that fact had : Reiter’s own records. | Detective Recarey tells Reiter that he, too, is being surveilled nues, the cops see photographs ‘ : and that his trash has been picked through. 3 In his entire career as a police officer, this is the first time cers find Alison’s bigh echod) . 4 that Reiter’s seen or heard of such a thing: a suspect investigat- : 2 ing his investigators. But for the moment, he puts it aside. Recar- can’t shake the feeling that the j 4q ey’s doing great work on the investigation. He’s deeply invested, xp for their arrival. Shelves look and for good reason: the detective’s got four kids of his own. d several photographs appeat = i. Right now, more victims are coming out of the woodwork. And _ >) now that the warrant’s been executed, there’s no downside to a of the place to be searched,” : : interviewing Epstein’s servants. ssition for B.B. vs. Epstein, “some j 7 | a bit.” : ’ surprising about this. After a : 4 in’s gotten wind of their investiga” = q - for a house that’s been scrubbed, ; q nd. q about the search is that someone — ’ 80 4 ’ a1 HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019197