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American lawyer
Rod Rosenstein appears in the Epstein files primarily through media coverage and political documents from 2017-2018, during his tenure as Deputy Attorney General overseeing the Mueller investigation. The mentions are mostly from forwarded news articles and political commentary rather than direct involvement in Epstein-related matters.
Rosenstein's presence in these documents is almost entirely indirect, appearing in Yahoo email forwards of Washington Post articles and political opinion pieces about the Mueller investigation and Trump administration conflicts. The only direct mentions are in government property records showing a "Rosenstein Marilyn" as a personal representative for a trust, and a 2007 email he sent as U.S. Attorney for Maryland about crime victim notification procedures. He does not appear in flight logs, witness lists, or court documents related to Epstein's criminal cases.
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028453 - HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028466
le" :"_anf-ts- 1"), {"range": ("length":137, "start":0}, "textStyle":"_anf-ts-1"}], "layout": "default- body", "role": "body", "text": "Good morning. Rod Rosensteinâe™s fate is unclear, the U.N. General Assemblyâe™s yearly meeting kicks off, China steps up religious controls. Hereâe™s what you need to know:", "type"
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028455 →tStyle": "kicker", "type": "text"}, ("identifier":" anf-title- 1", "layout": "default-title", "role":"title", "text":"Your Tuesday News Briefing: Rod Rosenstein, the U.N., Hong Kong", "type": "text"}, ("identifier":" 1" "inlineTextStyles": | {"range": ("length":16, "start" :26}, "textStyle": "pub- dt"}], "lay
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028454 →HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028467 - HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028480
xt":"Separately, the deputy attorney general, Rod Rosenstein, suggested secretly recording President Trump las
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028469 →("length": 266, "start":0}, "textstyle":"_ anf-ts-100"1], "layout": "default- body", "role": "body", "text":"Separately, the deputy attorney general, Rod Rosenstein, suggested secretly recording President Trump last year to expose the chaos inside the White House and even discussed recruiting cabinet members to i
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028469 →HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_029165 - HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_029173
according to sources both near the investigation and the White House, has prepared the case, but it requires the approval of Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, who-with the recusal of Attorney General Jeff Sessions from the Russia-related investigation - HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_029165 --- PAGE BREAK --- oversees
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_029165 →Attorney General Jeff Sessions from the Russia-related investigation - HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_029165 --- PAGE BREAK --- oversees the Mueller team. Indeed, Rosenstein, as recently as April, publicly declared that the President was not a target. This may have been a form of fig leaf to soothe a President who regular
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_029166 →HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_030248 - HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_030254
forts. At this point, the case for indictment has, in effect, a judge of one, since the Mueller team must get the approval of Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein to proceed. As recently as April, Rosenstein publicly declared that the President was not a target, but this may have been a kind of fig leaf: techni
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_030248 →, in effect, a judge of one, since the Mueller team must get the approval of Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein to proceed. As recently as April, Rosenstein publicly declared that the President was not a target, but this may have been a kind of fig leaf: technically the President does not become a formal
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_030248 →HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_030258 - HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_030265
forts. At this point, the case for indictment has, in effect, a judge of one, since the Mueller team must get the approval of Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein to proceed. As recently as April, Rosenstein publicly declared that the President was not a target, but this may have been a kind of fig leaf: techni
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_030258 →, in effect, a judge of one, since the Mueller team must get the approval of Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein to proceed. As recently as April, Rosenstein publicly declared that the President was not a target, but this may have been a kind of fig leaf: technically the President does not become a formal
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_030258 →m, according to sources both near the investigation and the White House, has prepared a case, but it requires the approval of Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, who-with the recusal of Attorney General Jeff Sessions from the Russia-related investigation- oversees the Mueller team. He would need to set aside
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_030403 →ding that the former opinion was inaccurate re the president being above the law. therby creating an inability to indict a sitting president. Indeed, Rosenstein, as recently as April, publicly declared that the President was not a target. This may have been a form of fig leaf to soothe a President who regular
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_030403 →HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_026248 - HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_026253
ions _ in question on behalf of the FBI, and Deputy Director Andrew McCabe signed one. Then-DAG Sally Yates, then-Acting DAG Dana Boente, and DAG Rod Rosenstein each signed one or more FISA applications on behalf of DOJ. Due to the sensitive nature of foreign intelligence activity, FISA submissions (includin
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_026250 →Sally Yates, then-Acting DAG Dana Boente, and DAG Rod Rosenstein each signed one or more FISA applications on beha
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_026250 →HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_033468
<p>Conflicting reports have surfaced on the possible resignation or firing of US Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, who oversees the special counsel investigation into Russia's role in the 2016 presidential election. </p› <p>According to US media, Rosenstein was
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_033468 →Rod Rosenstein, who oversees the special counsel investigation into Russia's role in the 2016 presidential election. </p› <p>According to US media, Rosenstein was meeting with White House Chief of Staff John after reports surfaced that he had offered to resign in speculation of being fired. </p> <p>Axios,
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_033468 →tigators nonetheless sniffed out a name, and Mr. Nunes in recent weeks issued a letter and a subpoena demanding more details. Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein’s response was to double down—accusing the House of “extortion” and delivering a speech in which he claimed that “declining to open the FBI’s files t
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020819 →manding more details. Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein’s response was to double down—accusing the House
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020819 →orkforce since Trump Administration started which is double the drop in the prison pop. This is highly misleading. As you know (and AG Sessions and DAG Rosenstein were also acutely aware of), over the 5 years leading into this administration our prison population had dropped 40,000 inmates, but our staffing ha
Page: BOP_Epstein_Records_Part_3_of_4_p842 →misleading. As you know (and AG Sessions and DAG Rosenstein were also acutely aware of), over the 5 years lea
Page: BOP_Epstein_Records_Part_3_of_4_p842 →ps in Miami. Read full article » EXPERT ANALYSIS A Welcome DOJ Shift On Cooperation Credit Changes announced last week by Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein will likely make it easier for a company to obtain cooperation credit in criminal and civil cases, while also potentially reducing some of the cost
Page: EFTA00018656 →nnounced last week by Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein will likely make it easier for a company to obta
Page: EFTA00018656 →tigators nonetheless sniffed out a name, and Mr. Nunes in recent weeks issued a letter and a subpoena demanding more details. Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein’s response was to double down—accusing the House of “extortion” and delivering a speech in which he claimed that “declining to open the FBI’s files t
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_021110 →manding more details. Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein’s response was to double down—accusing the House
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_021110 →gation could litigate such an argument in court. One would hope, however, that given the facts either Mr. Mueller himself or Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein would do it first. Mr. Rivkin and Ms. Foley practice appellate and constitutional law in Washington. He served at the Justice Department and the Whi
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_026482 →. Mueller himself or Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein would do it first. Mr. Rivkin and Ms. Foley prac
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_026482 →HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_021120 - HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_021144
ll the way to the Supreme Court. For this plan to work, the president would have to get rid of his inept lawyers. Oh, and he would also have to fire Rod Rosenstein, the deputy attorney general who was overseeing the Mueller investigation. Bannon had been against the firing of Comey, and in the months after the a
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_021142 →ng of Comey, and in the months after the appoint- ment of the special counsel, he had fought the president's almost daily impulse to fire Mueller and Rosenstein, seeing this as the surest invitation to impeachment. (“Just don’t pay attention to his crazy shit” he had urged everyone around the president.) But
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_021142 →gation could litigate such an argument in court. One would hope, however, that given the facts either Mr. Mueller himself or Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein would do it first. Mr. Rivkin and Ms. Foley practice appellate and constitutional law in Washington. He served at the Justice Department and the Whi
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_026496 →. Mueller himself or Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein would do it first. Mr. Rivkin and Ms. Foley prac
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_026496 →HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017635 - HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017713
. The committee gives courts discretion to notify the victim or simply issue the subpoena ex parte. 239 Fed. R. Crim. P. 17(c). 240 See E-mail from Rod Rosenstein, U.S. Attorney for the District of Maryland, to Russell Butler, Maryland Crime Victims’ Resource Center, Inc. (Jan. 3, 2007), reprinted in Testimony
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017667 →Fed. R. Crim. P. 17(c). 240 See E-mail from Rod Rosenstein, U.S. Attorney for the District of Maryland, to R
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017667 →HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019874 - HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020142
oing to try to fire the head of the FBI,” said Ailes. During the first week of May, the president had a ranting meeting with Sessions and his deputy Rod Rosenstein. It was a humiliating meeting for both men, with Trump insisting they couldn’t control their own people and pushing them to find a reason to fire Com
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020044 →Did he fight [the ouster]? No. Did he say it would go badly? No.”) Horrified, McGahn quashed sending it. Nevertheless, it was passed to Sessions and Rosenstein, who quickly began drafting their own version of what Kushner and the president obviously wanted. “I knew when he got back he might blow at any mome
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020046 →HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028326 - HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028335
neHeight":58, "textAlignment":"left ", "textColor": "#4c4e4d"}}, "components": [{"identifier":" ["‚"Iayout";"t÷t[ehayout.", "role":"title", "text" "s Rod Rosenstein fired, resigning, os staying? The drama, explained.", "textStyle": "titleTextStyle", "type":"text"}, ("identifier":" anf-heading- 1", "layout": "dekL
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028329 →™s team has said in court that they inform Rosenstein of all their major decisions in advance, and that he would have the authority to overrule them. \nRosenstein approved Muellerâe™s assembly of an all-star team that at its height totaled 17 prosecutors. \nIn August 2017, Rosenstein wrote a memo to Mueller lis
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028331 →HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028347 - HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028374
"role": "heading", "text": "What's Going On with Rod Rosenstein?", "textStyle" :"big-article-headline- style", "t
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028357 →ney general had resigned. Others claimed he was on his way to the White House to be fired. Now Press Secretary Sarah Sanders says President Trump and Rosenstein will meet on Thursday. In the likely case that Rosenstein is on his way out, can the Mueller investigation survive?", "textStyle": "apple- promotion-
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028357 →HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028382 - HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028396
}, "textStyle":"_anf-ts- 10"}, {"range": ("length":205, "start":0}, "textStyle":"_anf-ts-10"'],"layout" :"default- body", "role": "body", "text":"Rod Rosenstein, the top official overseeing the special counsel investigation, is expected to leave the Justice Department after The Times revealed that he had disc
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028385 →layout" :"default- body", "role": "body", "text":"Rod Rosenstein, the top official overseeing the special counsel
Page: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028385 →
Donald Trump
PersonPresident of the United States (2017–2021, 2025–present)

Robert Mueller
PersonSixth director of the FBI; American attorney

Jeffrey Epstein
PersonAmerican sex offender and financier (1953–2019)

Bill Clinton
PersonPresident of the United States from 1993 to 2001 (born 1946)

James Comey
PersonAmerican lawyer and 7th director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (born 1960)

Hillary Clinton
PersonAmerican politician and diplomat (born 1947)

Department of Justice
Organization
Jeff Sessions
PersonAmerican politician and lawyer (born 1946)

Michael Flynn
PersonU.S. Army general and former U.S. National Security Advisor (born 1958)

Steve Bannon
PersonAmerican media executive & political strategist (born 1953)

George W. Bush
PersonPresident of the United States from 2001 to 2009
Christopher Steele
PersonFormer British intelligence officer

John Brennan
PersonDirector of the Central Intelligence Agency from 2013 to 2017

Michael Cohen
PersonAmerican former attorney and former Republican official

Carter Page
PersonAmerican oil industry consultant

Rudy Giuliani
PersonAmerican attorney and politician (born 1944)

George Papadopoulos
PersonAmerican political advisor (born 1987)

Eric Holder
PersonUnited States Attorney General from 2009 to 2015

Harvey Weinstein
PersonAmerican film producer and sex offender (born 1952)

Cynthia Nixon
PersonAmerican actress and politician