U.S. financier Epstein expected to be charged in sex trafficking case
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[July 08, 2019] By
Brendan Pierson
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Federal prosecutors in
New York on Monday are expected to announce charges against financier
Jeffrey Epstein related to sex trafficking of underage girls, a source
familiar with the matter said, more than a decade after he avoided
similar charges in Florida in a plea deal.
Epstein, 66, was arrested https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-justice-epstein/financier-epstein-arrested-in-u-s-sex-trafficking-case-source-idUSKCN1U20IK
on Saturday night and could appear in federal court later on Monday to
hear the charges. His lawyer, Jack Goldberger, has said Epstein will
plead not guilty.
The former hedge fund manager, who is known for socializing with
politicians and royalty, first came under investigation in 2005 after
police in Palm Beach, Florida received reports that he had sexually
abused minors in his mansion there.
Epstein has said in court filings that his encounters with alleged
victims were consensual and that he believed they were 18 when they
occurred.
By 2007, Epstein was facing a potential federal indictment for sexually
abusing dozens of girls as young as 14 between 1999 and 2007, directing
others to abuse them and paying employees to bring victims to him,
according to court filings.
However, Epstein struck a deal in which he pleaded guilty to a lesser
Florida state felony prostitution charge. He served a 13-month sentence
in county jail, during which he was allowed to leave during the day to
go to his office.
The deal has been challenged in court by several of Epstein's accusers,
who say they were denied a chance to have their views about it heard, in
violation of the federal Crime Victims' Rights Act. In February of this
year, a U.S. district judge in Florida agreed, ruling that the deal
violated the law.
Even so, the U.S. Department of Justice said in a court filing last
month there was no reason to cancel the agreement.
Among the prosecutors involved in the agreement was Alex Acosta, then
the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Florida and now U.S.
Secretary of Labor for President Donald Trump. A spokeswoman for the
Department of Labor on Sunday declined to comment on Epstein's arrest.
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Jeffrey Epstein is shown in this undated Florida Department of Law
Enforcement photo. REUTERS/Florida Department of Law
Enforcement/Handout via Reuters/File Photo
Democrats in the U.S. House of Representatives confronted Acosta about his role
in the Epstein case in April when the labor secretary appeared before the House
Appropriations subcommittee on a routine budget matter.
Acosta responded that human trafficking was "an incredibly important issue"
and said his office's efforts ensured that Epstein faced jail time and had to
register as a sex offender.
"I understand the frustration," Acosta told the subcommittee. "I think it's
important to understand that he was going to get off with no jail time or
restitution. It was the work of our office that resulted in him going to jail."
A U.S. Justice Department office is investigating whether government attorneys
committed professional misconduct in the Epstein case.
Brad Edwards, a lawyer who represents some of Epstein's accusers, told Reuters
on Sunday that he had taken many calls from "victims crying tears of joy" since
news broke of Epstein's arrest. "One just kept repeating that she was so happy
he was finally off the streets," Edwards said.
(Reporting By Brendan Pierson in New York; editing by Grant McCool)
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