Financier Epstein goes from luxury life to confined jail cell after sex
trafficking charges
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[July 10, 2019]
By Brendan Pierson and Jonathan Allen
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Wealthy American
financier Jeffrey Epstein, charged with sex trafficking in underage
girls, is now confined to a cell in a fortress-like concrete tower jail
that has been criticized by inmates and lawyers for harsh conditions.
After his arrest on Saturday at New Jersey's Teterboro Airport on
arrival from Paris in his private plane, Epstein was likely put in
solitary confinement at the Metropolitan Correctional Center (MCC) in
lower Manhattan, according to defense lawyers and others familiar with
the jail.
"When you have someone that's allegedly a sexual predator like Jeffrey
Epstein, he'll need to be in protective custody," Andrew Laufer, a
lawyer who has represented MCC inmates in civil lawsuits against prison
officials, said in an interview.
Epstein pleaded not guilty https://www.reuters.com/article/us-people-jeffrey-epstein/financier-epstein-pleads-not-guilty-to-sex-trafficking-charges-involving-girls-idUSKCN1U3136
in the nearby federal court on Monday to one count of sex trafficking
and one count of sex trafficking conspiracy. He will remain in jail at
least until a bail hearing on July 15. Federal prosecutors have said he
is a flight risk because of his wealth and international ties.
In the past, Epstein, 66, was known for socializing with politicians and
royalty, with friends who have included U.S. President Donald Trump,
former president Bill Clinton and, according to court papers, Britain's
Prince Andrew. None of those people was mentioned in the indictment and
prosecutors declined to comment on anyone said to be associated with
Epstein.
The indictment said Epstein made young girls perform nude "massages" and
other sex acts, and paid some girls to recruit others, from at least
2002 to 2005 at his mansion in New York and estate in Florida.
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Marc Fernich, a lawyer for Epstein, declined to comment on Epstein's
current conditions.
The Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) said it does not release information
on an inmate's conditions of confinement for safety and security
reasons.
The MCC houses about 800 inmates, most of whom are awaiting trial and
have not been convicted. Prominent inmates have included New York Mafia
bosses, the fraudster Bernie Madoff and the Mexican drug lord Joaquin
"El Chapo" Guzman.
Inmates and defense lawyers have complained of rat and cockroach
infestations and uncomfortable extremes of heat and cold or problems
with the water supply.
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U.S. financier Jeffrey Epstein (C) appears in court where he pleaded
guilty to two prostitution charges in West Palm Beach, Florida, U.S.
July 30, 2008. Picture taken July 30, 2008. Uma Sanghvi/Palm Beach
Post via REUTERS.
The jail's harshest unit, known colloquially as "10 South", has been
compared unfavorably to the U.S. prison camp Guantanamo Bay. In
2011, rights group Amnesty International said the unit, which has
also been used to house people accused of terrorism, flouts
"international standards for humane treatment."
One defense lawyer, who asked to remain anonymous, said that Epstein
is likely in "9 South," a separate special housing unit.
Inmates in protective custody are allowed out of their cell for
recreation only one hour a day, according to BOP guidelines and
interviews with lawyers.
Laufer and other lawyers said they believed that high-profile
defendants such as Epstein enjoyed better protections than most, in
part because prison officials are mindful of the embarrassment that
harm to a well-known inmate could bring.
If Epstein is moved into a general population unit, he would have
access to a shared common space with a television used by other
inmates in the unit.
There, however, he would likely be a target for other inmates both
because of his wealth and because he is a registered sex offender
following his 2008 conviction for soliciting a girl for prostitution
in Florida.
"The sex offenders have a hard time," Jack Donson, a former BOP
employee who now works as a federal prison consultant in New York,
said in an interview. "He's definitely going to get ostracized."
There are fewer activities and diversions for inmates at the MCC
compared to some other jails, Donson said.
"It's pretty confining, pretty boring, not dangerous, but still no
picnic," Donson said. "Especially if you're a man of wealth: one
minute you're on your yacht or in a helicopter; next minute you're
sitting at a table playing cards with the boys."
(Reporting by Brendan Pierson and Jonathan Allen in New York;
Editing by Noeleen Walder and Grant McCool)
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