The victims, using Jane Doe pseudonyms, said the FBI received
credible tips as early as 1996 that Epstein trafficked young
women and girls, yet failed to interview victims or share what
it knew with federal and local law enforcement.
Victims said the FBI finally began a probe in 2006, but ended it
two years later after Epstein pleaded guilty to a Florida
prostitution charge, and kept ignoring tips until his July 2019
arrest. Epstein committed suicide a month later.
"As a direct and proximate cause of the FBI's negligence,
plaintiffs would not have been continued to be sex trafficked,
abused, raped, tortured and threatened," the complaint said.
"Jane Does 1-12 bring this lawsuit to get to the bottom -- once
and for all -- of the FBI's role in Epstein's criminal sex
trafficking ring," it added.
The U.S. Department of Justice did not immediately respond to a
request for comment.
Wednesday's complaint filed in federal court in Manhattan seeks
damages from the U.S. government, the only defendant.
It cited a Dec. 5, 2023, Senate Judiciary Committee hearing
where FBI Director Christopher Wray was asked why the FBI didn't
do more. He promised to "get with my team and figure out if
there is more information we can provide."
The number of Epstein's victims is believed to be well over 100.
Victims previously reached approximately $500 million of
settlements, before deducting legal fees and costs, with a
program funded by Epstein's estate and with two of Epstein's
banks, JPMorgan Chase and Deutsche Bank.
It is unclear whether the 12 plaintiffs received compensation
from those settlements. Their lawyers did not immediately
respond to requests for comment.
The case is Doe 1 et al v United States, U.S. District Court,
Southern District of New York, No. 24-01071.
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; editing by Jonathan
Oatis)
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