DOJ-OGR-00029015.tif
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FD-350 (Rev. 5-8-81)
{Mount Clipping in Space Below)
Rich man fought the law
— and he mostly won
Two years after a grand jury
indicted him on a felony charge of
solicitation of prostitution, Jeffrey
Epstein finally admitted that he
lured a teenage girl to his $8.5 mil-
lion, 13,000-square-foot Palm Beach
mansion for sex. A week ago, the
‘5d-yearold investment banker be-
gan serving 18 months in jail.
But that plea deal — guilty of
felony solicitation of prostitution
and precuring a person under the
age of 18 for prostitution — does
not account for all five of the girls,
_ one as young as 14, who alleged that
Epstein sexually abused them. And
why is Epstein serving his ,
term in the overcrowded | 20702 fhe
Palm Beach County Jail
and not a state prison, |
where inmates are sent if
their sentences are longer
than one year?
The slow, dissatisfy-
ing resolution of the case
sends a message to the
public that there’s a dif
ferent system of justice for
the wealthy who hire high-powered
lawyers. Epstein’s legal team includ-
ed West Palm Beach defense attor-
ney Jack Goldberger, Harvard Law
School Professor Alan Dershowitz,
who defended O.J. Simpson against
murder charges, and Kenneth
Starr, the prosecutor who pursued
then-President Bill Clinton for lying
about sex with young women.
Palm Beach police spent 11
months investigating Epstein be-
fore State Attorney Barry Krischer
sent the case to a grand jury, in-
stead of charging Epstein so the
man who once boasted of accepting
only billionaire clients could face a
trial. The police had taken a high
school transcript, class schedules
and phone messages from Epstein’s
Why ts Jeffrey Epstein in
jail, and not prison?
home that showed he knew the girls
were underage. Yet Mr. Krischer
was more swayed by Epstein’s law-
yers, Who attempted to impugn the
girls’ character by showing they
had chatted on myspace.com about
smoking marijuana and drinking.
He should have let a jury decide
whether the victims — and Epstein
— were credible,
Ultimately, one charge against
the age of one victim, and
the plea agreement left
Epstein labeled a sex of
fender. With that additional
charge, if Epstein had been
convicted at a trial, he
could have been sentenced
to anything from probation
to 15 years in prison, Assis-
tant State Attorney Lanna
Belohlavek said, adding that the
recommended guideline sentence
was 21 months.
Epstein also won’t have to cer
tify to the court that he is receiv-
ing counseling, typically required
of sex offenders, because he has
a private psychiatrist. But without
court supervision, who will ensure
Epstein is in fact being treated?
The plea deal also drops a federal
investigation of Epstein. If a federal
investigation was warranted, how
does dropping it before completion |
benefit the public?
Epstein preyed on girls and de-
nied it. For three years, his wealth
and the influence of his lawyers
bought him the protection the state
attorney owed to the victims.
Epstein finally reflected ,
(Indicate page, name of
newspaper, city and state.)
Date:
Edition:
07072008
Palm Beach Post
Title: Rich man fought the law and he mostly won
or
_ | Character:
Classification: 3 1E-MM-108062
Indexing:
| Submitting Office: Miami {PB2)
~
03956-1081
G/E- HH- 10f062- (uy
DOJ-OGR-00029015
Extracted Information
Dates
Document Details
| Filename | DOJ-OGR-00029015.tif |
| File Size | 70.5 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 93.1% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 3,293 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-03 21:28:46.892181 |