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write a treatise for the judge in an unsuccessful attempt to persuade him to soften
the stinging language in his order.
Senior U.S. District Court Judge William J. Zloch copied Acosta on his order,
noting, “The court is at a total loss as to why the Office of the United States Attorney
for the Southern District of Florida, as well as the Assistant United States Attorney
assigned to the above-styled cause, found it appropriate to intentionally withhold ...
information from the court.”
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A. Marie Villafafia was the lead federal prosecutor in the Jeffrey Epstein sex case. The U.S. attorney’s office’s handling of
the prosecution, which led to a plea to minor charges in state court, has been harshly criticized.
Later that year, Acosta and Villafafa put together a plea bargain for Epstein, a
multimillionaire money manager who sexually abused nearly three dozen teenage
girls at his mansion in Palm Beach. The deal, a federal judge ruled last month, was
intentionally kept from his victims in violation of the Crime Victims’ Rights Act.
While the two cases are unrelated, it shows that both Acosta and Villafana had been
warned about the importance of victim disclosure in sex crimes cases before the
Epstein agreement. They nevertheless forged ahead with a pact with Epstein that
violated the law.
U.S. District Court Judge Kenneth A. Marra wrote: “When the Government gives
information to victims, it cannot be misleading. While the Government spent untold
hours negotiating the terms and implications of the [agreement] with Epstein’s
attorneys, scant information was shared with victims.”
This comes as Acosta, who is now the U.S. secretary of labor, is facing mounting
scrutiny for his oversight of the Epstein case. On Monday, White House press
secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders declined to say whether President Trump has full
confidence in Acosta, noting that Acosta’s involvement in the Epstein case is
“currently under review.”
The Justice Department launched a probe in January into whether Acosta, Villafafia
and other prosecutors committed professional misconduct.
Francey Hakes, who worked in the Justice Department’s Crimes Against Children
unit, said Zloch’s comments were so brutal that it should have deterred Acosta and
Villafafia from keeping the deal secret.
“Tt is highly unusual for a court to allege an assistant U.S. attorney has intentionally
withheld information. That allegation is like dropping a bomb in the legal
community,” she said.
The story behind a Palm Beach sex offender’s remarkable deal
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