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Extracted Text (OCR)
TERSON
nan had not wanted to make a
t she had taken the cop’s card,
at she’d changed her mind.
ibed Epstein as a tallish man—
ght was her guess —with gray
owner of a large black four-door
1utters on the Beach, which was
tousand dollars a night and was
_other Hollywood types.
vas a model and actress herself.
a month. They had a friend in
head shots.
Epstein had invited her to meet
srvations, the officer wrote in his
iews are not conducted in hotel
ned frightening quickly.
recause although she wanted to
ecret’ catalog model she felt as
ig to get her to act in an unpro-
eatpants and a white T-shirt, she —
ters USA printed on it in patriotic ©
nd actually assisted her to do so
dle you for a second.’
Fittyy Ricu
Then, Alicia told the cop, Epstein groped her buttocks against
her will while acting as though he was evaluating her body. Alicia
had stopped Epstein, and left the room, but couldn't get over the
incident.
At the top of his crime report, the officer wrote “Sexual
Battery.” But Epstein was never charged in the incident. “The
Santa Monica Police Department discounted every one of [Alicia’s]
allegations of improper conduct by Jeffrey Epstein and they took
no action on this 1997 complaint,” Epstein’s West Palm Beach
attorney, Jack Goldberger, told the Palm Beach Post in 2010.
“The cops said it'd be my word against his,” Alicia told the
paper. “And since he had a lot of money, I let it go. 1 hadn't
thought much about it since, until 1 saw his picture online. And
“« I want everybody to know how much of a creep he’s always
een.”
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