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14 The Virgin Islands Daily News
PERVERSION OF JUSTICE
Monday, March 4, 2019
Alan Dershowitz suggests curbing press access
to hearing on Jeffrey Epstein sex abuse
By JULIE K. BROWN
Miami Herald
MIAMI —A court hearing on whether to
unseal sensitive documents involving the alleged
sex trafficking of underage girls by Palm Beach
multimillionaire Jeffrey Epstein — and the pos-
sible involvement of his influential friends — will
play out in a New York City courtroom this week.
But it may happen behind closed doors, with
the news media and public barred — atleast in
part.
An attomey for lawyer Alan Dershowitz wrote
a letter to the U.S. District Court Second Circuit
of Appeals on Tuesday, asking whether the media
should be excluded from the proceeding because
his oral arguments on behalf of his client could
contain sensitive information that has been under
seal.
The appeals court has not responded to his
concem as of Friday, but if the hearing is closed
during his lawyer's argument, it would represent
the latest in a long history of successful efforts to
keep details of Epstein'’s sex crimes sealed.
Dershowitz, a professor emeritus at Harvard,
constitutional law expert and criminal defense
attorney, represented Epstein, who in 2008
received what many consider an unusually light
sentence for sexually abusing dozens of girls at
his Palm Beach mansion. Two women — one of
whom was underage — have said Epstein and
his partner, British socialite and environmentalist
Ghislaine Maxwell, directed them to have sex.
with Dershowitz, 80, and other wealthy, powerful
men. Dershowitz and Maxwell have denied the
claims.
Oral arguments are scheduled Wednesday to
hear an appeal by the Miami Herald and other
parties seeking to unseal a 2015 court case in-
volving Epstein and Maxwell. The Herald, as part
of an ongoing investigation into Epstein’s case,
hopes to shed more light on the scope of Ep-
stein’s crimes, who else might have been involved
and whether there was any undue influence that
tainted the criminal justice process.
A legal brief supporting the Herald's appeal
was filed in December by the Reporters Commit-
tee for Freedom of the Press and 32 other media
companies, including The New York Times,
The Washington Post, Dow Jones, Fox News,
Gannett, Politico, Reveal Center for Investigative
Reporting and Tribune Publishing Co.
The case — which was settled in 2017 —
involved Virginia Roberts Giuffre, who sued
Maxwell in federal court in the Southern District
of New York in 2015. Giufire has asserted that
Maxwell and Epstein trafficked her and other
underage girls, often at sex parties that Epstein
File phote by GETTY IMAGES
Alan Dershowitz wants to keep the public, and news media, out of a hearing in New York this
week in which a judge is being asked to unseal sensitive documents involving Jeffrey Epstein
and the alleged sex trafficking of underage girls.
The case — which was settled in 2017 — involved Virginia Roberts
Giuffre, who sued Ghislaine Maxwell in federal court in the
Southern District of New York in 2015. Giuffre has asserted that
Maxwell and Epstein trafficked her and other underage girls, often
at sex parties that Epstein hosted at his homes in New York, New
Mexico, Palm Beach and the Virgin Islands.
hosted at his homes in New York, New Mexico,
Palm Beach and the Virgin Islands.
Maxwell called Giuflre a liar, resulting in Gin
fre suing for defamation.
As the case was litigated, the judge allowed a
vast trove of documents, including testimony by
witnesses, to be sealed. Dershowitz, having been
publicly implicated in Epstein’s crimes by Giuf-
fre, tried unsuccessfully to get the judge to unseal
a select number of documents that he says will
exonerate him. Blogger Michael Cernovich also
filed a motion to release a portion of the sealed
documents.
The judge denied their motions in 2016, as the
case was still ongoing, saying that release of the
documents could taint a potential jury pool.
After the case was settled, the Herald filed a
more extensive motion, arguing that with the case
now closed, all the documents in the case should
be made public. The motion, filed in April 2018,
came as the Herald was working on an investiga-
tive series, Perversion of Justice, which detailed
how Epstein and his lawyers manipulated federal
prosecutors to obtain one of the most lenient sen-
tences for someone who sexually abused children
in history.
Dershowitz’s lawyer, Andrew G. Celli Jr,
emphasized to the Herald that Dershowitz is not
trying to ban the media from the proceeding; he
is simply giving the court a heads-up that his ar-
guments could include information that has never
been made public because it is under seal.
“What the letter says very clearly is we intend
to make reference to the sealed material in open
court, so we want to notify the judges that this is
my intention to make my arguments,” Celli said.
“We want the courtroom to be open so long as
we can argue the substance of what we want to
unseal.”
Barbara Petersen, executive director of the
First Amendment Foundation, pointed out that
since the judges are well aware that sealed docu-
ments are at the heart of the appeal, Dershowitz’s
request comes across more as a “veiled threat.”
“It’s like ‘if you don't keep out the media, then
we are going reveal stuff and let the chips fall
where they may, she said. “They don't want it to
come out and they don’t want to make a motion
and ban the media, so they are hoping the judges
do it for them.”
Attomeys for Giuffre want the case unsealed.
“Ms. Giuffre is a victim of Jeffrey Epstein’s
sex trafficking organization,” her attorney, Paul
Cassell, said in a statement attached to the Her-
ald’s appeal. “When she bravely came forward
to explain what happened to her at the hands of
Epstein and his powerful friends, Epstein’s ‘Ma-
dame’ and girlfriend, Ghislaine Maxwell, told
the world that Ms. Giuffre was a liar. Ms. Giuffre
filed a defamation action.”
The case was settled in Giuffre’s favor, with
Maxwell paying Giufire millions.
Maxwell wants the case to remain sealed and
earlier tried to get the judge to destroy the sealed
documents, but her motion was denied.
Epstein’s deal, brokered by then-Miami US.
Attorney Alexander Acosta, allowed Epstein to
plead guilty to two prostitution charges in state
court, and in exchange, Epstein and an untold
number of others were given federal immunity.
Epstein served just 13 months in the county jail,
although much of his incarceration was spent
at his office in downtown west Palm Beach on
“work release.”
Last week, a federal judge ruled that Acosta,
now President Donald Trump's secretary of labor,
violated the law because he and other prosecutors
deliberately kept the deal secret from Epstein’s vic-
tims, who are now in their late 20s and early 30s.
Cernovich’s lawyer, Marc J. Randazza, said he
has never seen a court seal nearly an entire court
record like this.
“T've seen partial seals, but I’ve never seen
anything where it went quite that far. That in of it-
self is newsworthy,” he said. “What kind of power
here is able to influence our court system in such
abig way? Something is amiss and I’m glad that
journalists are out there looking at it.”
PERVERSION
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 13
was taken of the two of them strolling in Manhat-
tan. It was later revealed that Epstein had loaned
the prince's ex-wife, Sarah Ferguson, $24,000 to
pay off some debts. Ferguson later called the loan
a “gigantic error of judgment.”
Changing the law
Crime victims’ rights advocates have used
the Epstein case to strengthen the federal law
in recent years, adding more precise language
mandating that prosecutors notify victims about
plea bargains and allow victims to be heard at
sentencing.
Because some statute-of-limitation laws set
deadlines for filing civil and criminal sex crime
cases, it’s difficult to bring them years later, said
Marci Hamilton, a University of Pennsylvania
professor who is working to ease those restric-
tions across the country.
But she points out that there has been no stat-
ute of limitations for federal sex crimes involving
children since 2002.
Children who are sexually abused often take
decades to reveal what happened to them, in part
because their brains aren't wired at a young age
to understand the trauma they've experienced,
said Kenneth V. Lanning, a retired FBI agent who
investigated and studied child sex crimes for 40
“We want to hold children to some
superhuman standard because they behave
this way. In reality, police, prosecutors and
judges have to understand that children are
not all angels from heaven. They are just
plain human beings who are emotionally im-
mature so we have to protect them from their
own decisions.”
“Really if you think about this too hard it’s
scary because this is our government thatis sup-
posed to protect us but has done everything to
protecta pedophile,” she said.
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| Filename | HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_023000.jpg |
| File Size | 0.0 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 8,945 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-04T16:49:26.374459 |