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Extracted Text (OCR)
Wednesday, March 6, 2019
Miami U.S. attorney's office recuses
itself from the Jeffrey Epstein case
By JULIE K. BROWN
Miami Herald
MIAMI — Just days before a Friday
deadline, the Justice Department has
reassigned the Jeffrey Epstein victims’
rights case to the U.S. attomey’s office
in Adanta, the attorneys representing
Epstein’ victims said Tuesday.
Miami federal prosecutors, in a let-
ter to attorneys for the victims Monday,
said they had recused themselves from
the case, according to Brad Edwards
and Jack Scarola, representing Ep-
stein’s victims.
The reassignment means that the
US. attomey for the Northern District
of Georgia, Byung J. “BJay” Pak, will
oversee the case for the government.
Pak, a former Georgia lawmaker, was
appointed Atlanta's chief federal pros-
ecutor by President Donald Trump in
October 2017.
The Justice Department is still under
a Friday deadline for prosecutors to
confer with the victims’ attorneys in an
effort to settle the case. On Feb, 22, U.S.
District Judge Kenneth A. Marra in
Palm Beach County ruled that federal
prosecutors, under former Miami U.S.
Attomey Alexander Acosta, broke the
law when they concealed a plea agree-
ment from more than 30 underage girls
in Palm Beach who had been sexually
abused by Epstein, a multimillionaire
New York hedge fund manager.
Marra stopped short of voiding the
agreement, which granted Epstein and
an untold number of accomplices im-
munity from federal prosecution for
sex trafficking crimes, provided Ep-
stein plead guilty to minor charges
in state court. At the time of the plea
deal, federal prosecutors had gathered
enough evidence against Epstein to
write a 53-page federal indictment,
court records show.
An investigation by the Miami Her-
ald, “Perversion of Justice,” found that
after Acosta met privately with one
of Epstein’s lawyers, the govemment
agreed to seal the plea agreement so
that no one — not the victims, not
even the state court judge who sen-
tenced Epstein — would know the full
extent of his crimes. Epstein, now 66,
was allowed to plead guilty to prosti-
tution charges and served 13 months
in the Palm Beach County jail, where
he was given liberal work release, and
acesa0
VIP Awards & Engraving
allowed to travel to New York and his
private island in the Virgin Islands dur-
ing his subsequent house arrest. He was
released in 2009, and now divides his
time between New York, Palm Beach
and the U.S, Virgin Islands.
The Herald interviewed four of Ep-
stein’s victims, who were as young as 13
at the time they were abused by Epstein.
They said they felt betrayed by state and
federal prosecutors, who treated them
like prostitutes instead of victims. Two
of them sued the federal government in
2008 under the Crime Victims’ Rights
Act, which grants crime victims the
right to be informed about plea deals
and to confer with prosecutors.
Marra, in a 33-page opinion, said
prosecutors not only intentionally vio-
lated the Crime Victims’ Rights Act, but
they misled the girls into believing that
the FBI's sex trafficking case against Ep-
stein was ongoing — when, in fact, pros
ecutors had secretly closed it after sealing
the plea bargain from the public record.
Marra, noting that he reviewed affi-
davits, depositions and interrogatories,
said “Epstein worked in concert with
others to obtain minors not only for his
own sexual gratification, but also for
the sexual gratification of others.”
The victims’ attorneys — Edwards,
Scarola and Paul Cassell — have asked
the Justice Department to throw out
Epstein’ plea agreement and reopen
the criminal investigation.
Edwards, who brought the victims’
rights case against the government,
said transferring the case to another ju-
risdiction is a prudent decision,
“I think it's good that we're going
to get fresh eyes and a fresh opinion
on the way the case was handled,” Ed-
wards said Tuesday.
Miami’ new U.S, attorney, Ariana
Fajardo Orshan — who was appointed
by Trump in September — did not re-
spond to a request for comment.
Acosta, who was appointed by Trump
as the U.S. secretary of labor in 2017, is
the focus of a separate Justice Depart-
ment investigation into whether there
was any prosecutorial misconduct in the
Epstein case. That probe, by the DOJ
Office of Professional Responsibility,
was initiated in response to demands
from a bipartisan group in Congress,
led by Republican Sen. Ben Sasse of
Nebraska and Democratic Rep. Debbie
Wasserman Schultz of Florida.
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HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_031170
Document Details
| Filename | HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_031170.jpg |
| File Size | 0.0 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 5,191 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-04T17:09:48.625084 |