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Judge Rules Federal Prosecutors Broke Law in Epstein Sex Trafficking Plea DealCase Filekaggle-ho-029608House OversightJudge Rules Federal Prosecutors Broke Law in Epstein Sex Trafficking Plea Deal
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Judge Rules Federal Prosecutors Broke Law in Epstein Sex Trafficking Plea Deal
Judge Rules Federal Prosecutors Broke Law in Epstein Sex Trafficking Plea Deal The passage alleges that U.S. federal prosecutors in the Southern District of Florida violated legal procedures in securing a lenient plea agreement for Jeffrey Epstein, suggesting possible misconduct by DOJ officials. It provides specific names (U.S. District Judge Kenneth Marra, former U.S. Attorney for Miami Peter Acosta) and references a DOJ internal probe, offering concrete leads for further investigation. While the claim is not novel-prosecutorial misconduct in the Epstein case has been reported-it adds detail about a judge’s opinion and a pending DOJ review, making it a moderately strong, actionable lead. Key insights: Judge Kenneth Marra stated federal prosecutors broke the law in the Epstein plea deal.; Former U.S. Attorney Peter Acosta allegedly helped negotiate the non‑prosecution agreement.; The plea agreement allowed Epstein to avoid federal charges despite evidence of sex trafficking.
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