Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
"Sweetheart deal!" So goes the attack on
the resolution of the more than a decade
ago federal investigation involving our
client Jeffrey Epstein. The attack is
profoundly misplaced, supported neither
by the law nor the facts. Moreover, it is
inaccurately leveled at President Trump's
current Secretary of Labor, Alex Acosta,
who was then the United States Attorney
in south Florida. In actuality, the
disposition of a federal criminal case
against Jeffrey in the form of a Non-
Prosecution Agreement ("NPA") was
negotiated on both sides at arms-length
between several prosecutors in the United
States Attorney's Office for the Southern
District of Florida, the largest and one of
the most respected of the nation's
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prosecutorial arms of the Department of
Justice, and a group of equally well-
respected criminal defense attorneys with
impeccable reputations for integrity and
professionalism.
Although the pundits and critics would
have the public believe that Secretary
Acosta was solely responsible for the
resolution of Jeffrey's case, as confirmed in
a recent Miami Herald op ed piece by
Alex Acosta's second
in command in the Southern District and
actively involved in the case, the truth is
that decision-making within the DOJ was
widely shared by a number of respected
and experienced career federal
prosecutors. Numerous federal
prosecutors knew about, participated in,
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and approved the negotiated resolution.
Moreover, because of the unprecedented
nature of a federal prosecution of the state
offenses alleged against Jeffrey and the
unusual and onerous conditions imposed
in the NPA by the U.S. Attorney's Office,
Jeffrey sought DOJ review of the NPA by
the Criminal Division as well as the Office
of the Deputy Attorney General. Far from
some secretly negotiated sweetheart deal,
the federal resolution of Jeffrey's case
received more scrutiny at multiple levels of
the DOJ than virtually any case involving an
individual of which we are aware. The
implication that any one of the highly
accomplished attorneys on either side of
this case would sacrifice a lifetime of
superlative professional work to participate
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in base unethical behavior in order to curry
favor with a single wealthy man accused of
sexual misconduct is preposterous. It
reflects a fundamental misunderstanding
of the federal statutory and constitutional
laws and existing Department of Justice
policies at issue when the NPA was
negotiated, as well as what actually
transpired during those negotiations.
Equally as inaccurate is the continued
irresponsible mischaracterization of Mr.
Epstein's case as a trafficking case. The
true facts of Mr. Epstein's case bear no
resemblance to that distorted and
exaggerated narrative. Despite repeated
suggestions to the contrary in the media,
the allegations against Mr. Epstein did not
involve sex trafficking. Mr. Epstein, a
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successful self-made businessman with no
prior criminal history, engaged in conduct
that was thoroughly investigated during a
fifteen-month period by the Palm Beach
State Attorney's Office. No one turned a
blind eye to potential offenses to the
public order. To the contrary, the evidence
assembled during that intensive
investigation was carefully reviewed and
evaluated by an experienced sex crimes
prosecutor, the Chief of Palm Beach
County's sex crimes division, who
presented that evidence to a state Grand
Jury. There was simply no evidence to
support any of the current claims of sex
trafficking and there were no such findings
by the state Grand Jury, which issued a
single count indictment for solicitation of
prostitution.
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Nor in Mr. Epstein's case were there any of the allegations typical to sex trafficking offenses. There were no
allegations that coercion, violence, alcohol, drugs or the like were involved in Mr. Epstein's case. And although the
women who interacted with Mr. Epstein included persons under the age of 18, Mr. Epstein was not targeting
minors, and, in fact, many were adults. The actual ages of the women involved have been inaccurately described
by Plaintiffs' lawyers and unquestioningly accepted by the media without proper journalistic objectivity. Their ages
have been misrepresented by photographs taken at times that do not comport with the relevant timeframes of the
events in this case. Photos taken years before some of these women even met Mr. Epstein have been irresponsibly
published by the media, along with uncorroborated stories of sex parties that Mr. Epstein never hosted. In fact,
those who know Mr. Epstein can confirm that he rarely hosted any parties at all. And the story that seems to have
gained so much traction about President Clinton visiting Mr. Epstein's Island was a total fabrication.
All of that being said, Mr. Epstein's conduct was wrong and the resolution of his case after months of negotiations
by well-respected attorneys on both sides was a balanced resolution that weighed the seriousness of the allegations
against Mr. Epstein. However, it also properly considered the significant evidentiary challenges that prosecutors
faced in this case, including swom testimony from many that they lied about being eighteen years old to be allowed
into Mr. Epstein's home. And perhaps most importantly, it reflected a realistic assessment of the significant
problem that a federal prosecution of Mr. Epstein would have required novel and untested applications of federal
law to what would typically be considered a quintessentially local criminal matter in south Florida.
The conduct alleged involved a classic state offense and was treated exactly that way by able and honest
prosecutors in Palm Beach County. Nevertheless, without any request from or consultation with those prosecutors,
the federal government intervened. The United States Attorneys Office extensively and aggressively investigated
whether Mr. Epstein had engaged in a commercial human trafficking ring, targeted minors, or used the internet or
traveled interstate in the process. But that's not what this was, that's not what really happened and that is precisely
why the federal authorities' ultimate decision to defer prosecution to the state was the right one. There was not one
scintilla of proof that Mr. Epstein had given young women to his friends. Not one.
Despite the substantial issues that the government faced if it chose to prosecute Mr. Epstein, the federal
prosecutors insisted on various unorthodox requirements that Mr. Epstein's experienced defense team had never
seen imposed on any defendant anywhere. Under the federally-forced deal, Mr. Epstein was required to request that
the state prosecutors demand the imposition of a thirty-month sentence that included both jail time and the strictest
condition of probation: lifetime sex-offender registration. Those draconian measures were far more than warranted
by the state grand jury's indictment and would not have otherwise been required under the previously agreed-upon
state disposition. As part of this highly unusual deal, the government required Jeffrey to pay for a highly
experienced group of attorneys to bring claims against him on behalf of a government list of asserted victims.
Jeffrey was required to waive the right to challenge those claims without being provided the asserted victim's
identities by the government until after he was incarcerated. Now, more than a decade later, without understanding
anything about what actually transpired, many are criticizing this deal for not going far enough. Importantly, the
government's decision to decline prosecution in deference to the state in exchange for these extraordinary
requirements was reviewed and approved at the multiple levels of the U.S. Department of Justice.
Jeffrey took full responsibility and complied with the government's demands. He served his sentence, and in the
process was subject to the same conditions concerning his time served and work release as any other state-
incarcerated individual. His conduct while in custody was exemplary, and so characterized by the state custodial
authorities. Jeffrey has paid his debt to society and strictly abided by the terms of the NPA, paying restitution to
asserted victims who collectively received many millions from him.
Our nation faces vitally important challenges, many involving the treatment of women and basic human dignity.
Voices are rightly being raised speaking truth to power, especially about women in the workplace. But Jeffrey's
offenses of yesteryear, which were entirely outside of the workplace, have long since been redressed by the criminal
justice system. He fully and faithfully has performed every promise and obligation required of him by state and
federal authorities. In the spirit of the bedrock American belief in second chances and fundamental fairness, that
chapter in Jeffrey's otherwise-productive and charitable life should be allowed to close once and for all.
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