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kaggle-ho-029518House Oversight

Jeffrey Epstein’s secret 2008 non‑prosecution deal with U.S. Attorney Alexander Acosta raises questions of political influence and possible misconduct

Jeffrey Epstein’s secret 2008 non‑prosecution deal with U.S. Attorney Alexander Acosta raises questions of political influence and possible misconduct The passage identifies a concrete plea‑deal negotiated by former U.S. Attorney Alexander Acosta (now Labor Secretary) that shielded Epstein from federal trafficking charges. It names specific actors (Acosta, Donald Trump, Bill Clinton, Prince Andrew) and cites pending civil suits aiming to nullify the agreement, offering clear investigative leads (court filings, DOJ decision‑making, Acosta’s Senate confirmation testimony). While many details are already public, the connection to a sitting cabinet member and the possibility of a broader non‑prosecution agreement make it a strong, actionable lead. Key insights: Acosta, as U.S. Attorney in Miami in 2008, approved a secret non‑prosecution deal for Epstein.; Acosta is now Secretary of Labor in the Trump administration, creating a potential conflict of interest.; Victims are seeking to nullify the plea agreement to allow federal re‑prosecution.

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Summary

Jeffrey Epstein’s secret 2008 non‑prosecution deal with U.S. Attorney Alexander Acosta raises questions of political influence and possible misconduct The passage identifies a concrete plea‑deal negotiated by former U.S. Attorney Alexander Acosta (now Labor Secretary) that shielded Epstein from federal trafficking charges. It names specific actors (Acosta, Donald Trump, Bill Clinton, Prince Andrew) and cites pending civil suits aiming to nullify the agreement, offering clear investigative leads (court filings, DOJ decision‑making, Acosta’s Senate confirmation testimony). While many details are already public, the connection to a sitting cabinet member and the possibility of a broader non‑prosecution agreement make it a strong, actionable lead. Key insights: Acosta, as U.S. Attorney in Miami in 2008, approved a secret non‑prosecution deal for Epstein.; Acosta is now Secretary of Labor in the Trump administration, creating a potential conflict of interest.; Victims are seeking to nullify the plea agreement to allow federal re‑prosecution.

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kagglehouse-oversighthigh-importancejeffrey-epsteinnon‑prosecution-agreementalexander-acostatrump-administrationbill-clinton
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