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Attorney Kenneth Starr raises concerns about unusual Deferred Prosecution Agreement provisions for Jeffrey EpsteinCase Filekaggle-ho-012656House OversightAttorney Kenneth Starr raises concerns about unusual Deferred Prosecution Agreement provisions for Jeffrey Epstein
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Attorney Kenneth Starr raises concerns about unusual Deferred Prosecution Agreement provisions for Jeffrey Epstein
Attorney Kenneth Starr raises concerns about unusual Deferred Prosecution Agreement provisions for Jeffrey Epstein The passage reveals that Epstein's DPA includes a novel waiver of 18 U.S.C. §2255 and limits on future civil claims, which is atypical and could affect victim compensation and DOJ oversight. It names high‑profile actors (Jeffrey Epstein, Assistant Attorney General Alice S. Fisher, former prosecutor Kenneth Starr) and suggests a possible procedural irregularity worth investigating, but provides limited specifics on dates, amounts, or parties beyond the DOJ. Key insights: Epstein's DPA requires waiver of jurisdiction under 18 U.S.C. §2255, an unusual condition for a criminal plea.; The agreement precludes Epstein from contesting civil lawsuits seeking statutory minimum damages ($50k or $150k).; Defense counsel (Kenneth Starr) has not seen precedent for this provision and seeks DOJ guidance.
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