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Court Finds U.S. Government Violated Victims' Rights by Granting Immunity to Potential Epstein Co‑ConspiratorsCase Filekaggle-ho-017945House OversightCourt Finds U.S. Government Violated Victims' Rights by Granting Immunity to Potential Epstein Co‑Conspirators
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Court Finds U.S. Government Violated Victims' Rights by Granting Immunity to Potential Epstein Co‑Conspirators
Court Finds U.S. Government Violated Victims' Rights by Granting Immunity to Potential Epstein Co‑Conspirators The passage reveals that a federal court ruled the Justice Department knowingly concealed a non‑prosecution agreement (NPA) that granted blanket immunity to unnamed co‑conspirators of Jeffrey Epstein, including specific individuals. This provides a concrete lead-court order, dates, and names-to investigate possible obstruction, abuse of prosecutorial discretion, and the role of senior DOJ officials. The allegation ties high‑level actors (U.S. Attorney’s Office, possibly senior DOJ leadership) to a cover‑up of sexual abuse of minors, which would generate major public outcry if substantiated. Key insights: Court granted summary judgment to victims under the Crime Victims’ Rights Act (CVRA) on Feb. 21, 2019.; The government entered a confidential NPA with Epstein that barred disclosure to victims.; NPA allegedly extended immunity to potential co‑conspirators, naming Sarah Kellen, Adriana Ross, Lesley Groff, Nadia Marcinkova.
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