Skip to main content
Skip to content
Case File
kaggle-ho-030433House Oversight

Opinion piece alleges DOJ officials shielded Jeffrey Epstein and mentions Bill Clinton, Prince Andrew, and Alex Acosta

Opinion piece alleges DOJ officials shielded Jeffrey Epstein and mentions Bill Clinton, Prince Andrew, and Alex Acosta The passage repeats widely reported allegations that senior officials (Alex Acosta, former U.S. Attorney, now Labor Secretary; former President Bill Clinton; Prince Andrew) were involved in a lenient plea deal for Jeffrey Epstein. It provides no new documents, dates, or financial transaction details, but it does highlight potential avenues for further inquiry into DOJ decision‑making and possible political interference, which could be useful for investigative follow‑up. Key insights: Claims that Alex Acosta gave Epstein immunity and a light sentence while serving as U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Florida.; Alleged involvement of former President Bill Clinton and Prince Andrew in Epstein's recruitment of under‑age girls.; Reference to a 2007 non‑prosecution agreement that allegedly violated the Crime Victims' Rights Act.

Date
Unknown
Source
House Oversight
Reference
kaggle-ho-030433
Pages
1
Persons
32
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

Opinion piece alleges DOJ officials shielded Jeffrey Epstein and mentions Bill Clinton, Prince Andrew, and Alex Acosta The passage repeats widely reported allegations that senior officials (Alex Acosta, former U.S. Attorney, now Labor Secretary; former President Bill Clinton; Prince Andrew) were involved in a lenient plea deal for Jeffrey Epstein. It provides no new documents, dates, or financial transaction details, but it does highlight potential avenues for further inquiry into DOJ decision‑making and possible political interference, which could be useful for investigative follow‑up. Key insights: Claims that Alex Acosta gave Epstein immunity and a light sentence while serving as U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Florida.; Alleged involvement of former President Bill Clinton and Prince Andrew in Epstein's recruitment of under‑age girls.; Reference to a 2007 non‑prosecution agreement that allegedly violated the Crime Victims' Rights Act.

Persons Referenced (32)

Paula Epstein

one of that happened because Acosta, Krischer and Epstein’s lawyers didn’t want the deal to become public.

Donald Trump

Southern Dis- trict of Florida — Alex Acosta, now Trump’ la- bor secretary — gave Epstein immunity on fed

Eric Trump

Southern Dis- trict of Florida — Alex Acosta, now Trump’ la- bor secretary — gave Epstein immunity on fed

NER Regional Director

r — J. Lowe Davis, Editor Ken E. Ryan, Production Director —_Lisa Jamil, Advertising Director Onneka Challen

Steven Andrew

t Trump, former President Bill Clinton and Prince Andrew. Between 1998 and 2006, Ep- stein recruited rough

Elizabeth Stein

nty State Attorney Barry Krischer went along. Ep- stein served 13 months in jail — he was allowed out abo

Blaine Trump

Southern Dis- trict of Florida — Alex Acosta, now Trump’ la- bor secretary — gave Epstein immunity on fed

Geoffrey West

ischer sought secrecy. Acosta drove from Miami to West Palm Beach to meet with Epstein attorney Jay Lefk

Edward Jay Epstein

one of that happened because Acosta, Krischer and Epstein’s lawyers didn’t want the deal to become public.

Melania Trump

Southern Dis- trict of Florida — Alex Acosta, now Trump’ la- bor secretary — gave Epstein immunity on fed

Bill Clinton

friends include President Trump, former President Bill Clinton and Prince Andrew. Between 1998 and 2006, Ep- ste

Kenneth Marra

in the abuse. Last February, U.S. District Judge Kenneth Marra ruled that prosecutors had violated the Crime Vic

Barry Krischer

te charges. Then-Palm Beach County State Attorney Barry Krischer went along. Ep- stein served 13 months in jail —

Andrew Stein

nty State Attorney Barry Krischer went along. Ep- stein served 13 months in jail — he was allowed out abo

Robert Trump

Southern Dis- trict of Florida — Alex Acosta, now Trump’ la- bor secretary — gave Epstein immunity on fed

Ilan Epstein

one of that happened because Acosta, Krischer and Epstein’s lawyers didn’t want the deal to become public.

Larry Page

s are there? Why should a man who once faced a 52-page indictment be able to resume a life of privilege?

Chelsea Clinton

ds include President Trump, former President Bill Clinton and Prince Andrew. Between 1998 and 2006, Ep- ste

Paul Ryan

ahigian, Publisher — J. Lowe Davis, Editor Ken E. Ryan, Production Director —_Lisa Jamil, Advertising Di

Ivanka Trump

Southern Dis- trict of Florida — Alex Acosta, now Trump’ la- bor secretary — gave Epstein immunity on fed

Jay Lefkowitz

to West Palm Beach to meet with Epstein attorney Jay Lefkowitz. Krischer wrote to a federal prosecutor, “Glad we

Unit Manager

side. To review, Epstein is a billionaire money manager whose friends include President Trump, former Pre

Prince Andrew

resident Trump, former President Bill Clinton and Prince Andrew. Between 1998 and 2006, Ep- stein recruited rough

Adam Back

irgin Islands Daily News 11 Government turns its back on Jeffrey Epstein's sex victims From the Sun Se

Garrett Stein

nty State Attorney Barry Krischer went along. Ep- stein served 13 months in jail — he was allowed out abo

a retired federal judge

joined in the abuse. Last February, U.S. District Judge Kenneth Marra ruled that prosecutors had violated

Ivana Trump

Southern Dis- trict of Florida — Alex Acosta, now Trump’ la- bor secretary — gave Epstein immunity on fed

Jeffrey Epstein

lands Daily News 11 Government turns its back on Jeffrey Epstein's sex victims From the Sun Sentinel, Ft. Lauderd

Alexander Acosta

ney for the Southern Dis- trict of Florida — Alex Acosta, now Trump’ la- bor secretary — gave Epstein immu

Estate Manager

side. To review, Epstein is a billionaire money manager whose friends include President Trump, former Pre

Hillary Clinton

ds include President Trump, former President Bill Clinton and Prince Andrew. Between 1998 and 2006, Ep- ste

Mark Epstein

one of that happened because Acosta, Krischer and Epstein’s lawyers didn’t want the deal to become public.

Tags

kagglehouse-oversightmedium-importancejeffrey-epsteinnon‑prosecution-agreementcrime-victims-rights-actpolitical-influencesex-trafficking

Ask AI About This Document

0Share
PostReddit
Review This Document

Extracted Text (OCR)

EFTA Disclosure
Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
Saturday, July 6, 2019 ‘Che Virgin Islands DAILY ® NEW A Pulitzer Prize-Winning Newspaper ST. CROIX ‘ST. JOHN ST. THOMAS Founded Aug. 1, 1930, by J. Antonio Jarvis and Ariel Melchior Sr. Published by Daily News Publishing Co., Inc. Archie Nahigian, Publisher — J. Lowe Davis, Editor Ken E. Ryan, Production Director —_Lisa Jamil, Advertising Director Onneka Challenger, Circulation Director = Juanita Young, Controller TORTOLA The week in cartoons OPINIONS The Virgin Islands Daily News 11 Government turns its back on Jeffrey Epstein's sex victims From the Sun Sentinel, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. Private lawyers allowed sexual predator Jef- frey Epstein to escape justice. Epstein’s new defense team works for the federal government. The US. attomey for the northem district of Georgia claimed last week that even though prosecutors in South Florida broke the law when they approved an outrageously light sen- tence for Epstein, the deal must stand. Byung Pak may not actually be on Epstein’s legal team, but he has placed the Department of Justice on Epstein’s side. To review, Epstein is a billionaire money manager whose friends include President Trump, former President Bill Clinton and Prince Andrew. Between 1998 and 2006, Ep- stein recruited roughly three dozen underage girls — generally from poor and troubled fami- lies — to his house in Palm Beach and sexually abused them. Epstein could have faced federal sex traffick- ing charges. He could have faced life in prison. Instead, the U.S. Attorney for the Southern Dis- trict of Florida — Alex Acosta, now Trump’ la- bor secretary — gave Epstein immunity on fed- eral charges and allowed him to plead guilty to minor state charges. Then-Palm Beach County State Attorney Barry Krischer went along. Ep- stein served 13 months in jail — he was allowed out about half the time — and had to register with the state as a sex offender. Prosecutors never told the victims about the agreement. Until the signing of that odious agreement in 2007, the girls believed the FBI was still investigating. Two victims challenged the deal, which ap- plied not just to Epstein, but also to those who recruited the girls and joined in the abuse. Last February, U.S. District Judge Kenneth Marra ruled that prosecutors had violated the Crime Victims Rights Act. In criticizing the govern- ment, Marra noted “Epstein worked in concert with others to obtain minors not only for his own sexual gratification, but also for the sexual gratification of others.” Marra then asked attorneys for both sides how he should correct this violation. Pak got the case because Acosta’s old office had to re- cuse itself. Pak’s idea? The victims could “confer in pri- vate” with prosecutors about the deal. Prosecu- tors could get more training in how to consult with victims. But the deal stands. The victims don’t deserve even an apology. Pak argues that the Crime Victims Rights Act contains no provision for undoing the non- prosecution agreement, which is what the vic- tims want. Doing so, Pak claims, could violate separation of powers. That sounds like a warning to Marra — one he should ignore. Prosecutorial discretion doesn't matter when the action in question breaks the law. Even Pak acknowledges repeat- edly that it happened. The government, he writes, “should have communicated with the victims in a straight- forward and transparent way.” Pak “regrets that the manner in which (the government) com- municated the resolution of the Epstein case to The Daily News’ opinions are expressed only in its editorials. The opinions expressed in columns, letters, cartoons and guest editorials are those of the particular author or artist. the victims fell short.” Prosecutors could have communicated “more clearly and directly” with the victims.” None of that happened because Acosta, Krischer and Epstein’s lawyers didn’t want the deal to become public. The victims might have gone public with their complaints. Media cov- erage could have killed the deal. Indeed, the record reflects the lengths to which Acosta and Krischer sought secrecy. Acosta drove from Miami to West Palm Beach to meet with Epstein attorney Jay Lefkowitz. Krischer wrote to a federal prosecutor, “Glad we could get this worked out for reasons I won't put in writing.” We acknowledge that Pak didn't create this mess. But his argument insults the public and reflects badly on the Department of Justice. “The resolution in this case,” Pak writes, “has led some to conclude that the govemment chose for improper reasons not to prosecute Epstein, a conclusion that remains unsubstanti- ated.” That's because the principals have been able to avoid talking about it for more than a decade. Acosta ducked the issue during his confir- mation hearings in April 2017. Last November, The Miami Herald ran a series on the case that featured interviews with victims who agreed to be identified. Acosta refused to comment. So did Krischer. Some might argue that the victims have re- ceived money from civil lawsuits and should move on. But can there be a price for what Ep- stein and his accomplices did to these women? How many other victims are there? Why should a man who once faced a 52-page indictment be able to resume a life of privilege? “While the court cannot unwind the past,” Pak argues, “the remedies proposed by the government would give the victims a mean- ingful opportunity to have their voices heard and to un- derstand, if not accept, the deci- sions made in this matter.” Unaccept- able is right. The victims” lawyers will file their re- sponses soon. They should ask Marra to void the agreement. — This edito- ria is the opin- ion of the Sun Sentinel Editorial Board. ___ (¢ Some might argue that the victims have received money from civil lawsuits and should move on. But can there be a price for what Jeffrey Epstein and his accomplices did to these women? How many other victims are there? Why should a man who once faced a 52-page indictment be able to resume a life of privilege? Saturday, July 6, 2019 OPINIONS TheVirgin Islands Daily News 11 DAILY „:..„ NEWS Fuunck. Aug. 1,1930, by, Antonio Jur. and Ariel Me..., Sr. Published by Daily News Publishing Co., Inc. Archie Nohigian, Publisher ..1LoweDavls. Edkor The week in cartoons Government turns its back on Jeffrey Epstein's sex victims From the Sun Sett fine, FL Lauderdale. Fla Private Imvyers allowed sexual predator Jef- frey Epstein to escape justice. Epstein's new defense team works for the federal gmerninent. The U.S. attorney for the northern district of Georgia claimed last week that even though prosecutors in South Florida broke the law %then they approml an outrageously light se, tence for Epstein, the deal must stand. B,ing Pak may not actually be on Epstein, legal team, but he has placed the Department of Justice on Epstein, side. an'agrerevIZI; EPstefillietlids a it'll:di; l'Pr=nYt inunp, former President Bill ulinton and Prince Andrew. Between 1998 and 2., E, stein recruited roughly three dozen underage girls — generally from poor and troubled fami- lies—to his house in Palm Beach and sexually abused them. Epstein could have faced fethral sex traffick- ing charges. He could have faced life in prison. Instead, the U.S. Attorney for the Southern Dis- trict of Rorida —Alex Acosta, now Trump, la- bor secretary — gave Epstein immunity on fed- eral charges and allowed him to plead guilty to minor state charges. Then-Palm Beach County State Attorney Barry K.rischer went along. E, stein served 13 months in jail — he was allmked out about haff the time — and had to register with die state as a sex offender Prosecutors never told the victims about the agreement Until the signing of that othous agreement in 2007, the girls believed the FBI was still investigating The victims challenged the deal, which a, plied not j. to Epstein, but also to those who recruited the girls and joined in the abuse. Last February, U.S. District Judge Kenneth Matra ruled that prosecutors Ind violated the Crime Victims RigNs Act In criticizing the govern- ment, Marra noted, "Epstein worked in concert with others to obtain minors not only f his own sexual gratification, but al. for the sental gratification of others." Mona then as. attomeys for both sides how he should correct this violation. Pak got the case because Acosta, old office had to 'r- euse itself Pak, idea?The victims could "confer in pri- vote" with prosecutors about the deal. Prosec, tots co. get more trsining in how to consuk with victims. But the deal stands. The victims don't deserve even an apology. Pak argues that the Crime Victims Rights Act contains no provision for undoing the no, prosecution agreement which is what the tims want. Doing so, Pak claims, could violate separstion of powers. That sounds lilce a waming to Marra — one he should ignore. Prosecutorial discretion doesn't maner when the action in question breaks the law. Even Pak acknowledges repeat- ethy that it hopper.. The government, he writ., "should have communicated with the victims in a straight- fonvard and transparent way,' Pak "regrets that the manner in which (the government) corn- municated the resolution of the Epstein case to the victims .11 short.- Prosecutors could have communicated "more clearly and direcdy- with die victims.- None of that happened because Acosta, Krischer and Epstein's laAryers didn't want the deal to become p.c. The victims might have gone public with their complaints. Metha cov- erage could have ki. the deal. Indeed, the record reflects the lengths to which Acosta and I.scher sought secrecy. Acosta thove from Miami to West Palm Beach to meet with Epstein attorney Jay Lefkowitz. Krischer wrote to a federal prosecutor, "Glad we could get this worked out for reasons I won't put in writing." We acknowledge that Pak di.1 create this mess. But his argument insults the public and reflects badly on die Department of Justice. "The resolution in this case,- Pak writes, "has led some to conclude that die government chose for impropernmasatons not to prosecute :IZ'1%iaa=1 ththe Iptrint:liPisaltsitvubestgreenn able to avoid talking about it for more than a decade. Acosta duc. the issue during his confir- mation hearings in Apri12017. Last November, The Miami Herald tan a series on the case that featured interviews with victims who agreed to be identi.. Acosta refus. to comment. So did I.scher. Some might argue that the victims have re- ceived money from civil lawsuits and should move on. But can there be a price for what E, stein and his accomplices did to these women? How ma, other victims are there? Why should a man who once faced a 52-page indictment be able to resume a life of privilege? "While the court cannot (mind the post." Pak argues, "the ten.. proposed by the goverment would give the victims a mean- hmagvea theiPrc=tYes t heard and to un- derstand, if not : icoctei ath ed ed xi; this matter- Unaccept- able is right. The victin, lawyers will file their re.- t3iers o u Icc "I a Marra to void the agreement — This edito- ria is the opin- ion of the Stet Sentinel Editorial Board The Da i y News' opinions are expressed only in its editorials. The opinions expressed in columns, letters, cartoons and guest editorials are those of the particular author or artist - Some might argue that the victims have received money from civil lawsuits and sh OU Id move on. But can there be a price for what Jeffrey Epstein and his accomplices did to the. women? How many other victims are there? Why should a man who once faced a 52-page indictment be able to resume a life of privilege?

Related Documents (6)

House OversightOtherNov 11, 2025

Editorial Highlights DOJ and Former Officials’ Role in Jeffrey Epstein Non‑Prosecution Deal

The passage identifies specific actors – former U.S. Attorney Alex Acosta (later Labor Secretary), former Palm Beach County State Attorney Barry Krischer, DOJ attorney Byung Pak, and federal prosecuto Acosta, as U.S. Attorney, granted Epstein immunity and a plea to minor state charges in 2007. Krischer, Palm Beach County State Attorney, collaborated with Acosta and Epstein’s lawyers. Byung Pak, DO

3p
House OversightUnknown

FOIA Deletion Log for House Oversight Document

FOIA Deletion Log for House Oversight Document The passage merely lists pages deleted from a House Oversight FOIA request without naming any individuals, agencies, transactions, or substantive content. It provides no actionable leads, controversy, or novel information. Key insights: Document identifier: FOI/PA# 1203982-1; Total of 152 pages marked as deleted across multiple sections; No substantive content or names disclosed

1p
House OversightSep 28, 2016

Epstein Investigation Files Reveal Potential High‑Level Collusion, Suppressed Evidence, and Questionable Plea Deal

Epstein Investigation Files Reveal Potential High‑Level Collusion, Suppressed Evidence, and Questionable Plea Deal The document contains multiple concrete leads that, if verified, tie a roster of powerful individuals—including Prince Andrew, Donald Trump, Bill Clinton, Henry Kissinger, Ted Kennedy, and others—to Jeffrey Epstein’s illegal activities or to the suppression of evidence. It also details alleged misconduct by the Palm Beach State Attorney’s Office, the involvement of high‑ranking lawyers (Dershowitz, Starr, Lefkowitz) in shaping a non‑prosecution agreement, and a possible extortion scheme by former Epstein employee Alfredo Rodriguez. These points suggest actionable investigative steps (e.g., subpoenaing Rodriguez’s notebook, tracing the alleged $50,000 payment, reviewing the non‑prosecution agreement, interviewing the listed high‑profile contacts). The controversy is extreme, the information is largely unpublished in this detail, and it implicates senior officials and political figures, meeting the criteria for a high‑impact lead. Key insights: Alfredo Rodriguez possessed a bound notebook containing names, addresses, and phone numbers of dozens of high‑profile individuals (Kissinger, Jagger, Hoffmann, Koch, Ted Kennedy, Donald Trump, Bill Clinton, Ehud Barak).; Rodriguez attempted to sell this notebook to an undercover FBI operative for $50,000, indicating possible extortion and obstruction of justice.; State Attorney Barry Krischer negotiated a non‑prosecution agreement (NPA) that granted immunity to co‑conspirators, including Sarah Kellen and Nadia Marcinkova, while limiting charges against Epstein.

1p
House OversightOtherNov 11, 2025

Epstein Investigation Files Reveal Potential High‑Level Collusion, Suppressed Evidence, and Questionable Plea Deal

The document contains multiple concrete leads that, if verified, tie a roster of powerful individuals—including Prince Andrew, Donald Trump, Bill Clinton, Henry Kissinger, Ted Kennedy, and others—to J Alfredo Rodriguez possessed a bound notebook containing names, addresses, and phone numbers of dozen Rodriguez attempted to sell this notebook to an undercover FBI operative for $50,000, indicating p

63p
House OversightFBI ReportNov 11, 2025

Extensive FBI & Palm Beach Police Investigation Links Jeffrey Epstein to Underage Sexual Abuse, Payments, and High‑Profile Associates

The compiled documents provide a wealth of actionable intelligence: detailed victim and witness statements describing under‑age massages and sexual assaults; financial transaction records (cash paymen Victims (girls aged 14‑17) were recruited with promises of $200‑$300 per massage and were repeatedly Trash pulls from 358 El Brillo Way yielded message books containing names, dates, phone numbers, a

240p
House OversightFBI ReportNov 11, 2025

Jeffrey Epstein Child Sex Trafficking Investigation – FBI Records, Deleted Pages, Non‑Prosecution Deal, High‑Profile Connections

The compiled documents reveal a dense web of FBI case files, internal forms, and communications that reference Jeffrey Epstein’s illegal sexual activities with minors, a secret non‑prosecution agreeme FBI case number 31E‑MM‑108062 repeatedly references ‘Child Locate’ entries and deleted pages (b6, b7 Multiple internal FD‑515 forms list Jeffrey Epstein as a subject (named explicitly on 09/30/2008 e

181p

Forum Discussions

This document was digitized, indexed, and cross-referenced with 1,500+ persons in the Epstein files. 100% free, ad-free, and independent.

Support This ProjectSupported by 1,550+ people worldwide
Annotations powered by Hypothesis. Select any text on this page to annotate or highlight it.