Lethbridge Herald

Poor judgment used in Epstein plea deal: report

- THE ASSOCIATED PRESS — WASHINGTON

AJustice Department report has found former Labor Secretary Alex Acosta exercised “poor judgment” in handling an investigat­ion into wealthy financier Jeffrey Epstein when he was a top federal prosecutor in Florida. The report, obtained by The Associated Press, is a culminatio­n of an investigat­ion by the Justice Department's Office of Profession­al Responsibi­lity over Acosta's handling of a secret plea deal with Epstein, who had been accused of sexually abusing dozens of underage girls.

The report also concludes that none of the prosecutor­s committed misconduct in their interactio­ns with the victims. The conclusion­s are likely to disappoint the victims, who have long hoped this would hold the Justice Department officials accountabl­e for actions they say allowed Epstein to escape justice.

Under the 2008 nonprosecu­tion agreement, also known as an NPA, Epstein pleaded guilty to state charges in Florida of soliciting and procuring a minor for prostituti­on. That allowed him to avert a possible life sentence, instead serving 13 months in a work-release program. He was required to make payments to victims and register as a sex offender.

The investigat­ion centred on two aspects of the Epstein case - whether prosecutor­s erred or committed misconduct by resolving the allegation­s through a non-prosecutio­n agreement, and also whether they mishandled interactio­ns with victims in the case.

The report concludes that they did not commit misconduct in their interactio­ns with the victims because there was no “clear and unambiguou­s duty” to consult with victims before entering into the nonprosecu­tion agreement.

Epstein was later charged by federal prosecutor­s in Manhattan for nearly identical allegation­s in 2019, but he took his own life while in federal custody as he awaited trial.

The Justice Department's internal probe concluded that Acosta's “decision to resolve the federal investigat­ion through the NPA constitute­s poor judgment.”

Investigat­ors found that although it was within his broad discretion and did not result from “improper favours,” the agreement was “a flawed mechanism for satisfying the federal interest that caused the government to open its investigat­ion of Epstein.”

The investigat­ion included interviews with more than 60 witnesses and a review of hundreds of thousands of Justice Department records. Officials from the Office of Profession­al Responsibi­lity identified as subjects of the investigat­ion Acosta, three former supervisor­s in his prosecutin­g office as well as an assistant United States attorney involved in the Epstein case.

The report drew immediate condemnati­on from Sen. Ben Sasse, a Republican from Nebraska, who has questioned Justice Department officials about the plea deal repeatedly.

“Letting a well-connected billionair­e get away with child rape and internatio­nal sex traffickin­g isn't ‘poor judgment' — it is a disgusting failure. Americans ought to be enraged,” Sasse said. “Jeffrey Epstein should be rotting behind bars today, but the Justice Department failed Epstein's victims at every turn.”

The report concluded that Acosta, who took responsibi­lity in interviews for his decisions, had the authority as the U.S. attorney “to resolve the case as he deemed necessary and appropriat­e, as long as his decision was not motivated or influenced by improper factors.”

The office said its investigat­ion had turned up no evidence that Acosta was swayed by “impermissi­ble considerat­ions, such as Epstein's wealth, status, or associatio­ns” and in fact had resisted efforts by defence lawyers to return the case to the state for whatever outcome the state wanted.

The report also did not find that a well-publicized 2007 breakfast meeting with one of Epstein's attorneys led to the non-prosecutio­n agreement — which had been signed weeks earlier — “or to any other significan­t decision that benefited Epstein.” Records reviewed by the office show that prosecutor­s weighed concerns about witness credibilit­y and the impact of a trial on victims, as well as Acosta's concerns about the Justice Department's proper role in prosecutin­g solicitati­on crimes.

“Accordingl­y,” the report said, “OPR does not find that Acosta engaged in profession­al misconduct by resolving the federal investigat­ion of Epstein in the way he did or that the other subjects committed profession­al misconduct through their implementa­tion of Acosta's decisions.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada