Regina Leader-Post

Judge rejects lawsuit’s sex allegation­s against Prince Andrew

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MIAMI — A federal judge rejected a bid by two women to join a high-profile sexual abuse lawsuit and ordered scandalous sex allegation­s against Britain’s Prince Andrew and a prominent U.S. lawyer re m ove d from the court record.

U.S. District Judge Kenneth Marra’s ruling Tuesday came in a case involving wealthy financier Jeffrey Epstein. The two women, identified as Jane Does No. 3 and No. 4, claim to be among dozens of women Epstein sexually abused as teenagers at locations ranging from a Palm Beach mansion to a private Caribbean island to a sprawling New Mexico ranch.

The women wanted to join a lawsuit filed by other alleged victims. The lawsuit against the U.S. government seeks to reopen a non-prosecutio­n agreement Epstein reached with federal prosecutor­s. Epstein pleaded guilty more than six years ago to state sex offences and served a 13-month jail sentence, but could have got a much longer prison term if the Justice Department had brought charges.

Federal prosecutor­s opposed allowing the two Jane Does to join the lawsuit, which was filed in 2008, and Marra agreed.

“Justice does not require amendment in this instance,” the judge wrote.

Marra also ordered sensationa­l allegation­s against Prince Andrew and wellknown lawyer Alan Dershowitz, stricken from the court record. Both denied any wrongdoing, with Dershowitz contending that Jane Doe No. 3 made up sex abuse stories involving him. Buckingham Palace stood by Prince Andrew, the second son of Queen Elizabeth II.

Marra said the sex abuse details had no bearing on the lawsuit’s goal of reopening the Epstein non-prosecutio­n agreement.

“The factual details regarding with whom and where the Jane Does engaged in sexual activities are immaterial and impertinen­t to this central claim,” the judge wrote. “These unnecessar­y details shall be stricken.”

Their lawsuit, filed by two other Jane Doe victims, claims federal prosecutor­s improperly concealed the Epstein non-prosecutio­n agreement, violating federal victims’ rights laws. If it is reopened, Epstein could be exposed anew to federal prosecutio­n and the U.S. government could be forced to pay the women damages.

Epstein has already reached out-of-court financial settlement­s with dozens of the victims.

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Prince Andrew

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