BusinessMirror

Deutsche Bank, Jpmorgan fight to dismiss class action suits

- Bloomberg News

DEUTSCHE Bank AG and Jpmorgan Chase & Co. have asked a federal court to throw out lawsuits filed by Jeffrey epstein’s victims accusing the banks of enabling the late pedophile’s sex traffickin­g network.

In motions to dismiss the class action suits, law yers for Deutsche Bank said the claims did not “come close to adequately alleging” that the bank, which provided banking services to epstein between 2013 and 2018, was part of his sexual abuse ring.

“All of the plantiff ’s claims are deficient and none can be maintained,” the motion, filed on Friday, states.

The victims filed legal action against Jpmorgan and Deutsche Bank in November, alleging epstein’s sex traffickin­g enterprise could not have “existed or f lourished ” without the complicity of the banks.

epstein was charged with sex traffickin­g in 2019 but found dead in his prison cell in New York weeks later. his former girlfriend, Ghislaine Maxwell, was convicted of similar charges last December. During her trial, a Jpmorgan banker testified that epstein wired her $31 million, money prosecutor­s characteri­zed as Maxwell’s payment for procuring young girls for the financier.

In the current civil case, epstein’s victims accused Jpmorgan of “financiall­y benefiting from participat­ing” in epstein’s sex traffickin­g through providing financial support from 1998 to August 2013. Deutsche Bank was accused of knowing it would earn millions of dollars from its relationsh­ip with epstein.

The suits, filed separately in federal court in Manhattan, are seeking unspecifie­d damages for violations of sex traffickin­g and racketeeri­ng laws and the newly-enacted New York Adult Survivor’s Act.

Lawyers for Deutsche Bank argue the victims’ complaint provides no factual allegation that the bank knew or should have known about epstein’s sex traffickin­g. Rather the bank was providing “routine banking services to a client, nothing more.”

The complaint also “plainly establishe­d that it was epstein’s conduct that was the direct cause” of the victims’ injuries, not the bank, according to Deutsche Bank.

Jpmorgan’s motion was similar and requested that the court dismiss all claims. Both banks stated they ended their relationsh­ip with epstein after The Miami herald published in 2018 allegation­s about the financier’s abuse of young women and teenagers.

Jpmorgan’s lawyers wrote in their motion that the survivor, who filed the class action suit, was entitled to justice but that the claim was directed at the wrong party and so is “legally meritless.”

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