Albuquerque Journal

Suspected pedophile’s delayed justice stains system

- CRIME AND JUSTICE www.DianeDimon­d.com; email to Diane@ DianeDimon­d.com.

We live in a country where justice is supposed to be blind. Citizens expect that people who do bad things will be caught, arrested and spend an appropriat­e period behind bars. Not so if you are an uber-wealthy guy named Jeffrey Epstein. He got away with a lot. Until now. Jeffrey Epstein is a suspected serial pedophile who was allowed to dodge allegation­s that he sexually abused some 40 girls from mostly troubled or low-income families with only minimal punishment. An award-winning Miami Herald series puts the number of Epstein’s victims at 80.

Only now, 14 years after law enforcemen­t first learned of Epstein’s obsession with young girls, the chickens are coming home to roost for Epstein. Federal prosecutor­s in New York have indicted him on sex-traffickin­g charges that carry a possible prison term of up to 45 years.

In March 2005, a 14-year-old girl went to Palm Beach, Florida, police and reported she had been sexually molested by a man who had offered her several hundred dollars to give him a massage inside his waterfront mansion. The man was Epstein, a top hedge-fund manager who owned two private jets and luxurious homes in Florida, New York, New Mexico and the Caribbean.

Palm Beach PD found evidence corroborat­ing the girl’s account, including her name and phone number on a discarded paper in Epstein’s trash. Detectives soon discovered dozens more girls from underprivi­leged homes had been similarly duped. Each girl reported that once inside the mansion Epstein demanded sex acts along with his nude massage. They reported that Epstein offered them money if they’d recruit their underaged friends.

Some reported they had traveled outside the state with Epstein, which seems a surefire violation of the federal Mann Act prohibitin­g the transport of minors across state lines for immoral purposes.

The evidence against Epstein mounted. A Palm Beach grand jury found indictable criminal offenses, but state prosecutor­s refused to file a case against the wellconnec­ted suspect who counted among his high-powered friends President Bill Clinton, Britain’s Prince Andrew, legal beagle Alan Dershowitz and then-real estate bigwig Donald Trump.

As author James Patterson, one of Epstein’s Palm Beach neighbors, wrote in “Filthy Rich,” the local police chief, Michael Reiter, became so frustrated that in July 2016 he contacted the FBI to share his evidence against Epstein. A 54-page federal indictment was ultimately readied, but then-U.S. Attorney Alexander Acosta from Miami entered the picture.

In 2008, Acosta met with Epstein’s lawyers and signed off on a sweetheart deal that took a possible life sentence off the table. This February, a federal judge ruled that the Acosta deal was illegal, a violation of the Victim’s Bill of Rights, because it was reached in secret without input from the sexually abused girls.

Acosta admits he orchestrat­ed a plan to allow Epstein to plead guilty to only two state charges of soliciting prostituti­on. Note the deal referred to the underaged girls as “prostitute­s,” not victims. Epstein was sentenced to 18 months in the local jail. He got out five months early and only had to sleep in his cell at night. During the day he was allowed to go home. Epstein did have to register as a sex offender.

During a news conference this week, Acosta defended his actions. He said he was the only reason Epstein, now 66, had to register as a sexual predator and he forced the state to file charges in 2005. This is baloney and beside the point. Now he has resigned as U.S. Secretary of Labor, and that was the right thing to do.

Acosta was the top federal prosecutor in Florida when he decided to sit down with a deviant’s lawyer and hammer out a slapon-the-wrist punishment. Acosta had a 54-count federal indictment in his pocket which he could have pursued if he wanted. He knew — or should have known — that Epstein’s henchmen had been actively investigat­ing Palm Beach detectives working on the case. The girls and their families had also been targets of Camp Epstein’s intimidati­on. Acosta was a patsy, not a hero.

The latest New York-based federal indictment said Epstein was responsibl­e for a “vast network of underaged victims” and he had engaged in a sex-traffickin­g scheme that brought dozens of young girls to his private homes. Prosecutor­s have urged other victims to come forward, and they are likely looking to identify those underaged girls seen in a trove of pornograph­y taken from Epstein’s Manhattan mansion.

It could be said that the system finally worked. I think it’s best recognized as a massive stain on the justice system. Special treatment given to the wealthy. If it weren’t for Chief Michael Reiter and his detectives, Jeffrey Epstein, now jailed without bail, would probably spend today arranging for more underaged massages.

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Diane Dimond

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