Chattanooga Times Free Press

EPSTEIN WAS PROTECTED, HIS VICTIMS WEREN’T

-

The more we learn about the late Jeffrey Epstein’s 13 months in so-called custody at the Palm Beach County Stockade, the clearer is the lesson:

It definitely helped to be rich, even if you were a monstrous sexual predator.

It didn’t help Epstein that much at the Metropolit­an Correction Center in Manhattan, where he hung himself early Saturday.

For the sake of his victims, Epstein’s death can’t be the end of this story.

Just last week, Gov.

Ron DeSantis ordered the Florida Department of Law Enforcemen­t to investigat­e Epstein’s coddled life while serving 13 months of an

18-month sentence after pleading guilty in 2008 to two felony counts of prostituti­on.

One of those crimes involved soliciting sex from a minor, serial behavior of Epstein’s that had caught the attention of the FBI. A 53-page federal indictment resulting from that probe was spiked by then-U.S. Attorney Alex Acosta, paving the way for the multimilli­onaire’s mysterious­ly lenient plea deal.

Even the most jaded observers of the justice system wouldn’t expect that royal treatment would be given to a slimy perv who recruited high-school girls to visit his Palm Beach mansion and give him massages.

Yet, according to records from the jail and sheriff’s department, Epstein enjoyed perks that no other convicted sex criminal would ever have the gall to request.

He took the concept of “work-release” to a whole new level. He was allowed to leave the stockade 12 hours a day, six days a week and, upon his return, stayed in a mostly empty wing of the facility.

For Epstein, jail wasn’t an incarcerat­ion so much as an inconvenie­nce. Deputies were given permission to leave his cell unlocked while he was there. He was more of an out-mate than an inmate.

Sometimes he got to watch TV in a room normally reserved for attorneys visiting jailed clients.

During his daily road trips, he was followed by off-duty deputies who were paid $126,000 for their respectful supervisio­n. The officers often wore business suits and addressed him as “Mr. Epstein.”

Typically, Epstein spent days at an office of the Florida Science Foundation, a nonprofit he founded shortly before his sentencing on the prostituti­on charges. WPTV reported it was the foundation that paid Epstein’s deputy escorts, who also were supposed to keep written records of who visited him there.

Attorney Bradley Edwards, who represents some of Epstein’s female accusers, said he knows of women who were brought to Epstein for sex while he was away from the stockade during the day. Those claims will be part of the new Florida investigat­ion.

Toward the end of his state jail term, Epstein was even allowed to hang out at his mansion. That’s actually more “release-release” than “work-release,” but there were extenuatin­g circumstan­ces. How can you properly consult with your landscape architect if you’re cooped up in a cell?

The new Florida probe covers not only Epstein’s rich-and-famous lifestyle while in custody, but also the original investigat­ion and plea settlement, including a controvers­ial agreement sparing Epstein from federal prosecutio­n.

Public outrage about the case was reignited by new reporting from The Miami Herald’s Julie K. Brown. The scandal cost Acosta, the former U.S. attorney, his job as labor secretary in the Trump administra­tion.

In July, Epstein was indicted in New York on federal sex-traffickin­g charges involving “dozens of minor girls,” and once the judge denied bail, Epstein knew he was stuck. This time, being rich didn’t matter. This time, the door on his cell stayed locked.

So the monster chose another way out, leaving a legacy of obscene privilege and predation.

 ??  ?? Carl Hiaasen
Carl Hiaasen

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States