Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Epstein estate seeks to form fund to compensate accusers

- By Tom Hays

The estate of Jeffrey Epstein wants to set up a fund using the late financier’s fortune to compensate women willing to forgo a spate of lawsuits seeking damages for sexual abuse, according to a court document filed on Thursday.

In the papers in the U.S. Virgin Islands, the co-executors of the estate asked the court to approve a voluntary program committed to giving the plaintiffs “compassion, dignity and respect” while sparing them “the rigors and publicity of litigation.” The papers say there are 12 pending suits in New York alone accusing Epstein of sexual misconduct.

The program would be managed attorney by New York City-based attorney Jordana Feldman with the help of Kenneth Feinberg, a well-known mediator who has overseen compensati­on funds for victims of the Sept. 11 attacks and of clergy sex abuse within New York’s Roman Catholic archdioces­e.

Any accuser who accepts a confidenti­al payment — determined by the fund’s administra­tor with no say from the estate — would have to give up “her right to litigate any claims she may have against any person or entity arising from or related to Mr. Epstein’s conduct,” the papers said. If the plan is approved, the payments could begin early next year.

Lawyers for some of Epstein’s accusers greeted news of the proposed compensati­on fund with apprehensi­on.

Attorney Roberta Kaplan complained that the plan was launched without the consent of the victims, saying, “We will keep an open mind, but both the estate and the new administra­tors have a lot to prove.”

Another lawyer, Brad Edwards, said the estate should start by committing all of Epstein’s assets to the compensati­on fund. Two days before his death, Epstein signed a will valuing his estate at $577 million, including more that $56 million in cash.

Daniel Kaiser, who represents Jennifer Araoz in a suit naming the estate executors as defendants, said his client also plans to forge ahead with a case accusing him of grooming her when she was a 14-year-old freshman at a performing arts high school near Epstein’s Manhattan mansion in 2001. Araoz said she stopped seeing Epstein in 2002 after he raped her when she was 15.

The Associated Press names alleged victims of sexual offenses only if they consent to being identified, as Araoz has done.

Epstein, 66, killed himself in his New York City prison cell in August after he was arrested on sex traffickin­g charges. The wealthy financier had pleaded not guilty to sexually abusing girls as young as 14 and young women in New York and Florida in the early 2000s.

Even with his death, federal prosecutor­s in New York have continued to investigat­e the allegation­s against Epstein. There is also a related investigat­ion in Paris, where accusers are complainin­g police haven’t done enough to track down potential witnesses.

There also were reports Thursday fueling conspiracy theories that Epstein didn’t take his own life, including one saying the first letters of 23 tweets sent by an Arizona congressma­n spelled out “Epstein didn’t kill himself.”

And in an interview with the Miami Herald, Epstein’s brother was quoted as saying a medical examiner was wrong in concluding his sibling killed himself.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This March 28, 2017, photo provided by the New York State Sex Offender Registry shows Jeffrey Epstein.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS This March 28, 2017, photo provided by the New York State Sex Offender Registry shows Jeffrey Epstein.

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