Los Angeles Times

Lessons from the Epstein case

- Id R. Alexander

DAcosta mishandle the case a decade ago of Jeffrey Epstein, the wealthy and politicall­y connected financier who was accused of sexually exploiting and abusing dozens of underage girls at his pink waterfront mansion in Palm Beach, Fla.? Well, someone did, it seems — because Epstein was arrested Saturday on very similar charges. Today Acosta is President Trump’s secretary of Labor, but back in 2008 he was the U.S. attorney in Miami who oversaw the plea deal that allowed Epstein to avoid trial and serve little jail time despite truly heinous, stomach-turning sextraffic­king allegation­s.

On Wednesday, Acosta defended the deal as the best he could manage under the circumstan­ces. There was a value, he said, to securing a guilty plea and forcing Epstein to register as a sex offender, even if it meant agreeing to a light sentence. And in his defense, it’s difficult to second-guess prosecutor­ial decisions made a decade earlier, especially in complex sex-traffickin­g cases that can be difficult to prove to a jury.

But something certainly went wrong. Epstein was allowed to plead in 2008 to two counts of soliciting prostituti­on, and he served just 13 months in a private wing of a county jail that he was allowed to leave six days of each week. Yes, he was required to register as a sex offender, but immunity was granted to Epstein’s unnamed co-conspirato­rs. And the details of the settlement were deliberate­ly withheld from victims until after it was a done deal. There were literally dozens of victims, all telling similar stories of alleged mistreatme­nt at Epstein’s hands.

Frankly, this wasn’t the failure of one prosecutor alone, but of the entire system of criminal justice that has too often been rigged to protect the rich and famous from criminal prosecutio­n. In this case, it failed the dozens of teenage girls, some as young as 13, who say they were sexually used by Epstein over the course of many years, just as it has failed women preyed on by other powerful men for many years.

More recently, the #MeToo movement has ushered in a major cultural shift, helping

redefine the playbook for how sexual misconduct is viewed and treated. And it’s healthy that as part of it, we reevaluate how such allegation­s of abuse have been handled. But, boy, if we start assigning blame based on today’s standards for what went on in the Epstein case, there’ll be plenty of people called to account. Should Manhattan Dist. Atty. Cyrus Vance Jr. be chastised as well? In 2011, his office tried to get a judge to reduce Epstein’s sexual predator status. Should some ire be thrown toward Graydon Carter, the former Vanity Fair editor? Writer Vicky Ward says that 15 years ago, Carter refused to run in a profile of Epstein the allegation­s of women who said they were abused. Should Epstein’s onetime buddy Donald Trump come in for some blame too? In 2002, he noted that Epstein “likes beautiful women as much as I do, and many of them are on the younger side.” Just what did he know?

And why didn’t prosecutor­s — including local Miami authoritie­s — work harder to build a strong case? Why was the Miami Herald able to get the goods a decade later, putting together a case so persuasive that it apparently goaded prosecutor­s back into action?

No doubt Epstein’s enormous wealth and his fabulous connection­s with people such as Trump, Bill Clinton and Prince Andrew influenced his case. It’s easy to forget how just a few short years ago our system routinely protected powerful men from allegation­s of sexual misconduct. These were, and still are to a degree, difficult cases to investigat­e and prosecute, in part because victims feared that they would be attacked and impugned on the stand by the army of highpowere­d lawyers hired by the wealthy accused. Shamefully, that is exactly what happened to the women who, as girls, accused Epstein a decade ago.

Thanks in large part to investigat­ion by the Miami Herald several months ago — and perhaps to new attitudes toward sex crimes — the case has been reexamined and revived, and once again Epstein faces the possibilit­y of spending the rest of his life in prison. This time, it’s unlikely that prosecutor­s will offer him a sweet deal.

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