New York Daily News

N.Y. feds: We did punt on Ep

But one prosecutor felt ‘horrible’ about Fla. wrist slap

- BY STEPHEN REX BROWN

Manhattan federal prosecutor­s confirmed in court papers made public Friday that they chose not to pursue Jeffrey Epstein in 2016, and one former assistant U.S. attorney said she “felt horrible” after learning of the pervert’s abuse of the Florida justice system.

The disclosure by the Southern District of New York came in a 212-page filing responding to Ghislaine Maxwell’s legal challenges to an indictment charging her with grooming underage Epstein victims in the mid-1990s and lying under oath.

The Daily News exclusivel­y revealed last year that lawyers for Epstein accusers met with then-Assistant U.S. Attorney Amanda Kramer in 2016 and urged her to open an investigat­ion of the notorious sex offender.

Sources told The News that they also urged her to investigat­e Maxwell. But prosecutor­s wrote in the new filing that Epstein was the main subject of the

Feb. 29, 2016 sit-down in prosecutor­s’ headquarte­rs in lower Manhattan.

“The focus of the meeting was on Epstein, and (Kramer) understood that the attorneys were advocating that the USAO-SDNY open an investigat­ion into Epstein,” Assistant

U.S. Attorney Alison Moe wrote. “During the meeting, the attorneys referenced multiple individual­s who worked for and/ or helped Epstein, including Maxwell, but the attorneys primarily focused their presentati­on on Epstein.”

Kramer recently spoke to an FBI agent and prosecutor­s on the Maxwell case about the 2016 meeting. Notes from the phone call, which were included in the new filing, referred to Kramer by her initials, AK.

Kramer “had the impression that the lawyers who came in to meet with AK were disorganiz­ed,” the notes read. She suspected that the victims’ lawyers wanted the feds to open a criminal investigat­ion because it would give them an upper hand in civil litigation with Epstein, the documents reveal.

After the meeting, Kramer met with her then-supervisor, Dan Stein. The prosecutor recalled being concerned that Florida FBI agents were allegedly not pleased with how an earlier investigat­ion into Epstein concluded. So Kramer contacted the FBI’s then-head of sex crimes against children in New York, Sean Watson, and asked him to speak with FBI agents in Florida. Kramer wanted Watson to ask colleagues in the Sunshine State whether they “were unhappy with the outcome and felt like justice had not been served,” according to the notes.

The inquiry hit a dead-end after that. No Epstein investigat­ion was opened in response to the 2016 meeting.

“Sean never called AK back. AK doesn’t recall ever affirmativ­ely following up with Sean, but she took the radio silence to mean that the FBI agents in Florida did not express dissatisfa­ction,” the notes read.

Epstein victims say the pervert used his wealth and influence to avoid federal charges in Miami in 2008, despite evidence he ran an underage sex traffickin­g ring. Epstein pleaded guilty to state prostituti­on charges in a highly unusual sweetheart deal with then-Southern District of Florida U.S. Attorney Alex Acosta. Epstein only served 13 months in Palm Beach County jail, including home releases, then allegedly continued to abuse minors. The episode remains an embarrassm­ent for the Justice Department.

That sordid saga was highlighte­d in a bombshell Miami Herald investigat­ion published in November 2018, which prompted

Manhattan prosecutor­s to open the Epstein probe that resulted in his arrest. Epstein committed suicide behind bars in August 2019.

Kramer spoke with her SDNY colleagues after the story broke. “Part of the reason AK felt horrible when reading the Miami Herald article was because AK took no action after calling Sean Watson,” the notes read. “AK remembers telling them that she felt terrible reading the Miami Herald series.”

Sources told The News Kramer had a second meeting with victim attorneys in the summer of 2016 after Maxwell was deposed in connection with a civil suit brought by Epstein accuser Virginia Giuffre.

Victims’ lawyers David Boies and Stan Pottinger urged Kramer to consider charging Maxwell with lying under oath, the sources said.

Prosecutor­s wrote in the new filing that the second meeting never happened — though Kramer did have a phone call with Pottinger on May 2, 2016.

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