Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Barr cites ‘ failure’ at jail where Epstein found dead

- By Kevin G. Hall

WASHINGTON — Attorney General William Barr ratcheted up his criticism of the Bureau of Prisons on Monday in the wake of Saturday’s apparent suicide of alleged sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein at the Metropolit­an Correction­al Center. Mr. Barr pledged to hold accountabl­e those responsibl­e for letting the Palm Beach, Fla., multimilli­onaire escape justice.

“We are now learning of serious irregulari­ties at this facility that are deeply concerning and that demand a thorough investigat­ion,” Mr. Barr said.

Speaking in New Orleans, Mr. Barr said the Justice Department will continue to investigat­e alleged co- conspirato­rs and enablers of Mr. Epstein, despite his death.

“Let me assure you this case will continue on against anyone who was complicit with Epstein,” he said, speaking to the national conference of the

Fraternal Order of Police. “Any co- conspirato­rs should not rest easy.”

Pronouncin­g himself “appalled” that Mr. Epstein was taken off suicide watch, Mr. Barr said the hedge fund manager’s victims — including, allegedly, dozens of underage girls — deserved justice “and we will ensure that they get it.”

Over the weekend, Mr. Barr ordered the DOJ’s Office of Inspector General to examine how and why the jail failed to adequately secure Mr. Epstein, who had apparently tried to kill himself weeks earlier in the same facility.

The FBI was also looking into potential irregulari­ties in the handling of Mr. Epstein, who had recently been denied bail pending trial and who had sought house arrest instead.

Mr. Barr promised Monday that “we will hold people accountabl­e for this failure.”

The irregulari­ties cited by Mr. Barr are only the latest in a legal odyssey that has been rife with puzzling developmen­ts from the beginning. More than 10 years ago, Mr. Epstein was accused of sexually abusing as many as three dozen underage girls who had been lured to his waterfront estate in Palm Beach under the pretext of giving a man a massage. The girls said they were sexually abused during those massages.

Then- U. S. Attorney Alex Acosta agreed to shelve a 53page sex traffickin­g indictment as part of a deal with Mr. Epstein’s lawyers that led the financier to plead guilty in 2008 to minor charges in state court. Mr. Epstein’s legal team demanded that victims not be informed of the plea deal and that the plea arrangemen­t, called a non- prosecutio­n agreement, be sealed.

Mr. Epstein then served 13 months in the Palm Beach stockade, during which time he enjoyed liberal work release privileges. He was picked up six days a week by his private driver and chauffeure­d to a downtown West Palm Beach office suite, where he spent 12 hours a day, returning to the stockade only to sleep.

The original plea deal, the work release arrangemen­t and now the death at the New York City jail are all the subject of separate investigat­ions.

Last November, the Miami Herald published a series of news articles on Mr. Epstein’s case, Perversion of Justice, that re- examined how he appeared to receive extraordin­arily lenient treatment.

In early July, Mr. Epstein was arrested by federal agents as he arrived at New Jersey’s Teterboro Airport on his private plane after a visit to Paris.

At the time of his death, Mr. Epstein faced up to 45 years in prison on federal sex traffickin­g and conspiracy charges unsealed last month.

A defense attorney for Mr. Epstein, Marc Fernich, also faulted jail officials, saying they “recklessly put Mr. Epstein in harm’s way” and failed to protect him.

Staffing shortages worsened by a partial government shutdown prompted inmates at the New York City jail to stage a hunger strike in January after they were denied family and lawyer visits.

Eight months later, the jail remains so short- staffed that the Bureau of Prisons is offering guards a $ 10,000 bonus to transfer there from other federal lockups.

In the wake of Mr. Epstein’s suicide, union president Eric Young of the American Federation of Government Employees Council of Prison Locals said a Trump administra­tion hiring freeze at the Bureau of Prisons has led to thousands of vacancies and created “dangerous conditions” for prison workers and inmates.

 ?? Robert Cohen/ St. Louis Post- Dispatch ?? Pathologis­t Dr. Michael Baden, front, arrives to testify before the grand jury on the Michael Brown shooting in 2014 in Clayton, Mo. Baden, who also testified for O. J. Simpson’s defense in the “trial of the century” and helped investigat­e the assassinat­ions of President John F. Kennedy and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. is now enmeshed in another high- stakes case. Baden is the private pathologis­t who observed Jeffrey Epstein’s autopsy on his lawyers’ behalf.
Robert Cohen/ St. Louis Post- Dispatch Pathologis­t Dr. Michael Baden, front, arrives to testify before the grand jury on the Michael Brown shooting in 2014 in Clayton, Mo. Baden, who also testified for O. J. Simpson’s defense in the “trial of the century” and helped investigat­e the assassinat­ions of President John F. Kennedy and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. is now enmeshed in another high- stakes case. Baden is the private pathologis­t who observed Jeffrey Epstein’s autopsy on his lawyers’ behalf.

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