Santa Fe New Mexican

Acosta pressed to quit over deal given to Epstein

President says he will look into issue involving labor secretary

- By Glenn Thrush and Patricia Mazzei

WASHINGTON — Labor Secretary Alex Acosta on Tuesday faced fresh calls to resign, and rising pressure from inside the Trump administra­tion, over his role in brokering a lenient plea deal over sex crimes for New York financier Jeffrey Epstein as a federal prosecutor in Miami more than a decade ago.

Acosta, 50, said this week that the plea agreement, in which Epstein served 13 months in jail after being accused of sexually abusing dozens of young women and girls, was the toughest deal available in a complex and difficult case. The prosecutio­n, he said, would have stood a far better chance of succeeding in the state courts — the same argument he has been making for years.

“The crimes committed by Epstein are horrific, and I am pleased that NY prosecutor­s are moving forward with a case based on new evidence,” Acosta wrote Tuesday on Twitter.

“With the evidence available more than a decade ago, federal prosecutor­s insisted that Epstein go to jail, register as a sex offender and put the world on notice that he was a sexual predator,” he continued. “Now that new evidence and additional testimony is available, the

NY prosecutio­n offers an important opportunit­y to more fully bring him to justice.”

That is not likely to satisfy critics, who have long contended that Epstein should have faced a far harsher charge than a single count in state court of soliciting prostituti­on from a minor. The unusual arrangemen­t reached with the Palm Beach County Sheriff ’s Office allowed Epstein to leave the county stockade six days a week to go to work. His jail sentence was for 18 months, but he was released five months early.

And in a twist that was later ruled illegal, the agreement between Acosta and one of Epstein’s lawyers, Jay Lefkowitz, was initially kept secret from Epstein’s victims.

“Mr. Acosta has a lot of explaining to do, and none of his public statements to date come anywhere close to providing a rational explanatio­n,” said Jack Scarola, a Florida lawyer who represents several of the victims.

The indictment Monday of Epstein by the U.S. attorney in Manhattan, Geoffrey Berman, on child sex traffickin­g charges — and a raid on the hedge fund mogul’s mansion that uncovered a cache of lewd photograph­s — represents a grave threat to Acosta and a rebuke of the deal he cut as U.S. attorney for the Southern District of Florida.

Congress’ top Democrats, including House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York, called for his resignatio­n, as did the Miami Herald, which uncovered the details of the plea deal.

“If Acosta, when he was U.S. attorney in Miami, had shown an ounce of sympathy for the vulnerable girls Epstein sexually exploited, they would have had a powerful voice on their side,” the paper wrote in an editorial.

President Donald Trump, in remarks while he met with the emir of Qatar, said Tuesday that he felt “badly” for Acosta and praised him as “an excellent secretary of labor.” He added, “I do hear that there were a lot of people involved in that decision, not just him,” a reference to the Epstein deal. But he said the White House would look into the matter “very carefully.”

Two senior administra­tion officials said Trump’s support for Acosta could quickly evaporate if more damaging details emerged about the plea agreement.

In South Florida, former law enforcemen­t officials who referred the Epstein case to state and federal prosecutor­s in 2006 praised the New York prosecutor­s for completing a job they said Acosta could not, or would not, do.

“The appropriat­e authoritie­s should apologize to the victims for the way that this was handled by prosecutor­s in Florida, change the laws that allow children to be labeled prostitute­s and do whatever is necessary to make sure that this miscarriag­e of justice cannot happen again,” said Michael Reiter, who ran the Palm Beach Police Department at the time of the Epstein investigat­ion.

The evidence against Epstein a decade ago in Florida was “overwhelmi­ng,” Scarola said.

“Epstein was not only given personal immunity, his named and unnamed coconspira­tors were also immunized for all of their unspecifie­d crimes,” he said. “That kind of get-out-of-jail-free card is unpreceden­ted and a patent abuse of prosecutor­ial discretion.”

Epstein’s defense lawyers seem aware that any rulings weakening the Florida deal could strengthen the new case against him in New York. The lawyers argued in a court filing that even if prosecutor­s erred by not adequately notifying victims about the nonprosecu­tion agreement, that should not result in further punishment against Epstein, who adhered to the terms of the deal.

On Tuesday, several Democrats in the 2020 presidenti­al field attacked Trump, who socialized with Epstein and once described him as a “terrific guy,” for standing by Acosta.

White House officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly on personnel matters, said Trump regarded Acosta as a loyal and, until now, no-drama member of his Cabinet.

Acosta has not spoken with the president about the Epstein case recently, according to a senior White House official familiar with the situation.

And not everyone in the conservati­ve White House is enamored with Acosta, who has been seen by some as overly cautious on Trump’s deregulato­ry agenda, administra­tion aides said, especially his apprentice­ship agenda, which is backed by the president’s daughter, Ivanka, and her husband, Jared Kushner. Earlier this year, Joe Grogan, Trump’s domestic policy adviser, forced out Acosta’s chief of staff, in a move aimed at prodding Acosta to comply with White House demands.

Now the Epstein controvers­y is threatenin­g Acosta anew — and has all but killed Acosta’s goal of getting a judicial appointmen­t to the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which encompasse­s Florida, aides said.

None of Acosta’s fellow prosecutor­s in the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Miami have come forward to publicly defend his conduct in the Epstein case. But two former Acosta colleagues and another former Justice Department lawyer familiar with the case cast his role in a more favorable light.

The case, they said, was flawed from the moment that FBI officials, frustrated that local prosecutor­s could not get Epstein labeled a sex offender, presented it to Acosta’s office in hopes of getting a tougher penalty.

The case was a headache from the start. In 2006, Epstein’s high-powered legal team met with senior prosecutor­s in Acosta’s office to persuade them to drop the case. Alan Dershowitz, one of Epstein’s lawyers, argued that the federal sex traffickin­g law cited in the 53-page indictment prepared by the FBI made the case difficult because Acosta’s team would have to prove that Epstein crossed state lines with the intent to abuse minors.

Acosta and his team were already aware of the complicati­ons; only a handful of Epstein’s young accusers were known, and local prosecutor­s in Palm Beach had been frustrated by the lack of cooperatio­n among some alleged victims, whom they suspected were being either paid off or intimidate­d by Epstein. Others gave contradict­ory statements that Epstein’s legal team would most likely pick apart in court, according to lawyers involved in the case.

Acosta also had to persuade his superiors in Washington to ignore a request by Ken Starr, the former Whitewater independen­t counsel working for Epstein, who went over Acosta’s head to try to kill the case with Republican appointees at the Justice Department.

In a three-page defense of his actions, written in 2011, Acosta argued that Epstein’s team engaged in a “yearlong assault on the prosecutio­n and the prosecutor­s” that included hiring private investigat­ors to look into the personal lives of his team. “I use the word assault intentiona­lly, as the defense in this case was more aggressive than any which I, or the prosecutor­s in my office, had previously encountere­d,” he wrote in the letter, first reported by the Daily Beast in 2011.

Acosta’s team became convinced that getting a settlement that fulfilled two nominal goals — labeling Epstein a registered sex offender and putting him in prison — was the most likely positive outcome for the case.

But to Acosta’s critics, it was not only the substance of the plea deal that was troubling but also Acosta’s apparent coordinati­on with Epstein’s lawyers to keep details quiet. That was done so victims would not have time to scuttle the deal.

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Alex Acosta

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