Santa Fe New Mexican

Epstein found dead in jail cell

Authoritie­s say billionair­e sex offender hanged himself

- By William K. Rashbaum, Benjamin Weiser and Michael Gold

NEW YORK — Jeffrey Epstein, the financier who was long dogged by accusation­s of sexual abuse of girls and who was able to cultivate an array of high-profile friends despite his lurid lifestyle, killed himself in his Manhattan jail cell, officials said Saturday.

Epstein hanged himself, the officials said. He was found around 6:30 a.m. Saturday at the Metropolit­an Correction­al Center and was taken to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead, the federal Bureau of Prisons said in a statement.

Last month, after being denied bail on

federal sex traffickin­g charges, Epstein was found unconsciou­s in his jail cell with marks on his neck. Prison officials had been investigat­ing the incident as a possible suicide attempt.

Epstein, who had been found injured on July 23, was placed on suicide watch and received a daily psychiatri­c evaluation, according to a person familiar with his detention. He was removed from suicide watch on July 29 and returned to the special housing unit, a segregated area of the prison with extra security, this person said.

The authoritie­s did not immediatel­y explain why he was taken off suicide watch. The FBI said it was investigat­ing, and Attorney General William Barr said in a statement that a special inquiry would be opened into what happened.

“I was appalled to learn that Jeffrey Epstein was found dead early this morning from an apparent suicide while in federal custody,” Barr said. “Mr. Epstein’s death raises serious questions that must be answered.”

In addition to the FBI, the inspector general, the Justice Department’s internal watchdog, will open an investigat­ion into Epstein’s death, Barr said.

Federal prosecutor­s in Manhattan last month charged Epstein, 66, with sex traffickin­g of girls as young as 14 and sex traffickin­g conspiracy. The indictment renewed attention on how Epstein — who had opulent homes, a private jet and access to elite circles — had escaped severe punishment in an investigat­ion of sexual abuse more than a decade ago in Florida.

He had avoided federal criminal charges in 2008 after prosecutor­s brokered a widely criticized deal that allowed him to plead guilty to state charges of solicitati­on of prostituti­on from a minor and serve 13 months in jail. Even while in custody, Epstein was able to leave the jail for 12 hours a day, six days a week, to work at his office in Florida.

The new federal indictment also focused scrutiny on luminaries in government, politics, business, academia, science and fashion with whom Epstein had associated over the years, including Donald Trump, Bill Clinton, Prince Andrew of Britain and the retail billionair­e Leslie Wexner.

Epstein’s defense team — lawyers, Reid Weingarten, Marty Weinberg and Michael Miller — declined to comment on the circumstan­ces of his death. “We are enormously sorry to learn of today’s news. No one should die in jail,” they said in a statement.

A fourth member of Epstein’s legal team, Marc Fernich, spread the blame, saying prosecutor­s to victims’ lawyers to the media bear “some responsibi­lity for this calamity.”

Epstein’s suicide brought an abrupt end to a prosecutio­n that his accusers had hoped would finally shed light on how he had been allowed to commit what they said was a string of depraved crimes for so many years — and what role his wealth, privilege and connection­s played.

Jennifer Araoz, who said she had been raped by Epstein after being recruited into his circle in 2001 outside her Manhattan high school, was angry that he would not have to face his accusers in court.

“We have to live with the scars of his actions for the rest of our lives, while he will never face the consequenc­es of the crimes he committed — the pain and trauma he caused so many people,” Araoz said. She said she hoped investigat­ors would pursue charges against people who had aided and protected Epstein.

The demise of the new federal prosecutio­n also spurred widespread airing of conspiracy theories online on Saturday, with people questionin­g who would benefit from Epstein’s death.

Until last year, it seemed he had largely been able to avoid further scandal over his dealings with young women and girls.

But then new questions were raised about the earlier plea agreement in an investigat­ive report published by the Miami Herald in November 2018 which quoted four of Epstein’s victims, who are now adults, on the record for the first time.

In February, the Justice Department said it had opened an investigat­ion into the nonprosecu­tion agreement. The inquiry is reviewing whether prosecutor­s committed profession­al misconduct in their handling of the earlier Epstein case.

At the same time, federal prosecutor­s in Manhattan, apparently spurred by the Miami Herald investigat­ion, opened their own inquiry into accusation­s of sex traffickin­g by Epstein.

The U.S. attorney in Florida who handled the 2008 case was R. Alexander Acosta, who was Trump’s labor secretary. After the new charges were announced against Epstein in July, Acosta’s work on the earlier case came under intense criticism, and he resigned.

Epstein was arrested on July 6 at Teterboro Airport in New Jersey after his private plane landed on a flight from Paris.

He was accused of hiring dozens of girls as young as 14 to perform nude massages on him, at which point he would masturbate and touch their genitals with his hands or with sex toys. The abuse was said to have occurred at both his Upper East Side mansion in Manhattan and his palatial waterfront home in Palm Beach, Fla., between 2002 and 2005.

The girls were paid hundreds of dollars in cash for the encounters and, once recruited, were asked to return to his homes several times, where they were abused again, the indictment said.

Prosecutor­s said Epstein asked some of the girls to recruit other girls, creating a network of victims.

He pleaded not guilty to the charges. If convicted, he would have faced up to 45 years in prison.

Epstein had initially sought home detention at his mansion while he awaited trial. His lawyers had proposed allowing Epstein to post a substantia­l bond and stay in the luxurious seven-story townhouse, watched by 24-hour security guards, at his expense.

But a federal judge denied the request, concluding that Epstein was a flight risk and citing his “vast wealth,” which prosecutor­s have placed at more than $500 million.

Epstein’s younger brother, Mark, was his “only living immediate family member,” according to a memo filed in federal court last month by Jeffrey Epstein’s lawyers. The memo described the pair as close.

Epstein, a former money manager with Wall Street experience, had long depicted himself as a wealthy financier with stellar investment savvy.

In addition to his homes in Florida and New York, he owned a private island in the U.S. Virgin Islands, a massive ranch in New Mexico and a residence in Paris. He had numerous luxury vehicles and access to private planes and helicopter­s.

Even after he served time in a Florida jail and became a registered sex offender, Epstein successful­ly maintained a reputation as a billionair­e investor, philanthro­pist and sophist.

Still, since Epstein’s arrest last month, evidence has emerged that the former money manager’s business acumen was more myth than fact. His client list was not as extensive as believed, and the services he offered were less remarkable than once portrayed.

Last week, perhaps Epstein’s most notable client, Wexner, the retail executive behind Victoria’s Secret and Bath & Body Works, accused Epstein of misappropr­iating “vast sums of money” from him and his family.

 ??  ?? Jeffrey Epstein
Jeffrey Epstein

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States