The Commercial Appeal

Acosta defends role in Epstein deal

- Jill Colvin and Richard Lardner ASSOCIATED PRESS ERIK S. LESSER/EPA-EFE

WASHINGTON – Insisting he got the best deal he could at the time, Labor Secretary Alex Acosta on Wednesday defended his handling of a sex-traffickin­g case involving now-jailed financier Jeffrey Epstein as Acosta tried to stave off intensifyi­ng Democratic calls for his resignatio­n.

“We believe that we proceeded appropriat­ely,” Acosta told reporters at a news conference at Labor Department headquarte­rs, where he retraced steps federal prosecutor­s took in the case a decade ago when he was U.S. attorney for the Southern District of Florida. Acosta said state authoritie­s had planned to go after Epstein with charges that would have resulted in no jail time until his office intervened and pressed for tougher consequenc­es.

“We did what we did because we wanted to see Epstein go to jail,” he said. “That was the focus.” He added: “Facts are important, and facts are being overlooked.”

Acosta is being assailed for his part in the secret 2008 plea deal he signed that let Epstein avoid federal prosecutio­n on charges that he molested teenage girls. But he was unapologet­ic Wednesday as he declared his office did the best it could under the circumstan­ces.

The deal Acosta helped broker has come under new and intense scrutiny after prosecutor­s in New York on Monday brought new child sex-traffickin­g charges alleging Epstein abused dozens of underage girls in the early 2000s, paying them hundreds of dollars in cash for massages, then molesting them at his homes in Florida and New York. Epstein has pleaded not guilty to the charges; if convicted, he could be imprisoned for the rest of his life.

Acosta said he welcomed the new case, calling Epstein’s acts “despicable.” Earlier he defended himself on Twitter, crediting “new evidence and additional testimony” uncovered by prosecutor­s in New York for providing “an important opportunit­y to more fully bring him to justice.”

Acosta has long made the case that it was better to use the threat of a federal indictment to force Epstein into a state guilty plea, with restitutio­n to victims and registrati­on as a sex offender, than it would have been to “roll the dice” and take Epstein to trial.

Acosta’s office had gotten to the point of drafting an indictment that could have sent Epstein to federal prison for life. But it was never filed, leading to Epstein’s guilty plea to two state prostituti­on-related charges. Epstein served 13 months in a work-release program. He was also required to make payments to victims and register as a sex offender.

Pressed on whether he had regrets, Acosta suggested that circumstan­ces had changed since the plea.

“We now have 12 years of knowledge and hindsight and we live in a very different world,” he said. “Today’s world treats victims very, very differentl­y.”

President Donald Trump has, so far, also defended Acosta, praising his work as labor secretary and saying he felt “very badly” for him “because I’ve known him as being somebody that works so hard and has done such a good job.” Still, he said, he would be looking at the circumstan­ces of the case “very closely.”

 ??  ?? Labor Secretary Alex Acosta was unapologet­ic about the handling of a 2008 plea deal with Jeffrey Epstein.
Labor Secretary Alex Acosta was unapologet­ic about the handling of a 2008 plea deal with Jeffrey Epstein.

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