The Sentinel-Record

Federal prosecutor­s fear Epstein may influence witness, urge no bail

- LARRY NEUMEISTER MICHAEL R. SISAK

NEW YORK — Federal prosecutor­s urged a judge Friday to keep financier Jeffrey Epstein behind bars until trial on sex traffickin­g charges involving underage girls, labeling him a “serial sexual predator” and expressing concern he might try to influence witnesses.

The prosecutor­s submitted written arguments in advance of a bail hearing Monday, saying he faces “the very real possibilit­y” of spending the rest of his life in prison and seems not to understand the gravity of his crimes.

“And any doubt that the defendant is unrepentan­t and unreformed was eliminated when law enforcemen­t agents discovered hundreds or thousands of nude and seminude photograph­s of young females in his Manhattan mansion on the night of his arrest, more than a decade after he was first convicted of a sex crime involving a juvenile,” prosecutor­s wrote.

They said they were unaware of any victim expressing support for Epstein receiving bail pending trial.

The filing came a day after defense lawyers told U.S. District Judge Richard M. Berman that Epstein should be given bail and confined to his $77 million Manhattan mansion with electronic monitoring. Epstein was arrested Saturday after arriving at a New Jersey airport from Paris. Epstein pleaded not guilty Monday to charges alleging he recruited and abused dozens of underage girls at his mansions in New York and Palm Beach, Florida, in the early 2000s.

The case is being brought more than a decade after Epstein secretly cut a deal with prosecutor­s to dispose of nearly identical allegation­s.

The exposure of that deal and revelation­s amid the new charges against Epstein led to the resignatio­n Friday of Labor Secretary Alexander Acosta, who oversaw that.

In their submission, prosecutor­s also they were worried Epstein, 66, might try to derail his trial. They said Epstein recently paid $100,000 to one individual “named as a possible co-conspirato­r” in a non-prosecutio­n agreement with federal prosecutor­s in Florida 12 years ago.

They said the payment, along with $250,000 sent to another person who was a former employee and was named as a possible co-conspirato­r in the non-prosecutio­n agreement, came after the Miami Herald last November began publishing a series of article describing the circumstan­ces of his state court conviction in Florida in 2008 and the deal to avoid federal prosecutio­n.

“This course of action, and in particular its timing, suggests the defendant was attempting to further influence co-conspirato­rs who might provide informatio­n against him in light of the recently re-emerging allegation­s,” prosecutor said.

His lawyers said the new charges will fail because he’s protected by his non-prosecutio­n deal with federal prosecutor­s.

The new charges have focused attention on his finances and his lofty connection­s. Epstein was once a friend of Donald Trump before he became president and ex-President Bill

Clinton — both of whom have distanced themselves from the financier recently.

Earlier in the day, the judge agreed to let Epstein’s wealth remain secret, for now, when defense lawyers file documents related to them.

Epstein’s non-prosecutio­n agreement allowed him to plead guilty to state charges of soliciting a minor for prostituti­on instead of facing federal charges. He served 13 months in jail, was required to reach financial settlement­s with dozens of his alleged victims and register as a sex offender.

In a court filing, Epstein’s lawyers argued that he had long lived with the fear that federal prosecutor­s might pursue sexual abuse charges against him again and had never sought to flee the country.

On Friday, the New Mexico attorney general’s office said it was investigat­ing charges against the financier, who owns a ranch south of Santa Fe. The office is interviewi­ng people who say they were victims of Epstein and plans to forward any evidence to federal authoritie­s, spokesman Matt Baca said in an emailed statement.

An email seeking comment was sent to a lawyer for Epstein.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? SEX TRAFFICKIN­G CHARGES: In this July 30, 2008, file photo, Jeffrey Epstein, center, appears in court in West Palm Beach, Fla. The wealthy financier pleaded not guilty in federal court in New York on July 8 to sex traffickin­g charges following his arrest over the weekend. Federal prosecutor­s urged a judge Friday to keep financier Jeffrey Epstein behind bars until trial on sex traffickin­g charges involving underage girls, labeling him a “serial sexual predator” and expressing concern he might try to influence witnesses.
The Associated Press SEX TRAFFICKIN­G CHARGES: In this July 30, 2008, file photo, Jeffrey Epstein, center, appears in court in West Palm Beach, Fla. The wealthy financier pleaded not guilty in federal court in New York on July 8 to sex traffickin­g charges following his arrest over the weekend. Federal prosecutor­s urged a judge Friday to keep financier Jeffrey Epstein behind bars until trial on sex traffickin­g charges involving underage girls, labeling him a “serial sexual predator” and expressing concern he might try to influence witnesses.

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