The Star Early Edition

Legal battle by victims could sink Maxwell defence

-

WOMEN who say they were victims of Jeffrey Epstein have spent 12 years trying to undo an unusual plea deal that spared the deceased financier from federal prison. Now their efforts could sink a key legal defence for Ghislaine Maxwell, who was charged this month with luring girls so Epstein could abuse them.

The 2007 deal allowed Epstein to plead guilty in a Florida court to soliciting minors to engage in prostituti­on and serve just 13 months in county jail. The once-secret agreement included non-prosecutio­n protection for unidentifi­ed co-conspirato­rs such as Maxwell, a provision that US attorneys since have acknowledg­ed in court was unpreceden­ted.

But Maxwell’s lawyers said in court papers on Friday that she intended to argue she could not be prosecuted because of the agreement, a defence Manhattan federal prosecutor­s on Monday called “absurd”.

The government charged Maxwell with luring and grooming minors for sexual abuse by Epstein at his mansions in Florida, New York and New Mexico, as well as at Maxwell’s London residence, in the 1990s. She is also charged with perjury from testimony in a civil case in 2016.

A judge was to decide yesterday whether Maxwell should get bail. Maxwell has pleaded not guilty to the charges.

The 2007 plea deal also came up last year when Epstein was charged with child sex crimes by Manhattan federal prosecutor­s, who said the Florida deal did not protect Epstein in New York.

Before the issue could be resolved in court, Epstein was found hanged in a Manhattan jail while awaiting trial. His death was ruled a suicide.

Several alleged victims of Epstein have been challengin­g the plea deal since 2008, arguing that it violated the Crime Victims Rights Act (CVRA) by concealing the Epstein plea and his nonprosecu­tion agreement until after it was signed.

Had the alleged victims been informed of the deal, which they argue was their right under the act, they could have tried to prevent a judge from approving it.

The plaintiffs are seeking to invalidate the deal and the provision that protected co-conspirato­rs, but after Epstein died a federal judge tossed their case. That ruling was upheld by a three-judge panel on an appeals court in Atlanta this year, which ruled 2-1 that the CVRA had not been triggered because Epstein was never charged with a federal crime.

The alleged victims had asked the full Atlanta federal appeals court to revive their case and determine if the lower court wrongly refused to invalidate the plea deal, said Paul Cassell, who represents alleged Epstein victim

Courtney Wild in the CVRA case.

“If the agreement is ripped up, she can’t get to first base,” said Cassell.

On Monday, prosecutor­s dismissed Maxwell’s plea deal defence. In a court filing, they said her crimes were committed before and after the time frame of the plea deal, Maxwell was not a named party to the deal and argued that prosecutor­s in New York are not bound by their counterpar­ts in Florida.

Retired Harvard Law Professor Alan Dershowitz, who helped defend Epstein in 2007, said Maxwell could counter each of those arguments.

“When the US government makes a promise, it’s binding all over the country,” he said.

The alleged victims have garnered noteworthy support for their appeals case, including from US Senator Dianne Feinstein, a Democrat, and former Republican senators Orrin Hatch and Jon Kyl, authors of the 2004 CVRA law.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa