Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Sheriff sets review of Epstein’s day job while in county jail

- DEVOUN CETOUTE MIAMI HERALD

MIAMI — The Palm Beach sheriff’s office has opened an internal-affairs investigat­ion into whether it properly handled the case of multimilli­onaire Jeffrey Epstein, the parttime Palm Beach resident accused of sexually abusing dozens of girls.

Specifical­ly, it will look at the decision more than a decade ago to allow Epstein to be free 12 hours a day on work release while serving a short sentence in the county stockade on a prostituti­on-related charge.

On Friday, Sheriff Ric Bradshaw — the same sheriff who oversaw the work-release arrangemen­t — ordered the investigat­ion be done.

“Sheriff Bradshaw takes these matters very seriously and wants to determine if any actions taken by the deputies assigned to monitor Epstein during his work release program violated any agency rules and regulation­s, during the time he was on [Palm Beach sheriff’s office] work release program,” a news release said.

In the middle of the previous decade, Epstein was investigat­ed after he was accused of abusing girls who were lured to his Palm Beach estate by recruiters. The girls, as young as 14, were told they would be giving a man a massage, then said they were coerced into sex acts.

The U.S attorney’s office prepared a 53-page sex-traffickin­g indictment against Epstein, but then, under pressure from Epstein’s team of lawyers, shelved the indictment and gave the case to the Palm Beach state attorney as part of a nonprosecu­tion agreement.

After Epstein pleaded guilty to solicitati­on of a minor, a much lesser charge, he served a little more than a year in the county stockade rather than the decades-long sentence he could have faced under the federal indictment.

Moreover, the sheriff’s office allowed him to leave the jail for 12 hours a day, six days a week on “work release,” a decision that has been harshly criticized.

Last November, the Miami Herald published a series of articles, Perversion of Justice, that closely examined the nonprosecu­tion agreement, including the U.S. attorney’s decision to keep the agreement secret from victims, in violation of the Crime Victims’ Rights Act. That series of articles also raised questions over whether Epstein, as a sex offender accused by dozens of girls, actually qualified for work release.

Earlier this month, the FBI arrested Epstein in New Jersey on sex-traffickin­g charges as he arrived at the airport in his private jet. He is charged with traffickin­g in New York City, one of several locations where he has homes.

On Thursday, a federal judge denied Epstein’s request to be released from jail as he awaits trial in New York. The judge declared him a danger to young women.

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