Houston Chronicle

Acosta defends role in Epstein plea deal

Labor secretary says his focus as a prosecutor was getting jail time for multimilli­onaire now accused of abusing dozens of young girls

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WASHINGTON — Embattled Labor Secretary Alex Acosta on Wednesday defended his role as a federal prosecutor in brokering a decade-old plea deal for sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, but lawyers for victims criticized his explanatio­n and Democrats called for him to appear at a congressio­nal hearing in two weeks.

Acosta, the top federal prosecutor for the Southern District of Florida when the 2008 deal was struck, portrayed his actions and those of his fellow federal prosecutor­s as heroic and possibly unpreceden­ted.

He said the state attorney was preparing to allow Epstein to plead to a single charge of solicitati­on that did not make a reference to the age of the female minor. That deal would have carried no jail time and would not have required Epstein to register as a sex offender.

“We wanted to see Epstein go to jail,” Acosta said. “He needed to go to jail.”

The federal non-prosecutio­n agreement that Epstein signed allowed him to plead guilty in state court to two felony solicitati­on charges, one involving an underage girl. He served a 13-month sentence in a private wing of a Palm Beach, Fla., jail, and was allowed to leave 12 hours a day, six days a week to work out of a nearby office.

A federal judge this year ruled that prosecutor­s violated the rights of the victims by failing to notify them of the plea deal.

Epstein is facing a new raft of federal child sex traffickin­g charges. Federal prosecutor­s Monday unsealed sex traffickin­g charges against him, alleging that the politicall­y connected multimilli­onaire had abused dozens of young girls at his New York and Palm Beach homes and enlisted his victims to bring him others.

During Wednesday’s news conference, Acosta said that new

evidence and a change in climate for sex abuse victims — since they are now more likely to be believed — has made the case against Epstein more viable.

“This is very, very good,” he said of the new case. “His acts are despicable.”

Acosta said that, a decade ago, the female minors were either too afraid to testify or wanted to put the incident behind them, making it difficult to put together a case. His staff distribute­d an affidavit from Marie Villafana, an assistant state attorney, who gave the same account and also said that one accuser had changed her statement, saying Epstein had not sexually assaulted them.

Acosta said, “In our heart, we were trying to do the right thing for these victims.”

Spencer Kuvin, a Florida-based attorney for the 14-year-old girl who first alerted police to Epstein’s conduct, said Acosta stopped investigat­ing long before he should have, giving up on the case and settling for less than he should have.

“Mr. Acosta’s office did not take this matter seriously back in 2008 and still refuses to accept responsibi­lity for his failed leadership, which lead to a sweetheart deal for a pedophile,” Kuvin said.

The former state’s attorney for Palm Beach County at the time of the Epstein plea deal released a statement disputing Acosta’s account.

“I can emphatical­ly state that Mr. Acosta’s recollecti­on of this matter is completely wrong,” wrote Barry Krischer. “Federal prosecutor­s do not take a back seat to state prosecutor­s.” Krischer said Acosta could have moved forward with a 53-page indictment that Acosta’s office had drafted.

Acosta’s statements did not help him with Democrats as pressure mounted for his resignatio­n and for him to offer a better explanatio­n for the plea deal.

“Secretary Acosta had a chance to do right by Jeffrey Epstein’s victims. He failed,” Democratic Policy and Communicat­ions Committee Chairman David Cicilline of Rhode Island said in a prepared statement. “Today’s press conference doesn’t change that. The only appropriat­e thing for him to do now is to resign.”

Before the news conference, House Oversight Committee Chairman Elijah Cummings, D-Md., joined by four of his Democratic colleagues, sent a letter to Acosta demanding he appear before the powerful investigat­ive panel to testify July 23 on the Epstein plea deal.

Attorneys for Epsteins’ victims also called for Acosta’s resignatio­n and questioned the explanatio­ns he gave during the hourlong news conference.

“Secretary Acosta’s repeated reference to a criminal prosecutio­n of Jeffrey Epstein as a ‘roll of the dice’ is grossly offensive,” said Jack Scarola, an attorney who represents many of Epstein’s alleged victims. “It demeans the credibilit­y of the dozens of victim-witnesses available to testify against Epstein. It ignores the strength of the abundant corroborat­ing evidence, including irrefutabl­e documentar­y support.”

Several Democrats in Congress, including House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, DCalif., and Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., have called for Acosta’s resignatio­n. But no Senate Republican­s — who all voted for Acosta’s confirmati­on in 2017 — have explicitly called on Acosta to resign, although several are awaiting the results of a Justice Department probe into the handling of Epstein’s plea deal before commenting on Acosta’s fate.

Trump has stood by Acosta and pushed Acosta to hold the news conference to defend himself. Acosta described his relationsh­ip with Trump as “outstandin­g” when asked if the president was still supporting him.

 ??  ?? Labor Secretary Alex Acosta is facing mounting calls to resign from Democrats.
Labor Secretary Alex Acosta is facing mounting calls to resign from Democrats.

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