Houston Chronicle

Bail rejected for Epstein in sex crimes case

- By Benjamin Weiser and Ali Watkins

NEW YORK — A federal judge on Thursday denied bail for Jeffrey Epstein, the financier facing sex-traffickin­g charges, rejecting his request to await trial under home detention at his Upper East Side mansion.

The judge, Richard M. Berman of U.S. District Court in Manhattan, said Epstein, who owns property in Paris and has a private plane, would be detained in jail until his trial on charges that he sexually abused and trafficked dozens of underage girls in the early 2000s.

Berman emphasized Epstein’s danger to the others, particular­ly his accusers and “prospectiv­e victims as well.” The judge cited what he called “compelling testimony” by two of the accusers — Annie Farmer and Courtney Wild — who said at a hearing Monday that they feared for their safety and the safety of others if Epstein were to be released.

Epstein’s lawyers had proposed allowing him to post a substantia­l bond and remain in his mansion guarded around the clock by private security guards, whom he would pay. Prosecutor­s vigorously opposed that proposal, saying he was seeking “special treatment” and trying to build his own private jail — a “gilded cage.”

Berman said that Epstein’s proposed bail package was “irretrieva­bly inadequate,” and that he would not entertain any other bail proposals from the financier’s legal team.

Ever since his July 6 arrest at Teterboro Airport in New Jersey after a flight from Paris, Epstein, 66, has been detained at the Metropolit­an Correction­al Center, a highly secure jail in Manhattan that has housed accused terrorists, mobsters and even the Mexican cartel leader known as El Chapo.

A federal indictment charged that between 2002 and 2005, Epstein and his employees paid dozens of underage girls to engage in sex acts with him at his homes in Manhattan and Palm Beach, Florida.

The indictment also accused Epstein of using some of his victims to recruit additional girls for him to abuse. He paid his “victim-recruiters” hundreds of dollars for each girl they brought to him, prosecutor­s said.

He has pleaded not guilty and has vowed to fight the charges, his lawyers said. If convicted, he faces up to 45 years in prison.

In 2008, Epstein pleaded guilty to two state prostituti­on charges in Florida as part of a secret, lenient deal he negotiated with the United States attorney in Miami to avoid federal prosecutio­n. He served 13 months in jail.

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