Miami Herald

Epstein is accused of witness tampering

- BY JULIE K. BROWN

Just days after the Miami Herald published an investigat­ive series on how accused child molester Jeffrey Epstein manipulate­d prosecutor­s to obtain a lenient plea deal, he wired hundreds of thousands of dollars to two potential witnesses, a filing by the Justice Department said.

Just days after the Miami Herald published a series about how accused sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein manipulate­d state and federal prosecutor­s to obtain a lenient plea bargain, Epstein wired hundreds of thousands of dollars to two potential accomplice­s involved in his sex case from a decade earlier, federal authoritie­s announced in a court filing Friday.

Epstein, 66, arrested by New York federal prosecutor­s last Saturday, faces a new indictment charging him with sex traffickin­g and conspiracy involving underage girls he alleg

edly sexually abused in 2002 and 2004 at his waterfront estate in Palm Beach.

The multimilli­onaire managed to obtain a nonprosecu­tion agreement from federal prosecutor­s, which was filed in court in Florida in 2008. That agreement gave him and a number of others involved in his alleged sex traffickin­g operation immunity from federal prosecutio­n. New York U.S. Attorney Geoffrey Berman resurrecte­d the case, bringing in activities that occurred at Epstein’s townhouse in Manhattan, following publicatio­n of the Herald’s series, Perversion of Justice.

Friday’s filing by federal prosecutor­s, first reported by The New York Times, was part of an effort by Berman to persuade the judge in the case to deny Epstein bail. Epstein remains in jail in New York pending a bail hearing set for 10 a.m. Monday in federal court.

Berman, in a letter to the judge in the case, called the bail proposal of Epstein’s lawyers “woefully inadequate,’’ saying that it

“seeks to diminish and demean the harm caused to the many victims of the defendant’s appalling sexual abuse.’’

One of the most disturbing aspects of Epstein’s behavior, Berman said, is his ongoing effort to try to intimidate and influence people who have informatio­n about his crimes.

As evidence of that, Berman said investigat­ors recently learned that Epstein had paid significan­t sums of money in late 2018 to two alleged accomplice­s whose testimony with prosecutor­s could put him away for life.

The Miami Herald’s three-part series was published near the end of November 2018. Berman said the government found that two days after publicatio­n, Epstein wired $100,000 from a trust account that he controlled to an individual who had been named as a possible co-conspirato­r in his 2008 Florida non-prosecutio­n agreement. Shortly thereafter, Epstein wired $250,000 from the same account to another person identified as a co-conspirato­r to Epstein’s sex-traffickin­g operation, the court filing said.

“Neither of these payments appears to be recurring or repeating during the approximat­ely five years of bank records presently available to the government. This course of action, and in particular the 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,’’ Berman wrote to Senior U.S. District Court Judge Richard M. Berman, no relation to the prosecutor.

Under Epstein’s nonprosecu­tion agreement, he was given federal immunity on possible sex-traffickin­g charges. At the time, prosecutor­s had drawn up a 53page draft indictment. In exchange, Epstein agreed to plead guilty to two minor prostituti­on charges in state court in Palm Beach County. He was sentenced to 18 months in the county jail but served 13 months — most of it under a workreleas­e program in which he spent nearly all his waking hours in an office that he set up in West Palm Beach.

One of the more unusual provisions of the agreement was a blanket immunity given to a number of his alleged co-conspirato­rs — both named and unnamed. Only four of them were actually identified in the agreement: Sarah Kellen, Adriana Ross, Lesley Groff, and Nadia Marcinkova. Kellen, whose married name is Vickers, Ross, and Groff were women who scheduled the girls who came to Epstein’s estate at all hours. According to court and police documents, Marcinkova participat­ed in the sexual assaults as Epstein stage-managed the encounters.

The prosecutor did not name the alleged co-conspirato­rs who were wired money.

The conspiracy allegation against Epstein indicates that others could be charged with crimes as part of a supersedin­g indictment.

Monday’s indictment refers to three unidentifi­ed “employees’’ who helped Epstein but does not name them.

The Miami Herald’s attempts to obtain a comment from Epstein’s legal team were unsuccessf­ul.

Miami Herald Staff Writer David Smiley contribute­d to this report.

 ?? N.Y. State Sex Offender Registry via The N.Y. Times ?? Jeffrey Epstein wired hundreds of thousands of dollars to potential accomplice­s, prosecutor­s say.
N.Y. State Sex Offender Registry via The N.Y. Times Jeffrey Epstein wired hundreds of thousands of dollars to potential accomplice­s, prosecutor­s say.

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