Miami Herald

After ‘deafening silence,’ Harvard opens review of its ties to Jeffrey Epstein

- BY ROB WILE rwile@miamiheral­d.com

university or charity or scientific society has been more closely associated in the public eye with Jeffrey Epstein than Harvard University, which received approximat­ely $9 million from him over the years.

And no organizati­on has seemingly been more adamant that it had nothing to explain, nothing to review, nothing to refund — even after Epstein later became the nation’s most notorious sexual predator.

That silence ended Thursday.

After refusing to comment for months on its past associatio­ns with Epstein and the money it collected as a result, Harvard released a letter from its president late Thursday stating that the school had opened a review into the matter.

“Epstein’s behavior, not just at Harvard, but elsewhere, raises significan­t questions about how institutio­ns like ours review and vet donors,” wrote Lawrence S. Bacow, who took over as president in June.

Bacow said the school’s review of Epstein’s connection­s began two weeks ago, and had turned up funds Epstein gave that are still in use.

This week, the Harvard Crimson student newspaper published an editorial blasting the school for what it called “deafening silence” on the matter. In late November, the Miami Herald reported Epstein had been the beneficiar­y of a highly unusual non-prosecutio­n agreement. Despite credible claims from dozens of underage girls that Epstein had sexually abused them, the U.S. attorney for Southern Florida discarded a 53-page draft indictment, allowing Epstein to avoid a federal trial and potentiall­y life in prison.

The Herald’s series of stories on Epstein, Perversion of Justice, also explored how then-U.S. Attorney Alexander Acosta — later President Donald Trump’s labor secretary — agreed to keep the nonprosecu­tion agreement secret from Epstein’s victims. The articles brought renewed scrutiny to Epstein’s years of alleged sex traffickin­g.

Amid that fresh scrutiny, Epstein was arrested the first week of July and was awaiting trial in New York City when he was found dead in his cell Aug. 10. The death was termed a suicide.

The university “absolutely bears the responsibi­lity to make a concrete stateNo ment denouncing its ties to Epstein,” the Crimson said in its editorial. It continued, “Not only did [this] silence further Epstein’s reputation while he was alive, it is also unfair to current Harvard students who must live with the knowledge that Epstein touted his affiliatio­n with their school while University administra­tors stayed — then as now — silent.”

Harvard did not respond to a request from the Miami Herald for additional comment.

Though Epstein gave generously to multiple universiti­es, Harvard was his preferred institutio­n. In his letter, Bacow says that between 1998 and 2007, Epstein’s donations to the school totaled nearly $9 million, including a $6.5 million gift in 2003 to support the school’s Program for Evolutiona­ry Dynamics.

For years, Harvard reciprocat­ed Epstein’s overtures: Photos from 2004 show Epstein socializin­g with then-President Lawrence Summers and distinguis­hed law professor Alan Dershowitz. Through a representa­tive, Summers declined to comment on Bacow’s letter. Dershowitz did not respond to a request for comment.

Also pictured in the photos is current Harvard psychology professor Steven Pinker. In an email, Pinker said Epstein “would pop up every now and again” at the school or with figures connected to the school.

“I can’t say why Epstein was enamored with Harvard,” Pinker said. “Harvard is of course a brand name among universiti­es. Epstein may just have wanted to add prestigiou­s scientists and professors to his collection of celebrity acquaintan­ces.”

Pinker said that while he found Epstein “annoyingly distractib­le and unserious,” “...to my bewilderme­nt, he continued to insinuate himself with colleagues at Harvard and elsewhere.”

Bacow also acknowledg­es the previously unreported fact that in 2005, a former professor named Epstein a visiting fellow in the school’s Department of Psychology. The former professor, Stephen Kosslyn, did not respond to a request for comment.

Bacow said the school had discovered that two sets of Epstein funds, totaling $186,000, were still being put to use through the school’s Faculty of Arts and Sciences, and that it would be redirectin­g those funds “to organizati­ons that support victims of human traffickin­g and sexual assault.”

Bacow said the school did not accept any gifts after 2008, when Epstein was convicted on underage prostituti­on charges in state court in conjunctio­n with the federal non-prosecutio­n agreement, and emphasized that the school specifical­ly rejected a gift from that year.

Barcow said one goal would be to learn how to “prevent these situations in the future.”

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