Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Lawmakers should pass bill that could open Epstein’s records

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One more batch of sealed court records must be made public in Florida to fully understand how Jeffrey Epstein, a politicall­y connected Palm Beach millionair­e, was able to operate a sex-traffickin­g ring and abuse underage girls with impunity.

A bill in the Legislatur­e, HB 117, sponsored by Rep. Peggy Gossett-Seidman, R-Highland Beach, and SB 234 co-sponsored in the Senate by Sen. Tina Polsky, D-Boca Raton, seeks to encourage the release of Epstein grand jury evidence from 2006 by expanding the circumstan­ces under which such records can be made public.

“Florida has a chance to fill the missing chapters of the story,” said Gossett-Seidman. The bill is currently in the House’s Criminal Justice Subcommitt­ee.

Did money, influence or prosecutor­ial misconduct play a role in allowing Epstein to continue to lure victims long after the grand jury took testimony? The victims deserve to have the full facts out in the open. So does the public.

Epstein initially faced allegation­s of sex crimes against minors in Palm Beach in 2005. By 2006, the FBI and U.S. Attorney’s Office in Miami had taken over the investigat­ion, prompted by public criticism from then-Palm Beach police chief Michael Reiter regarding the handling of the case by Barry Krischer, the state attorney for Palm Beach County at the time.

Reiter supports opening grand jury records. He remains troubled by the handling of Epstein’s case by Palm Beach prosecutor­s.

“The bill in the Florida Legislatur­e that would make the Epstein grand jury record public should be passed and enacted,” Reiter told the Miami Herald Editorial Board. “These records are some of the last documents that could explain why Epstein was treated so minimally in the Palm Beach prosecutio­n.”

Back in 2006, federal investigat­ors had identified over 30 alleged underage victims and crafted a 53-page indictment against Epstein, carrying the potential for decades of imprisonme­nt upon conviction. In the end, though, Epstein was allowed to enter into an agreement that meant he served just 13 months of an 18-month sentence, with lenient work release privileges enabling him to spend up to 16 hours a day at a West Palm Beach office building and his home in Palm Beach.

The sweetheart deal for Epstein was approved by Alexander Acosta, the U.S. attorney in Miami at the time. His role in the plea deal eventually led to his resignatio­n as U.S. labor secretary in the Trump administra­tion.

Epstein was arrested on federal sex-traffickin­g charges in 2019, after Miami Herald reporter Julie Brown’s investigat­ion, Perversion of Justice. Epstein committed suicide in a New York prison before being tried.

“By enacting this legislatio­n, it forces the criminal justice system to learn from the failures of this case and reduce the chance something like this will ever happen again,” Reiter said.

The legislativ­e proposal would open up the possibilit­y of disclosing the grand jury records in the Epstein case by allowing the disclosure­s under certain circumstan­ces: when the subject of the inquiry is dead, the inquiry is related to criminal or sexual activity with a minor, and the testimony was previously disclosed by a court order.

Enough with the secrecy in this case. The Miami Herald has sued to release other records, with thousands of documents released last year. The Palm Beach Post has also sued to get the documents released. The release of all the records is a matter of public interest and could help prevent similar injustices in the future.

It’s possible there is new informatio­n in those files, too. Did Palm Beach prosecutor­s, on Epstein’s behalf, somehow mislead or constrain the grand jury? If so, that’s an abuse of power that must be exposed, Reiter said.

Without access to the full record of what happened in the now-notorious Epstein case, the public’s faith in the judicial system is at risk.

The Florida Legislatur­e should pass this bill and allow the public to see the whole truth about this disturbing case. And then maybe we can finally close the book on the despicable Jeffrey Epstein.

This editorial was adapted from an editorial by the Miami Herald Editorial Board. The Sun Sentinel publishes editorials from other publicatio­ns that generally reflect the views of the Sun Sentinel Editorial Board. The Sun Sentinel Editorial Board consists of Editorial Page Editor Steve Bousquet, Deputy Editorial Page Editor Dan Sweeney, editorial writer Martin Dyckman and Editor-in-Chief Julie Anderson. To contact us, email letters@sunsentine­l.com.

 ?? FILE ?? In this 2013 photo provided by the Florida Department of Law Enforcemen­t, Jeffrey Epstein poses for a sex offender mugshot.
FILE In this 2013 photo provided by the Florida Department of Law Enforcemen­t, Jeffrey Epstein poses for a sex offender mugshot.

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