The Morning Call

Epstein victims’ claims died with him, judge rules

- By Marc Freeman

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — Jeffrey Epstein’s death last month means a lawsuit by his sexual abuse victims is over — along with their hopes to hold Epstein and his co-conspirato­rs in South Florida accountabl­e, a federal judge ruled Monday.

By stopping the 11-year-old civil litigation, the court said it will not order any remedies for the government’s violation of a crime victims’ rights law.

U.S. District Judge Kenneth Marra had been considerin­g ways to grant some relief to the women involved in the case.

In February, he ruled that federal prosecutor­s failed to properly consult Epstein’s victims when they approved his 2007 deal to avoid prosecutio­n on federal charges.

But everything changed Aug. 10 when the 66-year-old financier killed himself while awaiting a New York trial on sex traffickin­g charges, Marra wrote.

The judge said the “lengthy and contentiou­s litigation” had become moot because Epstein is dead.

Marra conceded that the victims “in the end they are not receiving much, if any, of the relief they sought.”

“They may take solace, however, in the fact that this litigation has brought national attention to the Crime Victims’ Rights Act and the importance of victims in the criminal justice system,” Marra wrote. “It has also resulted in the United States Department of Justice acknowledg­ing its shortcomin­gs in dealing with crime victims, and its promise to better train its prosecutor­s regarding the rights of victims under the CVRA in the future.”

Brad Edwards and Paul Cassell, attorneys for the victims, said this is a still a time for Epstein’s victims to be proud.

“Together, we have forever demonstrat­ed that nobody is above the law, not the wealthy and not even the Government,” they wrote in a statement.

Marra said the law does not allow for the lawsuit to continue as the victims’ had wanted after Epstein’s death, by taking aim at Epstein’s alleged co-conspirato­rs, or women who helped his sexual abuse activities from 1999 to 2007.

The lawyers for the victims said they are considerin­g an appeal, along with other ways to continue their battle.

“Of course, this is not the ending we had hoped for, but the enormous progressio­n of victims’ rights through this case will ensure that violations like this never happen again in this country,” Edwards and Cassell wrote. “For that, the fight was worth it.”

In his previous ruling, the court found that Epstein’s “nonprosecu­tion agreement” violated the law because the victims were “deliberate­ly” not told about Epstein’s deal.

That controvers­ial deal resulted in Epstein pleading guilty in 2008 to two state prostituti­on charges.

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