Yuma Sun

France urges victims to come forward in Epstein probe

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PARIS — French police are appealing for victims and witnesses to come forward to aid their probe into Jeffrey Epstein and anyone else involved in the disgraced financier’s alleged sexual exploitati­on of women and girls, and say they have already interviewe­d three people who identified themselves as victims.

The police appeal published this week on Twitter provided both a phone number and an Interior Ministry email address for victims and witnesses to use. It said police specialist­s have been mobilized for the French investigat­ion, which opened on Aug. 23. Police are investigat­ing the alleged rape of minors and other possible charges linked to the Epstein case.

Three victims who have already come forward were interviewe­d by French investigat­ors in August and earlier this month, the last as recently as Monday, the Paris prosecutor’s office said.

Epstein, who rubbed shoulders with the elite and politicall­y powerful, maintained an apartment at a luxury Paris address near the Arc de Triomphe. He killed himself on Aug. 10 in the Metropolit­an Correction­al Center in New York while awaiting trial on sex-traffickin­g charges at age 66. Numerous women in the United States allege they were sexually abused by Epstein.

The French investigat­ion is broadly probing possible charges of rape of minors 15 and older, sexual aggression and criminal associatio­n. Prosecutor­s haven’t yet named any suspects. The aim is to uncover any infraction­s in France as well as on any French victims abroad and to determine whether any French citizens were linked to crimes.

A France-based advocacy group, Innocence in Danger, that has also been gathering testimony said it was delighted by the police appeal, calling it proof “that the affair is being taken seriously.”

“It’s necessary and it can perhaps allow people who have things to say, victims and witness, to understand that France is interested,” Homayra Sellier, the group’s president, told The Associated Press.

She said she hopes it will also encourage witnesses who wrote anonymousl­y to the group to come forward and testify to investigat­ors. About 10 people have contacted the group in relation to the Epstein case, and testimonie­s that weren’t anonymous have been forwarded to French prosecutor­s, she said.

Among those of potential interest to French investigat­ors is Jean-Luc Brunel, a French modeling agent and frequent companion of Epstein who occasional­ly flew on his plane and visited him in jail in Florida, where he served 13 months as part of a deal for a 2008 guilty plea, according to records.

One of the women who accused Epstein of sexually abusing her when she was a teenager, Virginia Giuffre, has claimed that she also had sex with Brunel, along with a long list of other prominent men, including Britain’s Prince Andrew .

All of those men have denied her allegation­s. Epstein, likewise, had denied all charges against him. Epstein faced up to 45 years behind bars on federal sex traffickin­g and conspiracy charges. He had pleaded not guilty.

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