EFTA00019249
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- File Name
- EFTA00019249.pdf
- Data Set
- DS 8
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- court record
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- 255.7 KB
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- 3
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From: To: Subject: FW: WASHINGTON POST; Jeffrey Epstein's scandal of secrecy points to a creeping rot in the American justice system Date: Tue, 18 Jun 2019 20:34:15 +0000 Importance: Normal Just FYI. From: Sent: Tuesday, June 18, 2019 4:34 PM To: Subject: WASHINGTON POST; Jeffrey Epstein's scandal of secrecy points to a creeping rot in the American justice system Jeffrey Epstein's scandal of secrecy points to a creeping rot in the American justice system When rich people are credibly accused of crimes, does the public have a right to know? Should multimillionaires be allowed to silence their accusers with cash? According to superlawyer David Boies, "dozens" of women who could give testimony about being sexually assaulted as girls by mysterious financier Jeffrey Epstein are silenced by settlements they reached with their alleged assailant. The exact number is yet another secret in this least transparent of criminal cases. "Three dozen or eight dozen, I don't know, but there are dozens," Boies told me recently. He himself represents two alleged Epstein victims bound by "non- disclosure agreements" (NDAs). Because Epstein can afford to buy silence, he may succeed in shuttering the window of accountability pried open in a South Florida court back in February. U.S. District Judge Kenneth A. Marra ruled that federal prosecutors — led by the EFTA00019249 current labor secretary, Alexander Acosta — broke the law by entering a secret sweetheart deal