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yortsed snacilbuper

(7,939 posts)
Sun Dec 2, 2018, 08:58 PM Dec 2018

How a future Trump Cabinet member gave a serial sex abuser the deal of a lifetime

On a muggy October morning in 2007, Miami's top federal prosecutor, Alexander Acosta, had a breakfast appointment with a former colleague, Washington, D.C., attorney Jay Lefkowitz.

It was an unusual meeting for the then-38-year-old prosecutor, a rising Republican star who had served in several White House posts before being named U.S. attorney in Miami by President George W. Bush.

Instead of meeting at the prosecutor's Miami headquarters, the two men - both with professional roots in the prestigious Washington law firm of Kirkland & Ellis - convened at the Marriott in West Palm Beach, about 70 miles away. For Lefkowitz, 44, a U.S. special envoy to North Korea and corporate lawyer, the meeting was critical.

His client, Palm Beach multimillionaire Jeffrey Epstein, 54, was accused of assembling a large, cultlike network of underage girls - with the help of young female recruiters - to coerce into having sex acts behind the walls of his opulent waterfront mansion as often as three times a day, the Town of Palm Beach police found.

The eccentric hedge fund manager, whose friends included former President Bill Clinton, Donald Trump and Prince Andrew, was also suspected of trafficking minor girls, often from overseas, for sex parties at his other homes in Manhattan, New Mexico and the Caribbean, FBI and court records show.

Facing a 53-page federal indictment, Epstein could have ended up in federal prison for the rest of his life.
But on the morning of the breakfast meeting, a deal was struck - an extraordinary plea agreement that would conceal the full extent of Epstein's crimes and the number of people involved.

Not only would Epstein serve just 13 months in the county jail, but the deal - called a non-prosecution agreement - essentially shut down an ongoing FBI probe into whether there were more victims and other powerful people who took part in Epstein's sex crimes, according to a Miami Herald examination of thousands of emails, court documents and FBI records.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/perversion-of-justice-how-a-future-trump-cabinet-member-gave-a-serial-sex-abuser-the-deal-of-a-lifetime/ar-BBQmOVf?ocid=spartanntp

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How a future Trump Cabinet member gave a serial sex abuser the deal of a lifetime (Original Post) yortsed snacilbuper Dec 2018 OP
Clearly, Trump's name must be one mentioned in invesitgation documents. bitterross Dec 2018 #1
 

bitterross

(4,066 posts)
1. Clearly, Trump's name must be one mentioned in invesitgation documents.
Sun Dec 2, 2018, 09:43 PM
Dec 2018

There must be several GOP "leaders," donors, and cronies hidden away in the documents from that investigation. Otherwise that "rising young star" would have made a big name for himself prosecuting a bunch of high-profile people.

Instead, he took the alternate path. Obviously, promises of future advancement in exchange for a cover up.

There's a great place for the House to start looking.

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