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‘His Acts Are Despicable’: Key Moments in the Case Against Jeffrey Epstein

The financier was friends with celebrities at the same time prosecutors say he was exploiting a network of girls.

Jeffrey EpsteinCredit...New York State Sex Offender Registry, via Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

The sex-trafficking charges filed against Jeffrey Epstein this week in Manhattan underscored the long scope of the investigation into accusations that he engaged in sexual acts with girls, some as young as 14, in both his Upper East Side townhouse and his residence in Palm Beach, Fla.

The allegations against Mr. Epstein stretch back to at least 2002. Around the same time, a spate of media coverage pushed Mr. Epstein from a somewhat enigmatic money manager to a more public figure. Here’s how the saga unfolded.

Starting as early as 2002, according to the recent indictment, Mr. Epstein began sexually abusing and exploiting dozens of girls.

Mr. Epstein also asked some of the girls to recruit other girls, then paid them for bringing them to him, the indictment said. As a result, Mr. Epstein created a network of vulnerable young women he could sexually exploit, which prosecutors said he continued to do through at least 2005.

While the indictment only contained allegations dating back to 2002, some of Mr. Epstein’s accusers told both NBC News and the Miami Herald that their contact with him began the year prior.

Mr. Epstein garnered media attention in 2002 after Mr. Clinton used Mr. Epstein’s plane on a trip connected with Mr. Clinton’s foundation.

In October of that year, a New York magazine article about Mr. Epstein tried to clear some of the mystery surrounding his personal and professional life. The story referenced Mr. Epstein’s fondness for beautiful young women twice, though it never suggested the women were underage.

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Mr. Epstein was banned from President Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort, according to court documents, for sexually assaulting “an underage girl at the club.”Credit...Davidoff Studios, via Getty Images

Both Mr. Clinton and President Trump are quoted in the story. Mr. Trump said of Mr. Epstein: “He’s a lot of fun to be with. It is even said that he likes beautiful women as much as I do, and many of them are on the younger side.” Mr. Trump has since said he was “not a fan” of Mr. Epstein.

Vanity Fair magazine published its own lengthy profile of Mr. Epstein in 2003. The story sought to chart the relatively unknown money manager’s “complicated past” while also documenting his lavish lifestyle. The story helped build broader public interest in Mr. Epstein, presenting him as a high-rolling financier who rubbed elbows with the elite.

Like the New York piece before it, Vanity Fair’s article mentioned there being many women, “lots of them, mostly young” in Mr. Epstein’s orbit. The writer, Vicky Ward, said recently that while reporting that story she had uncovered allegations that Mr. Epstein had tried to seduce two sisters, one of them only 16 at the time, but that Vanity Fair removed the women’s stories from her article.

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Mr. Epstein owns homes in Palm Beach, Fla. (shown here), on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, in New Mexico and Paris.Credit...Wilfredo Lee/Associated Press

In March 2005, a teenage girl’s parents told the police in Palm Beach that she had been molested by Mr. Epstein, according to the Miami Herald and The New York Times.

Detectives followed up, and by October, the police had identified at least 21 possible victims and had executed a search of Mr. Epstein’s house in Florida, the Herald said.

The sex-trafficking accusations covered in the current indictment in Manhattan end the same year.

By May 2006, the police in Palm Beach said they found probable cause to charge Mr. Epstein with one count of lewd and lascivious molestation and four counts of unlawful sexual activity with a minor, The Times reported that year.

Instead, the Palm Beach County state attorney referred the case to a grand jury, which led to Mr. Epstein’s indictment on one charge of soliciting prostitution. The attorney’s decision was criticized by Palm Beach’s police chief, who accused prosecutors of giving Mr. Epstein special treatment, both The Times and the Herald reported.

Concerned that prosecutors might be undermining their work, the local police referred their case to the F.B.I., which opened its investigation in July 2006, the Herald reported.

Around the same period, Mr. Epstein’s high-powered legal team began attempting to persuade federal prosecutors to drop the case. The prosecutors were led by Alexander Acosta, the former United States attorney for the Southern District of Florida who is currently Mr. Trump’s labor secretary.

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Mr. Trump nominated Alexander Acosta for labor secretary in 2017. Mr. Acosta was previously a federal prosecutor in Florida where he led the team prosecuting Mr. Epstein.Credit...Joe Raedle/Getty Images

By 2007, federal prosecutors had prepared a 53-page indictment of Mr. Epstein.

At the same time, according to court records obtained by the Herald, emails between Mr. Epstein’s lawyers and prosecutors discussed a possible plea deal.

In October 2007, Mr. Acosta met with one of Mr. Epstein’s lawyers for breakfast, according to the Herald, during which they struck a deal that would help conceal the full accusations against Mr. Epstein and allow him to avoid a lengthy sentence.

It took months for the deal, a nonprosecution agreement, to be finalized. All the while, Mr. Epstein’s accusers were told the investigation was ongoing, and the F.B.I. continued its work.

In June 2008, Mr. Epstein pleaded guilty to state charges of solicitation of prostitution and solicitation of prostitution with a minor. He was sentenced to 18 months in jail and was required to register as a sex offender after his release.

Mr. Epstein’s victims have said that prosecutors did not tell them about the deal, even though federal law required they be told of major developments involving their complaints. Two of Mr. Epstein’s victims filed a lawsuit against the federal government, accusing them of violating their rights.

Mr. Epstein entered the Palm Beach County jail — not a state prison or federal facility — in July 2008. While there, he was allowed to leave the facility six days a week to work out of his office.

Mr. Epstein was released in July 2009, five months early. His deal wouldn’t become public until September of that year.

By that time, several of Mr. Epstein’s victims had filed civil lawsuits in which they claimed they had been molested or abused by Mr. Epstein when they were underage. Mr. Epstein and his lawyers began working to settle them.

In March of 2011, two of Mr. Epstein’s victims filed a motion in court accusing prosecutors of violating their rights by keeping the deal secret. In September, a judge ruled that their lawsuit could go forward. It remains active eight years later.

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The office of the Manhattan district attorney, Cyrus R. Vance, argued in favor of reducing Mr. Epstein’s classification in the sex offender registry to the lowest tier. Credit...Daniel Barry for The New York Times

At a 2011 hearing, Mr. Epstein sought to get his designation in New York’s sex-offender registry lowered from a top-level classification to the lowest possible tier.

The attempt did not succeed, even though a sex-crimes prosecutor from the Manhattan district attorney’s office supported Mr. Epstein’s position — an argument that baffled the judge overseeing the hearing. (The district attorney, Cyrus R. Vance Jr., has said this argument was a mistake and it had been made without his knowledge.)

The civil lawsuits against Mr. Epstein continued to work through the court system for years, but the accusations against him received a fresh burst of attention in 2015, when one of Mr. Epstein’s accusers, Virginia Roberts Giuffre, filed a defamation lawsuit against one of Mr. Epstein’s associates.

The lawsuit, which was eventually settled, revived Ms. Giuffre’s previous claims that when she was 17, Mr. Epstein paid her to have sex with Britain’s Prince Andrew, the Duke of York — allegations that Prince Andrew and Mr. Epstein have denied.

Mr. Acosta was confirmed as Mr. Trump’s labor secretary in April 2017. His nomination brought renewed focus on the nonprosecution agreement from 2007, which has been criticized for being too lenient.

Mr. Acosta’s involvement in the deal was mentioned during the confirmation hearings when Senator Tim Kaine, a Democrat from Virginia, questioned Mr. Acosta about his handling of the case.

In November 2018, the Miami Herald published a series of articles about Mr. Epstein’s case and Mr. Acosta’s role in the nonprosecution agreement.

The articles contained emotional interviews with Mr. Epstein’s accusers and excerpts from thousands of F.B.I. and court records.

Since publication, the Herald’s investigation has been widely credited with bringing public attention back to Mr. Epstein’s deal. It was also referenced obliquely by the federal prosecutor who announced the current charges against Mr. Epstein.

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On July 8, the F.B.I. announced new sex-trafficking charges against Mr. Epstein. Mr. Epstein’s lawyers are arguing that the current charges are covered under a 2008 nonprosecution agreement.Credit...Jefferson Siegel for The New York Times

Mr. Epstein was charged on Monday in Manhattan federal court with sex trafficking and sex trafficking conspiracy. Officials also conducted a raid on Mr. Epstein’s Manhattan mansion that uncovered numerous lewd photographs of women believed to be underage, prosecutors said.

Prosecutors did not specify why they brought charges against Mr. Epstein now but said they were not bound by the agreement that Mr. Acosta’s office made in 2008.

However, Reid Weingarten, Mr. Epstein’s lawyer, said the allegations in the current indictment were previously settled in that agreement.

Mr. Epstein pleaded not guilty to the charges. He could face up to 45 years in prison if convicted.

On Thursday, Mr. Epstein asked a federal judge to release him on substantial bond. He offered both his New York mansion, which city tax documents valued at close to $56 million, and his private jet as collateral.

Prosecutors said on Monday they sought to have Mr. Epstein held in jail until his trial, pointing to his wealth as they said he had “an extraordinary risk of flight and danger.”

Mr. Epstein’s bail proposal is expected to be taken up in Federal District Court in Manhattan on Monday.

After spending the week under intense criticism for his handling of the 2008 case, Mr. Acosta announced plans to resign on Friday.

As recently as Wednesday, Mr. Acosta had defended his role in the case. He said during a news conference that federal prosecutors’ intervention was what guaranteed Mr. Epstein would receive jail time.

Mr. Acosta also said that day that he supported the new charges brought against Mr. Epstein for crimes that he previously had described as “horrific” on Twitter.

“His acts are despicable,” Mr. Acosta said on Wednesday.

But by Friday, Mr. Acosta called Mr. Trump and said he would step aside, the president said.

Additional reporting by Nefertari Elshiekh

A correction was made on 
July 11, 2019

Because of an editing error, an earlier version of this story misidentified the person who argued in support of Mr. Epstein’s request to have his sex-offender designation lowered. It was a sex-crimes prosecutor from the office of the Manhattan district attorney, Cyrus R. Vance Jr., not Mr. Vance.

How we handle corrections

A version of this article appears in print on  , Section A, Page 12 of the New York edition with the headline: A Trail Mixes With Prosecutors And High-Powered Friends. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

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