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Subject: Privileged and Confidential - Timeline of the Jeffrey Epstein sex abuse case I Miami Herald
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Importance: High
Privileged - Redacted
Timeline of the Jeffrey Epstein sex
abuse case I Miami Herald
Nov. 28, 2018
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Jeffrey Epstein is flanked by his legal team during a court hearing in the summer of
2008. Uma Sanghvi Palm Beach Post via AP
For years, Jeffrey Epstein abused teen girls, police say. A
timeline of his case
PERVERSION
ofJUSTIC
A decade before #MeToo, a multimillionaire sex offender from Florida got the
ultimate break.
2005
March: A 14-year-old girl and her parents report that Jeffrey Epstein molested her
at a mansion in Palm Beach. She said a female acquaintance and classmate at Royal
Palm Beach High School had taken her to the house to give him a massage in
exchange for money.
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Jeffrey Epstein repeatedly engaged in sexual activity with underage girls at his
waterfront Palm Beach home on El Brillo Way, according to police in the Town of
Palm Beach. Epstein also owns residences in New York City and the U.S. Virgin
Islands, among other locales. Emily Michot emichotPmiamiherald.com
April: Palm Beach police begin trash pulls at Epstein's home, discovering a
telephone message for Epstein with the girl's name on it, and a time that matched
the time that she told police she was there. They find the names and phone numbers
of other girls on message slips in his trash.
October: With the police probe in full swing, one of Epstein's assistants calls one of
the girls just as she is being questioned by police. Investigators begin interviewing
more girls, as well as Epstein's butlers, who tell them that Epstein had frequent
visits from girls throughout the day. On Oct. 20, they execute a search warrant at his
house on El Brillo Way in Palm Beach.
2006
May: Police sign a probable cause affidavit charging Epstein and two of his
assistants with multiple counts of unlawful sex acts with a minor. The Palm Beach
state attorney, Barry Krischer, instead refers the case to a grand jury.
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Town of
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Palm Beach police were unhappy with the handling of the Epstein case by then-State
Attorney Barry Krischer.
June: The grand jury, after hearing from only one girl, returns an indictment of one
count of solicitation of prostitution. The charge does not reflect that the victim in
question and others were minors.
July: Epstein's powerhouse legal team tries to negotiate a deal with the State
Attorney's Office. Lawyers discuss a deferred prosecution in which Epstein would
enter a pretrial intervention program and serve no jail time.
July: After pressure from the Palm Beach police chief, the FBI opens a federal
investigation, dubbed "Operation Leap Year." Documents list the possible crime as
"child prostitution."
November: The FBI begins interviewing potential witnesses and victims from
Florida, New York and New Mexico.
2007
May: As the U.S. Attorney's Office prepares to present the case to a federal grand
jury, Epstein's attorneys request a meeting to discuss the investigation.
June: A 53-page indictment is prepared by the U.S. Attorney's Office as,
simultaneously, plea negotiations are initiated with Epstein's legal team.
July: Grand jury subpoenas are issued for Epstein's computers, which were
apparently removed from his Palm Beach home prior to the police search.
August: The U.S. attorney in Miami, Alexander Acosta, enters into direct
discussions about the plea agreement; a motion to compel production of Epstein's
computers is delayed.
September: Federal prosecutors draw up several federal plea agreements that are
rejected by Epstein and his attorneys. Epstein signs a non-prosecution agreement
on Sept. 24, but his attorneys continue to delay his court appearance.
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Alexander Acosta has been criticized for his handling of the Jeffrey Epstein case as
U.S. attorney. He later became the dean of Florida International University's law
school and, later still, President Trump's secretary of labor. Miami Herald file photo
October: With the non-prosecution agreement still being debated, Acosta meets
with Epstein lawyer Jay Lefkowitz at the West Palm Beach Marriott on Okeechobee
Road to discuss finalizing a deal. Among the terms agreed upon: that the victims
would not be notified, that the deal would be kept under seal and all grand jury
subpoenas would be canceled.
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The Marriott hotel in West Palm Beach, at 1001 Okeechobee Blvd., is where U.S.
Attorney Alexander Acosta met with Jeffrey Epstein's attorney to work out a plea
arrangement. Emily Michot emichotPmiamiherald.com
November: Epstein's lawyers object to an addendum to the agreement. The
provision called for a special master to appoint an attorney to represent Epstein
victims' rights to civil compensation.
December: The two sides continue to debate the addendum. Epstein attorney
Kenneth Starr asks for a review of the agreement by the U.S. Department of Justice
in Washington, further delaying its execution. Victims are told the investigation is
continuing.
2008
January: Epstein attorney, Lefkowitz, calls Acosta, telling him his client will not go
through with the agreement because it requires him to register as a sex offender.
February: With the plea negotiations and the Justice Department review still in
limbo, the FBI continues its probe, locating more witnesses and evidence.
March: Preparations are made for a new federal grand jury presentation. In court
documents, the U.S. Attorney's Office notes that Epstein's victims are being
harassed by his lawyers, who are not specifically named.
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May: The Justice Department issues finding that, if a plea deal is not reached,
Epstein can be federally prosecuted.
Palm Beach multimillionaire Jeffrey Epstein is a free man, despite sexually abusing
dozens of underage girls according to police and prosecutors. His victims have never
had a voice, until now.
June: Epstein's lawyers revisit plea negotiations, and on June 30, Epstein appears
in a Palm Beach County courtroom. He pleads guilty to state charges: one count of
solicitation of prostitution and one count of solicitation of prostitution with a minor
under the age of 18. He is sentenced to 18 months in jail, followed by a year of
community control or house arrest. He is adjudicated as a convicted sex offender
who must register twice a year in Florida.
July: Epstein's victims learn about his plea in state court after the fact. They file an
emergency petition to force federal prosecutors to comply with the federal Crime
Victims' Rights Act, which mandates certain rights for crime victims, including the
right to be informed about plea agreements and the right to appear at sentencing.
August: Epstein's victims learn that he has already been sent to jail, and that the
federal investigation is over. They seek to have his plea agreement unsealed, but
federal prosecutors argue against releasing the agreement, commencing a yearlong
court battle to learn the terms of Epstein's plea bargain.
October: Epstein begins work release from the county stockade. He is picked up by
his private driver six days a week and transported to an office in West Palm Beach,
where he accepts visitors for up to 12 hours a day. He returns to the stockade in the
evenings to sleep.
Support investigative journalism
The Miami Herald obtained thousands of FBI and court records, lawsuits, and
witness depositions, and went to federal court in New York to access sealed
documents in the reporting of "Perversion of Justice." The Herald also tracked down
more than 6o women who said they were victims, some of whom had never spoken
of the abuse before.
Your digital subscription, starting at $0.99 for the first month, supports
investigative journalism like this.
2009
July: Epstein is released from the Palm Beach County stockade, five months early.
He must register as a sex offender and is on probation for a year, confined to his
Palm Beach home except to travel to his office in West Palm Beach. However,
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records show he frequently makes trips to Manhattan and to his home in the U.S.
Virgin Islands.
August: Palm Beach Police Capt. George Frick finds Epstein walking along AiA in
the middle of the afternoon, when he was supposed to be at work in his office in
downtown West Palm Beach. Epstein says he is walking to work, even though the
location where he is found is not a direct route to his office. His probation officer
says Epstein has permission to get some exercise.
September: The federal non-prosecution agreement is made public. By
September, at least a dozen civil lawsuits have been filed by women who allege they
were molested by Epstein when they were underage. Epstein begins the process of
settling them out of court.
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Jeffrey Epstein never went to federal prison but his butler/houseman, Alfredo
Rodriguez, did, for obstruction of justice. He was busted for hiding Epstein's journal
and trying to sell it. He has since died. © Facebook
November: One of Epstein's former butlers tries to sell to an undercover FBI agent
a black book filled with the names of hundreds of girls and young women that
Epstein allegedly procured for sex and massages. The butler tells FBI agents he
witnessed nude underage girls at Epstein's pool and had known that the millionaire
was having sex with them. He also said he saw pornography involving underage girls
on Epstein's computers. The butler/houseman, Alfredo Rodriguez, is later charged
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with obstruction of justice and sentenced to federal prison. He dies in 2015. The
contents of the black book become public as part of several civil lawsuits.
2010
April: Flight logs obtained as part of civil lawsuits against Epstein show an
assortment of politicians, academics, celebrities, heads of state and world leaders
flying on Epstein's jets in the early 2000s. Among them: former President Bill
Clinton, former national security adviser Sandy Berger, former Colombian President
Andres Pastrana and lawyer Alan Dershowitz.
2011
March: Two of Epstein's victims file a motion in federal court accusing the
government of violating their rights by failing to notify them about the plea deal and
keeping it secret. Among other things, they want the plea deal invalidated in the
hopes of sending Epstein to prison. They accuse federal prosecutors of deceiving
them with "false notification letters."
September: U.S. District Judge Kenneth Marra rejects the U.S. Attorney's Office
argument that it was under no obligation to notify victims prior to striking a non-
prosecution agreement with Epstein because there were no federal charges filed
against him. The decision marks a victory for Epstein's victims, but the case will
drag on for seven more years.
November: Epstein must register in New York as the highest and most dangerous
level of sex offender, despite efforts by him and the New York District Attorney's
office to lower the classification. A Level 3 status means "high risk of repeat offense
and a threat to public safety exists," according to the state's guidelines.
2012
March-December: Calling himself a "celebrated philanthropist" and a "renowned
educational investor," Epstein undertakes a public relations campaign to counter
bad press about his sexual exploits. His foundation donates millions to scientific
research and sponsors global conferences on ways to achieve world peace and save
the planet. He funds cancer and educational research projects around the country.
2015
Virginia Roberts was working at Mar-a-Lago when she was recruited to be a
masseuse to Palm Beach hedge fund manager Jeffrey Epstein. She was lured into a
life of depravity and sexual abuse.
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January: Virginia Roberts files court papers in Florida claiming that she was
forced by Epstein to have sex with Prince Andrew and lawyer Alan Dershowitz when
she was underage. In a sworn affidavit, she provides photographs of her with the
prince and with Epstein's close associate, British socialite Ghislaine Maxwell. She
claims Maxwell worked as Epstein's madam, which she denies. Dershowitz and the
prince deny her claims as well, setting off a series of legal actions between
Dershowitz and Roberts' attorneys that are later resolved in an out-of-court
settlement.
April: A federal judge rules that Roberts cannot join the federal Crime Victims'
Rights Act lawsuit and that her affidavit — accusing Prince Andrew and Dershowitz
of having sex with her when she was underage — be stricken from the case.
Dershowitz said the ruling meant he was vindicated. However, the judge does not
address the veracity of Roberts' claims, writing: "The factual details regarding with
whom and where the Jane Does engaged in sexual activities are immaterial and
impertinent to this central claim."
September: Roberts sues Maxwell in federal court in New York, claiming that
Epstein's alleged madam defamed her in public statements in the media. The
lawsuit is widely viewed as a vessel for Epstein's victims to expose the scope of
Epstein's crimes. Several civil lawsuits filed the same year allege that Epstein and
Maxwell operated an international sex trafficking operation.
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Virginia Roberts holds a photo of herself at 16, her age when she met Jeffrey
Epstein. Her life had already been marred by sexual abuse even before she met the
multimillionaire. Emily Michot emichotPmiamiherald.com
2016
June: A lawsuit is filed in Manhattan by a woman who once used the name Katie
Johnson, claiming that she was raped by then-presidential candidate Donald Trump
at a party at Epstein's Manhattan mansion in 1994 when she was 13 years old.
Trump and Epstein both categorically deny it ever happened.
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'How in the world, do you, the U.S. attorney, engage in a negotiation with a criminal
defendant, basically allowing that criminal defendant to write up the agreement?'
said Bradley Edwards, shown here, who is representing some of the victims of serial
sex abuser and Palm Beach multimillionaire Jeffrey Epstein. Emily Michot
emichotPmiamiherald.com
November: Johnson backs out of a press conference just days before Election Day,
saying she had been threatened and was fearful. She later drops the lawsuit.
2017
February: President Trump nominates former Miami federal prosecutor Acosta as
U.S. secretary of labor. Acosta is compelled at his confirmation hearing to briefly
address questions about the deal he approved for Epstein. One lawmaker requests
more records from the Epstein case. Acosta is confirmed.
June: Roberts settles her lawsuit with Maxwell for an undisclosed sum.
2018
December: Civil trial is scheduled in Palm Beach County Court on Bradley
Edwards' allegations that Epstein sued him to punish him for representing several
of his victims. The malicious-prosecution lawsuit is set to begin Dec. 4. Epstein has
indicated he will not appear in court for trial.
The girls who were abused by Jeffrey Epstein and the cops who championed their
cause remain angry over what they regard as a gross injustice, while Epstein's
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employees and those who engineered his non-prosecution agreement have
prospered.
More from the series
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Read
How Miami Herald journalists investigated Jeffrey
Epstein
The Team
Investigative Reporter: Julie K. Brown
Investigations Editor: Casey Frank
Visual Journalist: Emily Michot
Interaction Designer: Aaron Albright
Video production: Marta Oliver Craviotto, Emily Michot, Julie K. Brown
Copy Editor: Mary Behne
Social Media Editors: Adrian Ruhi, Noel Gonzalez
Drone Footage: Pedro Portal
Director of Design: Jessica Gilbert
Senior Manager of Design: Eddie Alvarez
DARREN K. INDYKE
5300 W. Atlantic Avenue, Suite 602
Delray Beach, Florida 33484
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