HomeNewsEditorialJeffrey Epstein case detail how girls were recruited

Jeffrey Epstein case detail how girls were recruited

New documents in the Jeffrey Epstein case detail how girls were recruited to his home

A second set of unsealed court documents containing the names of alleged victims, employees and former associates of Jeffrey Epstein, the deceased convicted sex offender, was released on Jan. 4, 2024.

 

Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell (Joe Schildhorn/Patrick McMullan / Getty Images)

This set, following the first released the previous day, shed some light on how teen girls were recruited to go to his home in Palm Springs, Florida, and what was expected of them once inside.The 327 pages released on Thursday include depositions from one woman who outlined how the girls were convinced to go to the home and then bring additional friends for monetary payment. They were often then expected to give “massages” — which typically involved some kind of sexual element — but other times, just were paid for being at the home, she said. The woman said that she’d been 16 or 17 at the time and had no massage experience when she first visited Epstein’s Florida home.

“Jeffrey took my clothes off without my consent the first time I met him,” according to a transcript of a deposition from the woman, whose name has been redacted.

Thursday’s batch of court documents also featured a deposition of Former Palm Beach police Det. Joseph Recarey, who is now deceased. He said in 2016 that Ghislaine Maxwell, now serving 20 years in prison, was involved in seeking girls to give massages and work at Epstein’s home.

Recarey said he interviewed around 33 women total, only two of which had massage experience, and that most were under the age of 18.

The documents released so far have not revealed more high-profile names besides what has been previously reported. Prince Andrew, as well as former Presidents Donald Trump and Bill Clinton, are named, though Trump and Clinton are not accused of wrongdoing.

The court documents being released in batches were part of the defamation lawsuit first filed in 2015 against Ghislaine Maxwell, who in June 2022 was sentenced to 20 years in prison for her involvement in the scheme. The lawsuit was settled out of court in 2017. The documents so far have included numerous references of massaging of Epstein by young women, as well as Maxwell’s deposition.

U.S. District Court executive Ed Friedland confirmed to NBC News the documents and names will be released on a rolling basis, as there are dozens of documents. The names of anonymous parties who have objected to the release of the documents will be held until a later date, Friedland said.

Often mistakenly referred to as “Epstein’s list,” here’s what to know about the documents, which are expected to include more than 150 names with ties to Epstein.

Why are the documents being released now?

A New York judge in December ordered for dozens of court documents to be unsealed from a civil lawsuit filed in 2015. The lawsuit was filed against Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein’s associate who was sentenced to two decades in prison for recruiting and grooming girls and young women to be sexually abused by the disgraced financier.

 

On Dec. 18, U.S. District Judge Loretta Preska ordered for materials including previously redacted records, such as deposition transcripts, to be released after Jan. 1, according to court documents.

So what is “Epstein’s list” — and will there be client names on it?

On social media, some have referred to the court document releases as a “list” of Epstein’s possible clients — a characterization that is not accurate.

More than 150 names of Epstein’s associates, alleged victims, employees and others are expected to be among the documents to be released. Some of the people who were named only have a passing connection to Epstein and the scandal.

Preska said in the order that most of the names were already known through other public filings, testimony during Maxwell’s criminal trial or other ways. A number of the names are associated with behavior that is “not salacious,” Preska said.

The names of minor victims who have not testified in the case or whose identities have not been previously made public will not be released, according to Preska.

Where do the names come from?

The names appear in court documents from the lawsuit Virginia Giuffre filed against Maxwell in 2015.

Giuffre accused Epstein of sexually abusing her, and also alleged that Maxwell and Epstein facilitated the sexual abuse between her and other men from 2000 to 2002.

Maxwell accused Giuffre of lying about the allegations, leading Giuffre to file the defamation lawsuit in 2015. The lawsuit was settled in 2017, and the terms of the settlement were not disclosed.

Sigrid McCawley, Giuffre’s attorney, said her client supports the documents being made public, adding that they only begin to scratch the surface of Epstein’s scheme.

“We learn more each time about how the sophisticated trafficking operation happened for so many decades, and how many people were involved,” McCawley said on TODAY on Jan. 4. “It was vast, it was significant. And it harmed literally hundreds of young women.”

Who is named in the recently released documents?

Many of the most high-profile names in the first batch of documents, released on Jan. 3, have previously been released.

A transcript of Giuffre’s deposition was included in the documents, in which she said she was being instructed to have sex with Prince Andrew, another unidentified prince and an unnamed owner of a large hotel chain.

Prince Andrew did immediately respond to NBC News’ request for comment on Jan. 3. The royal has previously denied the allegations. In 2022, Giuffre settled a high-profile lawsuit out of court against Prince Andrew.

Former President Bill Clinton was also named in the documents, which has previously been reported. In 2019, flight records made public showed he’d traveled on Epstein’s planes numerous times.

Another woman, Johanna Sjoberg, said in a 2016 deposition released on Jan. 3 that Epstein had once told her that “Clinton likes them young, referring to girls.”

Clinton is not accused of wrongdoing and there is no mention of wrongdoing in that document. Sjoberg went on to say she’d never met the former president and never seen him on Epstein’s island.

A spokesperson for Clinton said in 2019 that the former president had not spoken to Epstein in over a decade and was unaware of any criminal activity at that time. Angel Ureña, a spokesperson for Clinton, referred NBC News to the 2019 statement when asked for comment about the release of the documents.

Former President Donald Trump is also mentioned in the documents, but isn’t accused of any wrongdoing. Sjoberg referenced Trump in the 2016 deposition, recalling when Epstein’s plane would have to land in Atlantic City, New Jersey.

“Jeffrey said, Great, we’ll call up Trump” and go to a casino, Sjoberg said in the deposition. She also said she never gave Trump a massage.

In July 2019, video footage of Epstein and Trump partying together at Trump’s Florida mansion in the early 1990s was published from the NBC archives.

Trump did not immediately respond to NBC News’ request for comment on Jan. 3, but has previously said he hadn’t been in touch with Epstein for 15 years before his death.

Sjoberg said she’d also met singer Michael Jackson at Epstein’s home in Palm Beach, Florida, but did not massage him.

She also said she met magician David Copperfield at a dinner at Epstein’s. She recounted how there was another woman at dinner who looked very young and wondered if it was possible she was in high school.

Sjoberg said Copperfield did magic tricks at the dinner and briefly mentioned he had “questioned me if I was aware that girls were getting paid to find other girls” before the line of questioning moved on.

Copperfield did not immediately respond to a request for comment from TODAY.com.

Where are Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell now?

Maxwell is serving her 20-year prison sentence after she was convicted in 2021 of five federal sex trafficking charges. She’s currently serving her sentence at the Federal Correctional Institution in Tallahassee, Florida, according to the Bureau of Prisons.

Epstein died by suicide in 2019 in federal jail in downtown Manhattan, where he was waiting to be tried on federal sex trafficking charges.

By:TODAY.com

What are these records

 

Jeffrey Epstein said Bill Clinton ‘likes them young,’ accuser testified in newly unsealed deposition

Jeffrey Epstein told one of his victims that Bill Clinton likes girls “young,” according to a newly unsealed deposition.

Records related to the Epstein accuser, Johanna Sjoberg, were made public Wednesday night as part of a batch of newly unsealed court documents related to the dead pedophile’s sex-trafficking partner Ghislaine Maxwell.

In a newly unsealed deposition, Sjoberg was asked whether Epstein ever talked to her about Clinton.

“He said one time that Clinton likes them young, referring to girls,” Sjoberg answered.

The deposition was taken on May 18, 2016, by a lawyer for Virginia Giuffre, who brought a civil lawsuit against Maxwell. Giuffre alleged that Maxwell defamed her when she denied her claims that Epstein and Maxwell trafficked her for sex.

Giuffre, as part of her claims, alleged that she had sex with Epstein’s friend Prince Andrew. Sjoberg, in her deposition, corroborated details of Giuffre’s story and said Prince Andrew fondled her as well. Sjoberg said in her deposition that Maxwell had a puppet that resembled Prince Andrew, and that Prince Andrew used the puppet to fondle Giuffre.

“Apparently it was a production from a show on BBC. And they decided to take a picture with it, in which Virginia and Andrew sat on a couch,” Sjoberg testified in a deposition. “They put the puppet on Virginia’s lap, and I sat on Andrew’s lap, and they put the puppet’s hand on Virginia’s breast, and Andrew put his hand on my breast, and they took a photo.”

Prince Andrew has denied wrongdoing. The British royal settled a separate civil lawsuit brought by Giuffre in 2022.

Clinton has previously said he regrets his association with Epstein, who visited the White House numerous times during his presidential administration and has denied any knowledge of Epstein’s crimes. The former president hasn’t been accused of any wrongdoing related to the Epstein case.

In an email to Business Insider, Angel Ureña, a spokesperson for Clinton, reiterated his statement in 2019, stating that Clinton knew “nothing about the terrible crimes” Epstein committed.

“In 2002 and 2003, President Clinton took a total of four trips on Jeffrey Epstein’s airplane, Ureña wrote.

“It’s been nearly 20 years since President Clinton last had contact with Epstein,” Ureña told BI.

Sigrid McCawley, an attorney for Giuffre — who deposed Sjoberg in 2016 — said in a statement Wednesday that the unsealed documents would shed light on “how Epstein operated his vast, global sex trafficking enterprise and got away with it for decades.”

“The public interest must still be served in learning more about the scale and scope of Epstein’s racket to further the important goal of shutting down sex trafficking wherever it exists and holding more to account,” she said. “The unsealing of these documents gets us closer to that goal.”

Sjoberg testified in the deposition that she knew Epstein “had dealings” with Clinton, but that she “did not know they were friends ” until she read a Vanity Fair article that said they took a trip to Africa together.

In the deposition, Sjoberg also testified she doesn’t recall seeing Clinton on Epstein’s private island in the US Virgin Islands, contradicting a Daily Mail report claiming that he visited it.

Portions of Sjoberg’s deposition were previously made public in earlier stages of the litigation between Giuffre and Maxwell. The full document became public Wednesday night.

Sjoberg is one of the approximately 170 associates of Epstein whose names were ordered to be unsealed this month. The list of formerly anonymous “Does” includes some of Epstein’s powerful friends, like Clinton, as well as victims, like Sjoberg.

Maxwell and Giuffre settled their lawsuit in 2017. In 2021, a jury found Maxwell guilty of trafficking girls to Epstein for sex and sexually abusing them herself. She’s serving a 20-year prison sentence. Epstein himself died in jail in 2019 while awaiting trial for his own set of sex-trafficking charges.

Read the original article on Business Insider

 

 

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