Federal judge deems plea deal for billionaire on child
sex trafficking was illegal
This is the dirtbag Acosta let off with a wrist-slap with pictures of some of the young girls he victimized. (Miami Herald photo) |
A U.S. District judge ruled Thursday
that U.S. Labor Secretary Alexander Acosta committed a crime in 2007 when, as a
U.S. prosecutor at the time, secretly gave a lenient plea deal to a
politically-connected billionaire accused of sex trafficking underage girls.
In a case brought by victims of
billionaire and Trump associate Jeffrey Epstein, Judge Kenneth Marra found that Acosta and other
federal prosecutors violated the Crime Victims' Rights Act by brokering a plea deal with Epstein, allowing
him to serve only 13 months in a county jail for his crimes, and then sealing
the agreement.
The ruling came nearly three months
after the Miami Herald's explosive report on the plea deal,
which prompted the Justice Department to begin investigation into the
prosecutors' conduct.
Marra's decision led to renewed
calls for Acosta—who was appointed by President Donald Trump and who as head of
the Labor Department is responsible for combating sex trafficking—to resign.
By sealing Epstein's plea agreement, Acosta stole from more than 30 of Epstein's victims—some of whom were as young as 13 when they were recruited by his paid employees and then coerced into sex acts by him—the chance to attend Epstein's sentencing and demand a harsher punishment.
"While the government spent
untold hours negotiating the terms and implications of the [agreement] with
Epstein's attorneys, scant information was shared with victims," Marra
found.
"The government aligned
themselves with Epstein, working against his victims, for 11 years," Brad
Edwards, the attorney representing the women who survived Epstein's abuse, told
the Herald. "Yes, this is a huge victory, but to make his
victims suffer for 11 years, this should not have happened. Instead of
admitting what they did, and doing the right thing, they spent 11 years
fighting these girls."
Epstein's victims and the U.S.
government now have 15 days to come to a resolution following Marra's ruling.