Epstein's victims get second chance at justice against sex offender in appeals court
Source: Miami Herald
The young victims of sex offender Jeffrey Epstein will get a second chance at seeking justice after an entire appellate court agreed Friday to rehear claims that federal prosecutors in South Florida violated their rights when they kept them in the dark about a secret plea deal with the now-deceased Palm Beach multimillionaire.
The 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals vacated a previous panels 2-1 decision that rejected a petition by one of Epsteins victims. She sought to undo the agreement that federal prosecutors struck with Epstein not to charge him with trafficking girls for his own sexual pleasure more than a decade ago.
A majority of the appeals court in Atlanta voted to rehear the appeal, setting the stage for a possible solution for potentially dozens of victims in the ground-breaking Epstein case. Despite its ruling in April, the three-judge panel had called the South Florida prosecutors deal with Epstein beyond scandalous and a national disgrace. Epstein, 66, committed suicide a year ago while he was in custody on federal sex-trafficking charges in New York.
The three judges narrowly rejected Courtney Wilds petition to compel federal prosecutors in South Florida to charge Epstein on the grounds that the feds violated Wilds and other victims rights when they cut a secret deal with him behind their backs. Instead, prosecutors allowed Epstein to plead guilty to lenient solicitation charges in state court in Palm Beach County.
Read more: https://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/article244800452.html