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1.91 MB

Extraction Summary

6
People
5
Organizations
3
Locations
3
Events
3
Relationships
4
Quotes

Document Information

Type: News article / media clipping (included in house oversight committee records)
File Size: 1.91 MB
Summary

This document appears to be a news article or column critiquing the State Attorney's handling of the Jeffrey Epstein case (circa 2006). It contrasts the overwhelming evidence collected by police—including phone messages, school transcripts, and witness testimony—against the prosecutors' reluctance to charge Epstein due to perceived victim credibility issues. The text highlights a controversial quote from a State Attorney spokesman admitting that wealth can indeed buy a different standard of justice.

People (6)

Name Role Context
Jeffrey Epstein Suspect / Money Manager
53-year-old Manhattan money manager accused of crimes involving teenage girls.
Alan Dershowitz Defense Attorney
Harvard law professor hired by Epstein; provided details to prosecutors to assail victims' characters.
Jack Goldberger Defense Attorney
Attorney for Epstein; denied knowing about private investigators following victims.
Barry Krischer State Attorney
Questioned regarding why he didn't let a jury decide the case.
Mike Edmondson Spokesman
Spokesman for Barry Krischer; commented on wealth influencing justice.
Unnamed Recruiter Recruiter
20-year-old Royal Palm Beach woman who recruited girls; had a Myspace page.

Organizations (5)

Name Type Context
State Attorney's Office
Prosecuting body handling the case.
The Palm Beach Post
Newspaper that interviewed Goldberger.
Myspace.com
Social media platform used by victims and the recruiter.
Harvard University
Affiliation of Alan Dershowitz.
House Oversight Committee
Implied by the footer stamp.

Timeline (3 events)

December 2004
A 16-year-old went to Epstein's house to 'work' after being asked if she needed money for Christmas gifts.
Epstein's House
Jeffrey Epstein 16-year-old victim
Unknown
Police search of Epstein's home and trash.
Epstein's Home
Unknown
Intimidation of victim's parents by private investigators.
Unknown
Victim's parents Private Investigators

Locations (3)

Location Context
7,234-square-foot waterfront home where evidence was found.
Origin of Jeffrey Epstein.
Location associated with the 20-year-old recruiter.

Relationships (3)

Jeffrey Epstein Client/Attorney Alan Dershowitz
Mr. Epstein... who has hired Harvard law professor Alan Dershowitz
Barry Krischer Employer/Spokesman Mike Edmondson
Mr. Krischer's spokesman, Mike Edmondson
Jeffrey Epstein Principal/Recruiter Unnamed 20-year-old woman
woman who told police she recruited girls for Mr. Epstein

Key Quotes (4)

"Prosecutors did not pursue charges against Mr. Epstein reflecting the age of the victims because they assumed a jury would view the girls not as victims but as promiscuous, untrustworthy, willing participants."
Source
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Quote #1
"Whether wealth buys a different standard of justice across the country ... the answer to that would, of course, be yes."
Source
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Quote #2
"He's never denied girls came to the house."
Source
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Quote #3
"Pimpin' Made EZ."
Source
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Quote #4

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (3,201 characters)

girls.
Prosecutors did not pursue charges against Mr. Epstein reflecting the age of the victims because they assumed a jury would view the girls not as victims but as promiscuous, untrustworthy, willing participants. The presumption is offensive.
Mr. Epstein, a 53-year-old Manhattan money manager who has hired Harvard law professor Alan Dershowitz and defense attorney Jack Goldberger, has denied knowing how old the girls were. But police interviews with five alleged victims and 17 witnesses under oath, as well as phone messages, a high school transcript and other items that police found from searching Mr. Epstein's trash and 7,234-square-foot waterfront home, provide evidence that he knew the girls were teenagers.
One girl couldn't show up when Mr. Epstein wanted because she had soccer. Another time, Mr. Epstein had to wait for his "massage" session because the girl he wanted was still in class.
Why didn't State Attorney Barry Krischer let a jury decide whether to believe the teenagers - including a 16-year-old who went to Mr. Epstein's house to "work" in December 2004 after being asked whether she needed to make money for Christmas gifts?
Prosecutors gave greater weight to the details Mr. Dershowitz provided about the girls in an apparent effort to assail their character. Mr. Dershowitz pointed out to prosecutors that some of the teenagers had talked on myspace.com about marijuana and alcohol use. The 20-year-old Royal Palm Beach woman who told police she recruited girls for Mr. Epstein has a Web page on myspace.com that features one girl using the name "Pimpin' Made EZ."
Although no charges of witness tampering have been filed, the parents of at least one of the teenage victims complained to police of being followed and intimidated by two men. Police determined that their vehicles were registered to two private investigators. Mr. Goldberger denied knowing anything about it.
Police also note in their reports that the state attorney's office offered Mr. Epstein a plea deal that would have placed him on probation for five years, allowing him ultimately to walk away with no criminal record at all.
I asked Mr. Krischer's spokesman, Mike Edmondson, why the case was referred to a grand jury instead of Mr. Epstein being charged and facing a trial before a jury. And shouldn't the victims' credibility be a factor to determine whether a crime's been committed, not whether a jury will convict? (After all, as Mr. Goldberger told The Palm Beach Post of Mr. Epstein, "He's never denied girls came to the house.")
Especially, I asked Mr. Edmondson to explain: Why shouldn't the public look at this case and think there are two kinds of justice - one for the wealthy and one for the rest of us? Mr. Edmondson said he could not comment on the case because it is active, but on the latter point, he offered, for the sake of "philosophical debate": "Whether wealth buys a different standard of justice across the country ... the answer to that would, of course, be yes."
But in this case, he said, "regardless of the battery of attorneys, the outcome would be the same. Every issue that was debated in public was debated in our office before this case
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