Jeffrey Epstein: Top Democrats call for US labour secretary to quit - 5 minutes read
Jeffrey Epstein: Top Democrats call for US labour secretary to quit
The top Democrats in Congress have called for the US labour secretary to quit over his handling of a 2008 sex crimes case against Jeffrey Epstein.
Secretary Alex Acosta has come under scrutiny for a plea deal he negotiated while a US attorney that resulted in a light sentence for Epstein.
The rich financier was charged with new sex trafficking charges in relation to allegations from the 2000s on Monday.
Senator Chuck Schumer said Mr Acosta should be fired if he does not resign.
"It is now impossible for anyone to have confidence in Secretary Acosta's ability to lead the Department of Labor," Mr Schumer, the top Democrat in the Senate said during a floor speech on Tuesday.
"We cannot have as one of the leading appointed officials in America someone who has done this, plain and simple."
Epstein was charged on Monday with allegedly running a "vast network" of underage girls for sex, enticing them to visit his Manhattan and Florida mansions between 2002 and 2005.
He pleaded not guilty to charges of sex trafficking and sex trafficking conspiracy, and will remain in jail until his bail hearing on 11 July.
Senator Schumer's comments came a day after Speaker of the House of Representatives Nancy Pelosi tweeted after Epstein's preliminary hearing that Mr Acosta "must step down".
The California congresswoman said Mr Acosta "engaged in an unconscionable agreement" with Epstein and prevented young victims from "seeking justice".
Senator Tim Kaine of Virginia and Florida Congresswoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz are among other Democrats who have called on Mr Acosta to resign.
Mr Acosta had been a federal prosecutor in Florida more than a decade ago when he offered Epstein what the Miami Herald called the "deal of a century".
The deal ended the FBI investigation into whether there were more victims or more people who took part in the alleged scheme.
It allowed him to avoid a potential life sentence, and instead plead guilty to state charges that required him to register as a sex offender.
He was ordered jailed for 18 months, but was allowed to spend most of each day outside prison as part of work release programme.
During his Senate confirmation hearing for US Secretary of Labor in March 2017, Mr Acosta defended the deal.
"At the end of the day, based on the evidence, professionals within a prosecutor's office decide that a plea - that guarantees that someone goes to jail, that guarantees that someone register generally and that guarantees other outcomes - is a good thing," he said at the time.
Mr Acosta's office has said that he has no plans to resign.
The New York native taught mathematics and physics at Manhattan's private Dalton School. He moved into finance in 1976, working as an options trader for investment banking company Bear Stearns. Within four years, he was made a limited partner.
He then went on to found his own financial management firm J Epstein & Co, reportedly managing the assets of clients with more than $1bn (£798m) in net worth.
In 1996, he changed his company's name to The Financial Trust Co and based it in the US Virgin Islands for tax purposes.
His lavish lifestyle, along with the secrecy surrounding his client list and other details of his business, earned Epstein a reputation as a mysterious moneyman.
Reports of his current wealth vary, with his Virgin Islands-based firm generating no public records.
According to Florida court records, cited by NBC News, Epstein also maintains properties in the US Virgin Islands, Paris and Mexico.
The financier rubbed elbows with many of America's rich an powerful, including former president Bill Clinton, President Donald Trump and Prince Andrew.
In a 2002 interview, Mr Trump called Epstein a "terrific guy" who he had known for 15 years.
"He's a lot of fun to be with," the president said at the time. "It is even said that he likes beautiful women as much as I do, and many of them are on the younger side."
On Tuesday, White House adviser Kellyanne Conway said that Mr Trump "hasn't talked to or had contact with Epstein in years".
On Monday, a spokesman for Mr Clinton said he "knows nothing about the terrible crimes".
Source: BBC News
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Keywords:
Jeffrey Epstein • Democratic Party (United States) • Democratic Party (United States) • United States Congress • United States Secretary of State • Sex and the law • Jeffrey Epstein • Plea bargain • United States Attorney • Human trafficking • United States Senate • Chuck Schumer • Alexander Acosta • Alexander Acosta • United States Department of Labor • Chuck Schumer • Democratic Party (United States) • United States Senate • Manhattan • Florida • Acquittal • Criminal charge • Human trafficking • Human trafficking • Conspiracy (criminal) • Prison • Bail • Chuck Schumer • Nancy Pelosi • Richard Epstein • Preliminary hearing • California • United States Congress • Richard Epstein • United States Senate • Tim Kaine • Virginia • Florida • United States House of Representatives • Debbie Wasserman Schultz • Democratic Party (United States) • Jim Acosta • Jim Acosta • United States Attorney • Florida • Richard Epstein • Miami Herald • Federal Bureau of Investigation • Federal Bureau of Investigation • Plea • Criminal charge • Work release • Advice and consent • Alexander Acosta • Prosecutor • Mathematics • Physics • Manhattan • Dalton School • Finance • Option (finance) • Investment banking • Company • Bear Stearns • Limited partnership • Corporate finance • Business • Company • Asset • Customer • Net worth • Company • Finance • Trust law • Company • United States Virgin Islands • Tax • Business • Wealth in the United States • Virgin Islands • Business • Public records • Florida • Public records • NBC News • United States Virgin Islands • Paris • Mexico • Bill Clinton • Donald Trump • Prince Andrew, Duke of York • Donald Trump • President of the United States • Time (magazine) • White House • Kellyanne Conway • Donald Trump •
The top Democrats in Congress have called for the US labour secretary to quit over his handling of a 2008 sex crimes case against Jeffrey Epstein.
Secretary Alex Acosta has come under scrutiny for a plea deal he negotiated while a US attorney that resulted in a light sentence for Epstein.
The rich financier was charged with new sex trafficking charges in relation to allegations from the 2000s on Monday.
Senator Chuck Schumer said Mr Acosta should be fired if he does not resign.
"It is now impossible for anyone to have confidence in Secretary Acosta's ability to lead the Department of Labor," Mr Schumer, the top Democrat in the Senate said during a floor speech on Tuesday.
"We cannot have as one of the leading appointed officials in America someone who has done this, plain and simple."
Epstein was charged on Monday with allegedly running a "vast network" of underage girls for sex, enticing them to visit his Manhattan and Florida mansions between 2002 and 2005.
He pleaded not guilty to charges of sex trafficking and sex trafficking conspiracy, and will remain in jail until his bail hearing on 11 July.
Senator Schumer's comments came a day after Speaker of the House of Representatives Nancy Pelosi tweeted after Epstein's preliminary hearing that Mr Acosta "must step down".
The California congresswoman said Mr Acosta "engaged in an unconscionable agreement" with Epstein and prevented young victims from "seeking justice".
Senator Tim Kaine of Virginia and Florida Congresswoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz are among other Democrats who have called on Mr Acosta to resign.
Mr Acosta had been a federal prosecutor in Florida more than a decade ago when he offered Epstein what the Miami Herald called the "deal of a century".
The deal ended the FBI investigation into whether there were more victims or more people who took part in the alleged scheme.
It allowed him to avoid a potential life sentence, and instead plead guilty to state charges that required him to register as a sex offender.
He was ordered jailed for 18 months, but was allowed to spend most of each day outside prison as part of work release programme.
During his Senate confirmation hearing for US Secretary of Labor in March 2017, Mr Acosta defended the deal.
"At the end of the day, based on the evidence, professionals within a prosecutor's office decide that a plea - that guarantees that someone goes to jail, that guarantees that someone register generally and that guarantees other outcomes - is a good thing," he said at the time.
Mr Acosta's office has said that he has no plans to resign.
The New York native taught mathematics and physics at Manhattan's private Dalton School. He moved into finance in 1976, working as an options trader for investment banking company Bear Stearns. Within four years, he was made a limited partner.
He then went on to found his own financial management firm J Epstein & Co, reportedly managing the assets of clients with more than $1bn (£798m) in net worth.
In 1996, he changed his company's name to The Financial Trust Co and based it in the US Virgin Islands for tax purposes.
His lavish lifestyle, along with the secrecy surrounding his client list and other details of his business, earned Epstein a reputation as a mysterious moneyman.
Reports of his current wealth vary, with his Virgin Islands-based firm generating no public records.
According to Florida court records, cited by NBC News, Epstein also maintains properties in the US Virgin Islands, Paris and Mexico.
The financier rubbed elbows with many of America's rich an powerful, including former president Bill Clinton, President Donald Trump and Prince Andrew.
In a 2002 interview, Mr Trump called Epstein a "terrific guy" who he had known for 15 years.
"He's a lot of fun to be with," the president said at the time. "It is even said that he likes beautiful women as much as I do, and many of them are on the younger side."
On Tuesday, White House adviser Kellyanne Conway said that Mr Trump "hasn't talked to or had contact with Epstein in years".
On Monday, a spokesman for Mr Clinton said he "knows nothing about the terrible crimes".
Source: BBC News
Powered by NewsAPI.org
Keywords:
Jeffrey Epstein • Democratic Party (United States) • Democratic Party (United States) • United States Congress • United States Secretary of State • Sex and the law • Jeffrey Epstein • Plea bargain • United States Attorney • Human trafficking • United States Senate • Chuck Schumer • Alexander Acosta • Alexander Acosta • United States Department of Labor • Chuck Schumer • Democratic Party (United States) • United States Senate • Manhattan • Florida • Acquittal • Criminal charge • Human trafficking • Human trafficking • Conspiracy (criminal) • Prison • Bail • Chuck Schumer • Nancy Pelosi • Richard Epstein • Preliminary hearing • California • United States Congress • Richard Epstein • United States Senate • Tim Kaine • Virginia • Florida • United States House of Representatives • Debbie Wasserman Schultz • Democratic Party (United States) • Jim Acosta • Jim Acosta • United States Attorney • Florida • Richard Epstein • Miami Herald • Federal Bureau of Investigation • Federal Bureau of Investigation • Plea • Criminal charge • Work release • Advice and consent • Alexander Acosta • Prosecutor • Mathematics • Physics • Manhattan • Dalton School • Finance • Option (finance) • Investment banking • Company • Bear Stearns • Limited partnership • Corporate finance • Business • Company • Asset • Customer • Net worth • Company • Finance • Trust law • Company • United States Virgin Islands • Tax • Business • Wealth in the United States • Virgin Islands • Business • Public records • Florida • Public records • NBC News • United States Virgin Islands • Paris • Mexico • Bill Clinton • Donald Trump • Prince Andrew, Duke of York • Donald Trump • President of the United States • Time (magazine) • White House • Kellyanne Conway • Donald Trump •