Multiple victims sue FBI for allegedly covering up Jeffrey Epstein's sex crimes
The plaintiffs allege that the FBI ignored evidence about the businessman's criminal behavior beginning in 1996.
Twelve Jeffrey Epstein victims filed a lawsuit against the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) for allegedly allowing and concealing the sex trafficking crimes committed by the businessman, who died in 2019. They allege that the FBI failed to take proper responsibility when investigating the case.
"As a direct and proximate cause of the FBI’s negligence, Plaintiffs would not have been continued to be sex trafficked, abused, raped tortured and threatened," the plaintiffs wrote. " Jane Does 1-12 bring this lawsuit to get to the bottom--once and for all--of the FBI’s role in Epstein’s criminal sex trafficking ring."
FBI ignored evidence starting in 1996
The victims allege that, in 1996, the FBI became aware of Epstein's criminal behavior after evidence was reported. However, according to the plaintiffs, the agency ignored them and decided not to carry out an investigation until a decade later, when Epstein admitted his guilt in a prostitution crime in Florida, for which he was sentenced to 18 months in prison:
After Epstein pleaded guilty, the FBI continued to receive tips and allegedly continued to ignore them, as explained by the 12 victims in the lawsuit, until he was arrested and imprisoned in 2019, shortly before committing suicide. Now, the plaintiffs are demanding compensation.