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Palm Beach County’s handling of Jeffrey Epstein wasn’t corrupt, Florida investigation finds

The Florida Department of Law Enforcement has cleared Palm Beach state prosecutors and the Palm Beach Sheriff’s Office of any wrongdoing in connection with the lenient criminal prosecution and liberal jail privileges received by sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein.

FDLE investigators found no evidence that Barry Krischer, who was the Palm Beach state attorney when the case was investigated in 2005-2006, or his assistant state attorney on the case, Lanna Belohlavek, committed any crimes, accepted any bribes or gifts, or did anything improper in their handling of the case, according to a 24-page summary of the state probe into their actions obtained Monday by the Miami Herald.

FDLE’s criminal investigation was ordered by Gov. Ron DeSantis following a series of stories in the Miami Herald, beginning in 2018. The series detailed how Epstein received unprecedented federal immunity and served a short jail sentence in 2008. After the series, Epstein was indicted in New York in 2019 on new sex trafficking charges, but died a month later behind bars while awaiting trial. His death was ruled a suicide by hanging.

The state’s probe was two-fold: focusing on Krischer’s initial decision not to prosecute Epstein, a wealthy New York financier accused of molesting and raping more than a dozen middle and high school girls at his Palm Beach mansion; and on Palm Beach Sheriff Ric Bradshaw’s role, if any, in Epstein’s unusual accommodations while he was in custody in the Palm Beach county jail.

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In 2007, Epstein’s criminal case was taken over by the Miami U.S. Attorney’s Office, which compiled enough evidence to charge him in a 53-page sex crime indictment. However, Miami’s U.S. attorney at the time, Alexander Acosta, approved a non-prosecution agreement giving Epstein and an untold number of other conspirators immunity in exchange for Epstein agreeing to plead guilty to relatively minor state charges and serve what turned out to be a 13-month sentence in the Palm Beach county jail.

FDLE released three summaries of its investigation Monday — an examination of the state attorney’s office’s handling of the case; a look at allegations that Epstein sexually abused two women while he was on work release in Palm Beach; and an inquiry into whether anyone in the Palm Beach Sheriff’s Office committed any crimes or received any benefits for giving Epstein special privileges while he was incarcerated.

Investigative Summary: the state attorney's office by Casey Frank on Scribd

Dozens of deputies worked off-duty shifts providing security for Epstein.

While conceding that it “appears that Epstein received differential treatment” while in the custody of the Palm Beach Sheriff’s Office (PBSO), state investigators nevertheless concluded that Epstein met all the criteria for work release that were set by the county sheriff.

Notably, Bradshaw’s name is not mentioned in FDLE’s summary report, even though he had oversight of the program that allowed Epstein to leave his jail cell almost daily and go to and from his office and his home up to 16 hours a day, seven days a week.

FDLE said the two women who claimed they were coerced into having sex with Epstein when he was in custody would not cooperate with its investigation, leaving FDLE to conclude that there was insufficient evidence that Epstein abused them while he was on work release.

Investigators also noted that under PBSO’s work release program, off-duty sheriff’s deputies were mainly hired for Epstein’s personal protection, not to monitor him. They did not check on him when he was behind closed doors, nor did they monitor his computer or his email account, FDLE said without further elaboration.

Jeffrey Epstein
Jeffrey Epstein

“No evidence was developed to substantiate that any identified PBSO member engaged in criminal activity during the performance of their duties associated with PBSO’s housing and supervision of Jeffrey Epstein,’’ the report concluded.

When he was in jail, Epstein was housed in a special management area of the Palm Beach stockade, and later he had his own private cell in the jail’s infirmary. PBSO officials told FDLE that they gave Epstein his own separate housing because they believed Epstein “was at risk of being extorted by other inmates and/or extorting other inmates himself.” They also worried that he would come to harm in the general population “because PBSO personnel could not identify boyfriends or associates of his victims who were incarcerated with Epstein who might want to harm him.”

Investigative Summary: Work release by Casey Frank on Scribd

There’s no indication in FDLE’s report that PBSO gave these kinds of special considerations to other inmates who might also be extorted or harmed by their victims’ boyfriends. Nor did they find out how and why Epstein purchased two pairs of women’s size 5 panties from the jail’s store, as the Herald reported after reviewing his purchase log.

Epstein was also given access to a television that was installed in the special management area solely for his use.

FDLE said this was permitted because, under the terms of Epstein’s federal plea agreement he was to receive “benefits, privileges and rights of all other inmates,’’ which meant that he was in a cell that was unlocked at all times, affording him the ability to walk around the management area.

While there was also no proof of “undue financial influence” by Epstein, investigators noted that Epstein’s attorney paid PBSO $128,136 for the private security details, which were performed by 91 different sheriff’s deputies. The deputies, who were required to wear suits, were then paid for their work by PBSO.

PBSO deputies were required to register all visitors to Epstein’s office, the Florida Science Foundation, which Epstein set up for research and philanthropy. He hired several employees, including women, but there’s no indication whether any of those employees were questioned by FDLE. The log book of visitors to his office was destroyed by PBSO in accordance with Florida’s records retention laws, FDLE said.

The deputies assigned to Epstein told FDLE that their high-profile client followed all guidelines and was a model inmate. Toward the end of his incarceration, he was allowed to visit his Palm Beach home for several hours a day. FDLE noted that the deputies did not enter Epstein’s home or office, as this was not required under the sheriff’s policies.

“The public needs to know how it was possible that a ‘work release’ program and official oversight permitted Epstein to create multiple trafficking victims on the Government’s watch,’’ said lawyer Marci Hamilton, a national expert on child sex abuse and CEO of a group called Child USA.

Under state law, Florida’s county sheriffs are given the sole authority over work release programs for county inmates.

When he was state attorney for Palm Beach County, Barry Krischer handled the local prosecution of Jeffrey Epstein. That handling has been sharply criticized by some as too lenient, although an investigation by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement found no evidence of improper actions.
When he was state attorney for Palm Beach County, Barry Krischer handled the local prosecution of Jeffrey Epstein. That handling has been sharply criticized by some as too lenient, although an investigation by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement found no evidence of improper actions.

The investigation “leaves far too many questions unanswered and an open question in my mind how the departments and offices intend to reform their practices to ensure this never happens again,” Hamilton said.

FDLE, in its analysis of the state prosecution of Epstein, said that state prosecutors considered Epstein’s victims prostitutes under state statute at the time the case was investigated. (In 2016, Florida amended its laws so that minors coerced into prostitution can no longer be charged; those who take advantage of them can be charged.) The state’s case was further hampered by victims who were reluctant or too traumatized to testify, and the fact that they gave conflicting information.

Claim two women were abused during Epstein's incarceration by Casey Frank on Scribd

As an example of the “conflicting” accounts, prosecutors noted that one victim said that Epstein used a purple vibrator on her, while other victims said the vibrator was white.

But the report also said that neither Belohlavek nor Assistant State Attorney Daliah Weiss interviewed the victims themselves; they only reviewed audio and video interviews conducted by the lead detective, Joe Recarey.

Recarey, who died in 2018, said in earlier interviews with the Miami Herald that, initially, some of the girls were too frightened to admit what happened, or they minimized the abuse out of embarrassment.

The veteran detective with the Town of Palm Beach Police Department reinterviewed several of the girls and was able to build what he believed to be a solid case supported by physical evidence, such as phone records and message pads found in Epstein’s home that listed the girls’ names and phone numbers. He also had more than a dozen witnesses who supported the fact that young girls were coming and going from Epstein’s house at all hours of the day and night.

Recarey, after gathering all the evidence, wanted to charge Epstein with more serious crimes, while Krischer and Belohlavek “did not believe the charges were ‘viable’ to get conviction beyond a reasonable doubt at a jury trial,” FDLE said.

The state attorney’s office would not accept Recarey’s arrest warrants charging Epstein with two second-degree felonies. Instead, they elected to present the case to a state grand jury to review, an unusual step for a sex crimes case. At the same time, state prosecutors were in close communication with Epstein’s attorneys discussing a possible plea deal, which Epstein ultimately rejected.

FDLE found that Recarey identified three victims and seven witnesses to testify before the grand jury. The first grand jury date was canceled after Epstein’s attorneys dug up derogatory information about several victims, and state prosecutors were forced to regroup.

Recarey told the Miami Herald that Belohlavek wanted the case to “go away” and felt that the victims weren’t “victims” because they had accepted payment from Epstein. Under state law, then and now, it is a crime to have sex with anyone under the age of 18.

State prosecutors didn’t want to prosecute Epstein for sexually abusing or molesting any victims over the age of 15, believing that they would be considered by the jury to be prostitutes. This meant the victims who were raped by Epstein were not part of the prosecution’s case because those girls were 16 and 17.

It was unclear whether FDLE interviewed any victims or witnesses in connection with its probe.

Krischer told FDLE he could recall only one victim testifying for the grand jury because the other two were not able or willing. Belohlavek couldn’t recall many details of the grand jury proceeding, not even how many witnesses or victims she called. Grand jury files are secret in Florida, and FDLE was unsuccessful in its quest to obtain the records. Palm Beach County Chief Circuit Court Judge Krista Marx denied FDLE’s effort to access the grand jury records.

The grand jury indicted Epstein on one count of solicitation of prostitution, a third-degree felony. At the time, Belohlavek said she didn’t realize that the charge made it possible for Epstein to be released under a pretrial intervention program, which would have meant he wouldn’t serve any time in jail.

Meanwhile, by that time, even more victims were coming forward. Recarey reached out to the Miami U.S. Attorney’s Office in an effort to see that Epstein was sent to prison. Epstein hired a prominent legal team, including Harvard professor Alan Dershowitz, criminal lawyer Roy Black and former Whitewater prosecutor Kenneth Starr.

He also hired another attorney, Palm Beach criminal defense lawyer Jack Goldberger.

FDLE noted in its report that by hiring Goldberger, Epstein was able to push Weiss off the case, since Weiss’ husband was Goldberger’s law partner. Weiss voluntarily removed herself from the case, but not before she signed Epstein’s search warrant.

When police arrived on Oct. 20, 2005, to serve the search warrant at Epstein’s mansion, it appeared that he had apparently been tipped off because all the computers had been removed, leaving dangling wires as if it had happened hastily, Recarey testified in a 2010 deposition.

But FDLE found that Epstein had known about the Palm Beach police investigation since Oct. 4, so he could have had the computers removed long before the search warrant was executed.

Weiss told FDLE that she supported Palm Beach police’s charges, but she was “overruled” by Krischer and Belohlavek. Recarey felt that Epstein orchestrated Weiss’ removal from the case because she was in favor of tougher charges.

“No information was identified to indicate that Weiss’ removal from Epstein’s prosecution resulted in a more favorable outcome for Epstein,’’ FDLE said.

The FDLE investigation, first undertaken nearly two years ago, was overseen by Bruce Colton, the former state attorney for the Nineteenth Judicial Circuit, which serves Indian River, Martin, Okeechobee and St. Lucie counties. Colton retired earlier this year.

Democratic state Sen. Lauren Book, a child abuse survivor from Broward County who called for the probe, said that just because FDLE concluded that no laws were broken, doesn’t mean that wrongs weren’t committed.

“Floridians should be upset by this — and the state of Florida needs to put bumpers on this system to make sure this kind of thing isn’t allowed to happen again. Deep pockets shouldn’t mean better treatment.”