EFTA00018384.pdf
efta-20251231-dataset-8 Court Filing 332.5 KB • Feb 13, 2026
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Subject: NYT; `Uncontrollable' Jeffrey Epstein: 5 Takeaways From Judge's Bail Decision
Date: Fri, 19 Jul 2019 23:03:13 +0000
'Uncontrollable' Jeffrey Epstein: 5 Takeaways
From Judge's Bail Decision
By Ben
Weiser
Mr. Epstein was willing to pay almost anything to stay out of jail. But the judge suggested he
could not curb his sexual fixation with minors.
July
19, 2019
[What you need to know to start the day: Get New
York Today in your Mbar"
A federal judge on Thursday denied Jeffrey
Epstein's request for bail pending his trial on sex-
trafficking charges in Manhattan. As a result, Mr.
Epstein, 66, a wealthy financier who owns a private
jet, luxury homes around the world and a private
island in the Caribbean, will have to spend months
in a Manhattan jail that typically holds accused
mobsters, drug dealers and terrorists.
The judge, Richard M. Berman of Federal District
Court, agreed with prosecutors that Mr. Epstein was
not only a flight risk, but posed a threat to others —
particularly teenage girls - if released.
The judge's strong rebuke of Mr. Epstein's conduct
and request to be allowed house arrest stood in
sharp contrast to how the authorities in Florida had
treated the financier in 2007.
f
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That year, he reached a widely criticized deal that
let him avoid federal prosecution on charges he
sexually abused and trafficked minors. Instead, he
pleaded guilty to state charges of soliciting a minor
for prostitution and ended up serving 13 months in
jail. He was allowed to leave the facility six a days
a week, ostensibly to work.
Here are five takeaways from Judge Berman's
opinion.
Mr. Epstein was willing to pay almost any price
to stay out of jail
Unlike so many people charged in state and federal
courts, affording bail was not a problem for Mr.
Epstein. He had offered to post a gargantuan bond,
secured by his $56 million mansion on East 71st
Street in Manhattan and his private jet.
"I am authorized to say to the court," one of Mr.
Epstein's lawyers told Judge Berman, "that
whatever bond you want Mr. Epstein to sign —
whether it's $100 million or an amount close to the
amount of the assets that we have provided — Mr.
Epstein is prepared to sign it."
Mr. Epstein provided the court with a one-page
summary of his assets that placed their value as of
June 30 at $559 million.
His lawyers said he would even pay for 24-hour
private security to assure that he did not flee. The
government argued he was seeking special
treatment, a "gilded cage," as one prosecutor put it
in court.
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The judge was concerned that if released, Mr.
Epstein would again abuse teenage girls
Judge Berman's decision portrayed Mr. Epstein as
sex offender who could not be trusted to curb his
sexual fixation with teenagers. He pointed to the
nature of Mr. Epstein's alleged crimes and his
propensity to commit them.
"The crimes Mr. Epstein has been charged with are
among the most heinous in the law principally, in
the court's view, because they involve minor girls,"
the judge
wrote.
A federal indictment charged that between 2002 and
2005, Mr. Epstein and his employees paid dozens of
underage girls — at least one as young as 14 years
old — to give him massages while nude or topless
at his residences in Manhattan and Palm Beach,
Fla.
During the massages, he engaged in various sex
acts with them, the indictment said. He also used
some of the teenagers to recruit other girls to abuse,
paying the "victim-recruiters" hundreds of dollars
for each girl they brought to him, the indictment
said.
"Mr. Epstein's alleged excessive attraction to sexual
conduct with or in the presence of minor girls
—
which is said to include his soliciting and receiving
massages from young girls and young women
perhaps as many as four times a day — appears
likely to be uncontrollable," Judge Berman wrote.
"It seems fair to say that Mr. Epstein's future
behavior will be consistent with past behavior," the
judge added.
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His immense wealth, private planes,
international travel and liquid cash made Mr.
Epstein a flight risk
Given Mr. Epstein's wealth, the risk of flight was
"exceptionally high," the office of Geoffrey S.
Berman, the United States attorney in Manhattan,
told the judge in court papers.
Besides his New York mansion, Mr. Epstein's asset
summary listed multi-million-dollar properties in
New Mexico; Palm Beach; Paris and the Caribbean.
Prosecutors have said Mr. Epstein's primary
residence is a private island in the United States
Virgin Islands.
Mr. Epstein's assets also included $56 million in
cash and more than $300 million in securities and
other financial instruments. Prosecutors also said
his sex registration documentation (stemming from
his 2008 guilty plea in Florida) listed no fewer than
15 motor vehicles, including seven Chevrolet
Suburbans, a cargo van, a Range Rover, a
Mercedes-Benz sedan, a Cadillac Escalade and a
Hummer.
Then there was a safe that the authorities said they
searched in Mr. Epstein's mansion in Manhattan, in
which they found more than $70,000 in cash, 48
loose diamonds ranging in size from approximately
one to 2.38 carats, and a large diamond ring.
The judge concluded that Mr. Epstein was "a
serious risk of flight" and "no conditions can be set
that will reasonably assure his appearance at trial."
The contents of Mr. Epstein's safe gave the judge
pause
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Inside that safe the authorities also found an
Austrian passport bearing Mr. Epstein's photograph
but another person's name, the judge noted. The
judge's opinion made it clear that prosecutors and
Mr. Epstein's lawyers disagreed sharply over the
passport's significance.
Prosecutors said the passport showed Mr. Epstein
knew how to obtain false travel documents or
assume other identities.
Defense lawyers told the judge that Mr. Epstein,
whom they described as "an affluent member of the
Jewish faith,"acquired the passport in the 1980s
"when hijackings were prevalent," in connection
with Middle East travel. The passport expired 32
years ago, the defense wrote, and "was for personal
protection in the event of travel to dangerous areas,
only to be presented to potential kidnappers,
hijackers or terrorists should violent episodes
occur."
In the back and forth, prosecutors noted that the
passport included numerous stamps showing it was
used to enter France, Spain, Britain and Saudi
Arabia in the 1980s. The defense said Mr. Epstein
was given the passport by a friend, the trips were
not his and he had never used it.
The passport was not the only unusual item found
inside Mr. Epstein's mansion. The authorities said
they found hundreds and perhaps thousands of
sexually suggestive photographs of fully or partially
nude females, including photos that appeared to be
of underage girls. Some of the photos were
discovered
in the locked safe.
The judge was concerned Mr. Epstein might try
to intimidate or buy off witnesses
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Judge Berman also made it clear he thought Mr.
Epstein might seek to silence witnesses against him
if he were granted pretrial release. "Mr. Epstein's
dangerousness is considerable and includes sex
crimes with minor girls and tampering with
potential witnesses," the judge wrote.
The judge highlighted the government's argument
that Mr. Epstein had tried to influence possible
witnesses against him when he wired $350,000 late
last year to two people close to him, shortly after
the Miami Herald started publishing an exposé
about him. The Herald's series quoted his accusers,
described how he had sexually abused teens for
years, and laid out the lenient plea agreement he
had negotiated with the United States attorney in
Miami.
The judge also cited evidence from prosecutors that
Mr. Epstein or his representatives had harassed or
intimidated witnesses in civil suits.
For instance, he quoted
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