020.pdf
ia-court-doe-no-3-v-epstein-no-9ː08-cv-80232-(sd-fla-2008) Court Filing 96.2 KB • Feb 13, 2026
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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF FLORIDA
CASE NO.: 08-CV-80232-MARRA/JOHNSON
JANE DOE NO. 3,
Plaintiff,
vs.
JEFFREY EPSTEIN,
Defendant.
____________________________________/
PLAINTIFF’S MEMORANDUM OF LAW IN
RESPONSE TO DEFENDANT’S MOTION FOR STAY
Plaintiff, Jane Doe No. 3, by and through her undersigned counsel, submits this
Memorandum of Law in Response to Motion for Stay, as follows:
INTRODUCTION
Defendant Jeffrey Epstein’s Motion to Stay this action is based on the incorrect premise that
there are criminal actions pending against him in Palm Beach Circuit Court, State of Florida v.
Jeffrey Epstein, Case No. 2006 CF 09454 AXXMB (Fifteenth Judicial Circuit, Palm Beach County),
and in the Southern District of Florida, In re Grand Jury, No. FGJ 07-103 (WPB) (S.D. Fla.). The
Motion to Stay as to the state court criminal action was rendered moot on June 30, 2008 when
Jeffrey Epstein entered a plea of guilty to violations of Florida Statute §796.07 (felony solicitation of
prostitution) and §796.03 (procurement of minors to engage in prostitution) in the state criminal
action. (See Defendant’s Notice Concerning Motion to Stay dated July 1, 2008). Jeffrey Epstein,
now an admitted sex offender, was sentenced to a term of imprisonment followed by community
control and sex offender registration.
As to the federal prosecution, Defendant’s mistitled ”Notice of Continued Pendency of
Case 9:08-cv-80232-KAM Document 20 Entered on FLSD Docket 07/18/2008 Page 1 of 9
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Federal Criminal Action,” which has now been unsealed, makes clear that there is in fact no criminal
federal action pending. This Notice discloses a confidential Agreement between the U.S. Attorney
and Defendant, the terms of which were triggered when Epstein began serving his state imposed
criminal sentence. Under the Agreement, according to the Notice, the U.S. Attorney “agreed to
suspend its grand jury investigation”, while “retain[ing] the right to reactivate the grand jury and
indict Mr. Epstein should he breach any part of the Agreement during its term, which runs for 33
months, beginning on the date Mr. Epstein began serving his sentence in the Florida Criminal
Action.” (The terms of this Agreement are also described in the notice letter to the victim Plaintiff, a
redacted copy which is attached hereto as Exhibit “A”.) Accordingly, as represented in Defendant’s
own filing, Mr. Epstein is not under indictment and the grand jury is not active in his case. There is
simply no pending criminal action, a necessary prerequisite for a stay under 28 U.S.C. §3509(k).
Additionally, the stay provision of 18 U.S.C. 3509(k) is limited to circumstances in which the
plaintiff is a “a person who is under the age of 18...” The Statute is therefore inapplicable in that
Plaintiff is not a minor, and was not a minor when she filed this lawsuit. The Motion is also
procedurally defective because (i) Defendant failed to comply with the Local Rules of the United
States District Court for the Southern District of Florida in that Defendant’s counsel neither
conferred nor attempted to confer with counsel for the Plaintiff as to the relief request prior to filing
the Motion to Stay; and (ii) in light of changed circumstances after the filing of the Motion to Stay,
the Motion fails to inform the Plaintiff or the Court of the grounds for the relief sought.
For the foregoing reasons, Defendant’s Motion to Stay must be denied in its entirety.
THE DEFENDANT HAS NOT DEMONSTRATED THAT
28 U.S.C. §3509(k) IS APPLICABLE AND A STAY MANDATED
Case 9:08-cv-80232-KAM Document 20 Entered on FLSD Docket 07/18/2008 Page 2 of 9
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As the movant, it is the Defendant’s burden to demonstrate that the requirements for a stay
have been met. He has not met this burden. 18 U.S.C. §3509(k) states as follows:
Stay of civil action. -- If, at any time that a cause of action for recovery of
compensation for damage or injury to the person of a child exists, a criminal action
is pending which arises out of the same occurrence and in which the child is the
victim, the civil action shall be stayed until the end of all phases of the criminal
action and any mention of the civil action during the criminal proceeding is
prohibited. As used in this subsection, a criminal action is pending until its final
adjudication in the trial court.
(emphasis added).
A threshold inquiry in determining whether to invoke the stay provision of 18 U.S.C.
§3509(k) is whether the plaintiff in a civil action is also the victim of a “criminal action . . . pending
which arises out of the same occurrence and in which the child is the victim....” (Emphasis
supplied). Given Jeffrey Epstein’s plea of guilty to the criminal charges in the state case and the
Agreement entered into with the U.S. Attorney, his argument that a stay of this lawsuit should be
granted because of pending criminal charges appears at this point to be specious.
Nonetheless,
Defendant Epstein represents to this Court in his “Notice Concerning Motion to Stay” dated July 1,
2008 that “the federal criminal proceeding . . . remains pending.” No further explanation is
provided.
The argument supporting this assertion is unknown to Plaintiff.
1
There is no indication in
the statutory language or elsewhere that 18 U.S.C. §3509(k) can be applicable in a situation, such as
here, where there is an agreement concerning federal crimes but there has been no indictment.
The notice letter attached hereto as Exhibit “A” further sets forth one of the conditions
imposed by Mr. Epstein’s Agreement with the U.S. Attorney, as follows: “Any person [including
1
The developments relating to the Defendant’s plea deal arose after the Defendant filed his Motion
to Stay. As a result, the Motion does not explain why a stay is justified under the present
circumstances. Plaintiff is at a disadvantage in filing this Memorandum in Response, and is left to
guess as the present grounds for the Motion. For this reason alone, the Motion should be denied.
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this plaintiff], who while a minor, was a victim of a violation of an offense enumerated in Title 18,
United States Code, Section 2255, will have the same rights to proceed under Section 2255 as she
would have had, if Mr. Epstein had been tried federally and convicted of an enumerated offense.”
Thus, not only is a necessary prerequisite for a statutory stay missing in that no criminal case is
pending, but a stay under 28 U.S.C. §3509(k) would be inconsistent with Mr. Epstein’s Agreement
with the U.S. Attorney, which contemplates civil claims by victims pursuant to federal law.
Defendant Epstein apparently contends that a stay should nonetheless apply for the next 33 months,
preventing for this extended period the civil litigation of these claims, to see if Mr. Epstein complies
with his Agreement. Needless to say, this would be absurd. It cannot be seriously argued in the
circumstances of this case that a stay under 28 U.S.C. §3509(k) is mandated because there is a
“pending” federal criminal action.
18 U.S.C. §3509(k) DOES NOT AUTHORIZE A STAY
OF A CIVIL LAWSUIT FILED BY AN ADULT PLAINTIFF
Even if there were a criminal case pending, which there is not, 18 U.S.C. §3509(k) would not
apply to the claim of a child victim who is now an adult. This Statute applies in situations in which a
child who has been the victim of sexual abuse is the plaintiff in a civil lawsuit at the same time
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