Friday, May 26, 2023 very projects f. . John is currently mitigated with a steel plate. The !king to rehabilitate sections of the road. heard on onal Park ehabilitatc mon Bay of Honey- ;outhwest. House, an t between !aches. nent fail- s threaten suit in a sections construe- aid Kim second area of erosion. The project will involve instal- lation of a mechanically stabilized earth retaining wall at one site, and installation of a rock face trapezoi- dal rockery wall at the second site. In response to questioning from St. John CZM Committee member Rafe Boulon, Campo-Allen said native stone will be used, and the rockery wall's facade was chosen with the viewshed in mind. Campo-Allen said there are known archaeological sites close to, but not at, the two failing sections of road- Friday, May 26, 2023 VIRGIN ISLANDS The Virgin Islands Daily News 3 44 Epstein's primary conduit for spreading money and influence throughout the USVI government was First Lady deJongh. — Court documents filed by JPMorgan Chase lawyers Court filing claims ex-first lady was Epstein's local fixer By SUZANNE CARLSON Daily News Staff A court filing by lawyers for JPMorgan Chase accuses former Vir- gin Islands first lady Cecile deJongh of facilitating Jeffrey Epstein's abuse of women and girls by helping him influence local politicians, and says deJongh even asked Epstein to suggest changes to the territory's sex offender "Epstein's primary conduit for spreading money and influence throughout the USVI government was First Lady deJongh" who worked as Epuein's local fixer for two decades. including throughout her husband John deJongh 1cs tenure as V.I. gover- nor from 2007 to 2015. according to the filing. DeJongh told Epstein which govern- ment officials to pay oft', and devised ways to jlaify his victims' presence in the territory by enrolling them at the University of the Virgin Islands so they could obtain student visas, according to th