Even from jail, Jeffrey Epstein manipulated the system | Miami Herald Page 13 of 17 Case 1:19-cv-03377 Document 1-1 Filed 04/16/19 Page 14 of 18 The girls who were abused by Jeffrey Epstein and the cops who championed their cause remain angry over what they regard as a gross injustice, while Epstein's employees and those who engineered his non-prosecution agreement have prospered. By Taking a page from Epstein’s legal team, lawyers representing Epstein’s victims hired private investigators and former police detectives to dig into Epstein’s life. Over the past decade, they’ve tracked down hundreds of people, including dozens of other potential victims; they’ve interviewed Epstein’s recruiters, bookkeepers, housekeepers, butlers, pilots and drivers. They’ve traveled around the country and the world, taking statements and sworn depositions, coaxing people to talk who had previously been too reticent to come forward. In short, they did what criminal prosecutors didn’t do. Some of the information they ’ve learned was given to federal authorities in New York. Edwards said those authorities have shown no interest in opening a new investigation focused on crimes he is alleged to have committed in that state, where he is listed as a level 3 sex offender, the most dangerous category, considered at risk to re-offend, records show. In New York, he has to register every 90 days. —— “. . r 4 ~~ = . > ” 3 . 4 eS Ps ae ' . . fo By i vm « = in ks ~ % oN 3 \, = of p : P XY ‘ ‘ -. “ é . + . a a vy f y ~ =, = ae, ' » q i ie: = } LEM yk ~™ | Virginia Roberts holds a photo of herself at age 16, when she says Palm Beach multimillionaire Jeffrey Epstein began abusing her sexually. Emily Michot [email protected] Holding abusers accountable In 2015, Roberts sued Maxwell for defamation in New York after Maxwell called her a liar in a news interview. The civil lawsuit was an effort by Roberts not just to clear her name, but an attempt to prove that Epstein and Maxwell operated an interna