HOUSE OVERSIGHT 023129 "As additional details about Epstein's crimes have emerged, it is clear to me that we should have pushed for much harsher terms," Sloman wrote. "That said, some have mistakenly suggested that our office kowtowed to Epstein's high-priced defense lawyers or, worse, that his lawyers corrupted or intimidated us into submission. ... Nothing could be further from the truth." Sloman did not directly address the chief complaint brought by Epstein's victims, who are now in their late 20S and early 30s. Those who spoke to the Herald said they felt betrayed by federal prosecutors, who sealed the non-prosecution agreement from public view so that they wouldn't find out about it before he was sentenced. It would be almost a year before they were successful in having it unsealed. By then, it was too late to try to derail it. They allege, in a federal lawsuit filed against the government, that prosecutors deliberately kept the deal secret — in violation of federal law — to prevent them from appearing at Epstein's sentencing to possibly undo the deal. Nor did Sloman address why prosecutors also gave immunity to a number of Epstein's co- conspirators, who have never been identified. "They cut a deal which they have to know was a failure," said Marci Hamilton, a law professor at the University of Pennsylvania and executive director of Child USA, which advocates for children's civil liberties. " They kept it secret and they didn't charge the co-conspirators. The horror of this is if you don't hold all the 'Johns' accountable, then it doesn't stop. This case involved multiple girls, multiple men, multiple recruiters, multiple times and he recruited girls to get other girls. That's a trafficking organization." Acosta has not commented since 2011, when he defended his decisions in a publicly issued letter that can be found in the federal court file. In it, he described what he called a "yearlong assault" on prosecutors by Epstein's "army of