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In reply to the discussion: Alexander Acosta: "I was told Epstein 'belonged to intelligence' and to leave it alone." [View all]Kid Berwyn
(21,291 posts)45. Justice for Just Us
Alexander Acosta When serving as a US Attorney, former Secretary of Labor Acosta arranged a most lenient plea deal that served to protect child sexual predator Epstein from his accusers and justice.
https://www.vox.com/2019/7/10/20689416/jeffrey-epstein-alexander-acosta-labor-secretary-deal

The more complete story, courtesy of US Rep. Katherine Clark (D-Massachusetts):
Salon: After giving Epstein "deal of a lifetime," Alex Acosta tried to slash anti-trafficking program
July 10, 2019
Labor Secretary Alex Acosta, the former federal prosecutor who gave financier Jeffrey Epstein a light plea deal when he was first accused of sex-trafficking children, tried to cut a program that combats human trafficking by nearly 80 percent.
Acosta is facing numerous calls to resign after Epstein was charged with running a child sex trafficking ring in New York and Florida. Acosta previously served as U.S. attorney in Miami, where his office identified 36 underage victims and issued a 53-page indictment against Epstein in 2007. Rather than face life in prison, Epstein cut the deal of a lifetime with Acosta, as the Miami Herald reported, allowing Epstein to plead guilty to two state prostitution charges and serve just 13 months in county jail, where he was allowed to leave to work from his office six days per week. The deal also granted the well-connected billionaire who investigators believed hosted underage sex parties for affluent menimmunity for any unnamed potential co-conspirators. A federal judge later found the deal was illegalbecause Acosta did not consult the alleged victims of Epstein's crimes before agreeing to the deal.
Rep. Katherine Clark, D-Mass., says this was not the only time Acosta turned a blind eye to child trafficking.
Acostas Labor Department budget proposal for fiscal year 2020 proposed slashing the budget of the International Labor Affairs Bureau (ILAB) by nearly 80 percent. The agency is charged with combating human trafficking, child labor and forced labor in the United States and around the world.
This is now a pattern, Clark told the Guardian. Like so many in this administration Mr. Acosta chooses the powerful and wealthy over the vulnerable and victims of sexual assault and it is time that he finds another line of work.
Clark grilled Acosta about the proposed cuts during a hearing in April.
After Clark and Acosta both agreed that more needed to be done to combat trafficking, Clark pointed out that Acosta had also proposed a budget cut, almost 80 percent, 79 percent to ILAB where this work is done, bringing its budget from $68 million to just $18.5 million.
Im sure youve come prepared to justify this cut to us but it doesnt go unnoticed that this isnt the first time that youve ignored human trafficking, Clark said. Your office found that there had been a sexual abuse pyramid scheme that involved at least 36 underage girls. Mr. Epstein raped and recruited these girls and there is evidence that he allowed his friends to do the same.
Epstein should have been looking at a sentence of 366 years at a minimum. But thats not what happened, Clark continued. How can we expect you, the labor secretary, to fight for American workers if you couldn't even fight for these girls?
The proposed ILAB cuts were not the only Acosta decision to come under fire from human rights advocates. Earlier this year, the Labor Department rolled back Obama-era protections for some human trafficking victims and will now deny certain visas to victims of trafficking or other workplace crimes unless they first consult with another law enforcement agency like the FBI.
Erika Gonzalez, a lawyer for the Coalition to Abolish Slavery & Trafficking, told the Daily Beast that the new rule will force victims to jump through a lot more hoops, often after they have endured devastating ordeals.
What the Epstein case shows is when these policies around human trafficking are implemented, theyre not necessarily considerate of the impact on the victims themselves, Gonzalez told the site. With the Department of Labor asking the FBI to look into [workplace violations] first, theyre adding another barrier for victims of trafficking to access the services the Department of Labor has.
While the visa rule change will be implemented by the Labor Department, Democrats are fighting back against the proposed ILAB cuts. In their own 2020 budget proposal, Democrats called for expanding ILAB funding from from $68 million to $122 million.
Acostas future at the department remains unclear after House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer called for him to step down following Epsteins arrest.
President Trump, a longtime friend of Epstein, meanwhile tried to distance himself and Acosta from Epsteins alleged crimes Tuesday. Trump claimed he was not a fan of Epstein, despite previously having praised him as a terrific guy?? with a penchant for women on the younger side. Trump said that Acosta had done a fantastic job and insisted, I do hear that there were a lot of people involved in that [Epstein] decision.
Asked about the Epstein case on Tuesday, Trump had nothing to say about the victims but lamented the criticism of the prosecutor who let Epstein get off with a slap on the wrist more than a decade earlier.
I feel very badly actually for Secretary Acosta because Ive known him as somebody who works so hard and has done such a good job. I feel very badly about that whole situation, Trump said. But were going to be looking at that and looking at it very closely.
Source with links any incorruptible Assistant DA can follow:
https://katherineclark.house.gov/2019/7/salon-after-giving-epstein-deal-of-a-lifetime-alex-acosta-tried-to-slash-anti-trafficking-program
https://www.vox.com/2019/7/10/20689416/jeffrey-epstein-alexander-acosta-labor-secretary-deal

The more complete story, courtesy of US Rep. Katherine Clark (D-Massachusetts):
Salon: After giving Epstein "deal of a lifetime," Alex Acosta tried to slash anti-trafficking program
July 10, 2019
Labor Secretary Alex Acosta, the former federal prosecutor who gave financier Jeffrey Epstein a light plea deal when he was first accused of sex-trafficking children, tried to cut a program that combats human trafficking by nearly 80 percent.
Acosta is facing numerous calls to resign after Epstein was charged with running a child sex trafficking ring in New York and Florida. Acosta previously served as U.S. attorney in Miami, where his office identified 36 underage victims and issued a 53-page indictment against Epstein in 2007. Rather than face life in prison, Epstein cut the deal of a lifetime with Acosta, as the Miami Herald reported, allowing Epstein to plead guilty to two state prostitution charges and serve just 13 months in county jail, where he was allowed to leave to work from his office six days per week. The deal also granted the well-connected billionaire who investigators believed hosted underage sex parties for affluent menimmunity for any unnamed potential co-conspirators. A federal judge later found the deal was illegalbecause Acosta did not consult the alleged victims of Epstein's crimes before agreeing to the deal.
Rep. Katherine Clark, D-Mass., says this was not the only time Acosta turned a blind eye to child trafficking.
Acostas Labor Department budget proposal for fiscal year 2020 proposed slashing the budget of the International Labor Affairs Bureau (ILAB) by nearly 80 percent. The agency is charged with combating human trafficking, child labor and forced labor in the United States and around the world.
This is now a pattern, Clark told the Guardian. Like so many in this administration Mr. Acosta chooses the powerful and wealthy over the vulnerable and victims of sexual assault and it is time that he finds another line of work.
Clark grilled Acosta about the proposed cuts during a hearing in April.
After Clark and Acosta both agreed that more needed to be done to combat trafficking, Clark pointed out that Acosta had also proposed a budget cut, almost 80 percent, 79 percent to ILAB where this work is done, bringing its budget from $68 million to just $18.5 million.
Im sure youve come prepared to justify this cut to us but it doesnt go unnoticed that this isnt the first time that youve ignored human trafficking, Clark said. Your office found that there had been a sexual abuse pyramid scheme that involved at least 36 underage girls. Mr. Epstein raped and recruited these girls and there is evidence that he allowed his friends to do the same.
Epstein should have been looking at a sentence of 366 years at a minimum. But thats not what happened, Clark continued. How can we expect you, the labor secretary, to fight for American workers if you couldn't even fight for these girls?
The proposed ILAB cuts were not the only Acosta decision to come under fire from human rights advocates. Earlier this year, the Labor Department rolled back Obama-era protections for some human trafficking victims and will now deny certain visas to victims of trafficking or other workplace crimes unless they first consult with another law enforcement agency like the FBI.
Erika Gonzalez, a lawyer for the Coalition to Abolish Slavery & Trafficking, told the Daily Beast that the new rule will force victims to jump through a lot more hoops, often after they have endured devastating ordeals.
What the Epstein case shows is when these policies around human trafficking are implemented, theyre not necessarily considerate of the impact on the victims themselves, Gonzalez told the site. With the Department of Labor asking the FBI to look into [workplace violations] first, theyre adding another barrier for victims of trafficking to access the services the Department of Labor has.
While the visa rule change will be implemented by the Labor Department, Democrats are fighting back against the proposed ILAB cuts. In their own 2020 budget proposal, Democrats called for expanding ILAB funding from from $68 million to $122 million.
Acostas future at the department remains unclear after House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer called for him to step down following Epsteins arrest.
President Trump, a longtime friend of Epstein, meanwhile tried to distance himself and Acosta from Epsteins alleged crimes Tuesday. Trump claimed he was not a fan of Epstein, despite previously having praised him as a terrific guy?? with a penchant for women on the younger side. Trump said that Acosta had done a fantastic job and insisted, I do hear that there were a lot of people involved in that [Epstein] decision.
Asked about the Epstein case on Tuesday, Trump had nothing to say about the victims but lamented the criticism of the prosecutor who let Epstein get off with a slap on the wrist more than a decade earlier.
I feel very badly actually for Secretary Acosta because Ive known him as somebody who works so hard and has done such a good job. I feel very badly about that whole situation, Trump said. But were going to be looking at that and looking at it very closely.
Source with links any incorruptible Assistant DA can follow:
https://katherineclark.house.gov/2019/7/salon-after-giving-epstein-deal-of-a-lifetime-alex-acosta-tried-to-slash-anti-trafficking-program
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Alexander Acosta: "I was told Epstein 'belonged to intelligence' and to leave it alone." [View all]
AntiFascist
Sunday
OP
Israeli - many believe Ghislaine's father Robert Maxwell was involved in Epstein 's connection
womanofthehills
Monday
#30
Trump and Bondi may be providing cover for the deepest, darkest aspects of what they would call the Deep State...
AntiFascist
Sunday
#4
I'm not sure what you mean by that one specific other thing already well documented...
AntiFascist
Sunday
#9
Such a joke that Epstein was intelligence. Who do they think was fooled by that lie?
brush
Sunday
#21
Hah. I guess some are gullible enough. Epstein's so-called 'intel' status sure got him places.
brush
Monday
#40
What is distressing is that, due to the high-level corporate figures involved, that the corporate media won't touch this
AntiFascist
Sunday
#11
I had been noticing Epstein's facial expressions toward the 74-ish-year-old toddler
pacalo
Monday
#25
Mossad. Ghislaine Maxwell's father Robert Maxwell had connections to the Mossad. When he died
Gaugamela
Sunday
#24
Tucker Carlson claims 'everyone in Washington' believes that Epstein was a Mossad operative
dalton99a
Monday
#26
Blaming Mossad sounds like a far right ruse to distract us, and Carlson knows that it hints at anti-semitism...
AntiFascist
Monday
#29