That Time Jeffrey Epstein Tried To Influence The Age Of Consent Laws In The US Virgin Islands

The Epstein Chronicles - Een podcast door Bobby Capucci - Donderdagen

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Jeffrey Epstein tried to manipulate the laws governing sex-offender oversight and age-of-consent enforcement in the U.S. Virgin Islands (USVI) — in a way that would benefit him personally. According to court filings and public reporting, a powerful figure in the territory’s government, Cecile de Jongh (then-First Lady of the USVI), allegedly approached Epstein for his approval on draft legislation intended to govern sex-offenders. She purportedly sent him a version of a proposed bill and asked: “Will it work for you?” Epstein then made edits favorable to his freedom of movement and privacy — for example limiting how the law would track or publicize who he stayed with, and how long he was abroad. That proposed legislation never became law; but the attempt itself shows how Epstein used political influence inside the USVI to try to reshape laws in his favor.The broader allegation is that this legal tampering was part of a quid-pro-quo relationship between Epstein and high-ranking officials in the territory, who reportedly accepted his money, tax-breaks, and other favors while looking the other way as Epstein ferried in under-age girls to his private island, Little Saint James. Through that influence over legislation and local governance, Epstein allegedly sought to water down oversight and monitoring — effectively giving him greater freedom to move girls in and out of the territory without drawing attention. This manipulation of the law helped create a permissive environment for his broader sex-trafficking and abuse network in the USVI.to contact me:[email protected] a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.

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