HomeCrimeDeutsche Bank Officials Saw Victims At Jeffrey Epstein's Home: Boies

Deutsche Bank Officials Saw Victims At Jeffrey Epstein’s Home: Boies

 

Deutsche Bank Officials Saw Victims At Jeffrey Epstein’s Home: Boies’ Deutsche Bank officials attended meetings inside Jeffrey Epstein’s home “when victims were present,” lawyers for those survivors alleged in a blistering legal brief.

Deutsche Bank Officials Saw Victims At Jeffrey Epstein's Home: Boies

Deutsche Bank Officials Saw Victims At Jeffrey Epstein’s Home: Boies

The brief, written by prominent attorney David Boies, names the names of the Deutsche personnel whom he claims interacted with the victims and raised questions about Epstein’s $ex trafficking.

“Epstein had been running the venture with JP Morgan, where Paul Morris ‘had been a member of the team servicing Epstein’s account’ and was aware of the venture,” the filing states. “In November 2012, Morris joined Deutsche Bank, ‘bringing with him the knowledge he had acquired at JP Morgan about Epstein’s $ex-trafficking venture and conspiracy’ — beyond the knowledge that Deutsche Bank already had at this time due to Epstein’s widely publicized conviction and conduct.”

READ: Gregory Whitney Disappears After Threatening To Kill Himself, Others

In November, Epstein victims filed multiple class action lawsuits against Deutsche and JPMorgan, calling them “complicit” in the dead predator’s crimes. Both of the banks have tried to dismiss the lawsuits, and Deutsche recently argued that a settlement agreement signed by one of the victims absolves them of liability.

The survivors’ lawyers said that Deutsche cannot “hide” behind that deal.

“Even if the court considered the settlement agreement at this stage, its plain language demonstrates that the parties did not intend for the release to benefit Deutsche Bank,” the legal brief says.

In their complaint, the survivors accuse Deutsche of violating the Trafficking Victims Protection Act, and the German lender denies their allegations, which the bank claims are too amorphous to stand up in court.

Attorneys for the survivors claim that the bank knew from the earliest stages of its relationship with Epstein roughly a decade ago.

“Beginning around November 2013, Epstein began using Deutsche Bank to send sizable wire transfers to his $ex-trafficking co-conspirators, whose names had been made public years earlier,” the brief states. “Further, in 2014 and into 2015, an internal department alerted Deutsche Bank management about ‘Epstein’s $ex trafficking,’ but management chose to ignore it.”

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