This document is an excerpt from an OPR report analyzing the handling of the federal investigation into Jeffrey Epstein. It concludes that former U.S. Attorney Acosta, while not committing professional misconduct, exercised 'poor judgment' in resolving the case through a Non-Prosecution Agreement (NPA) with a state-based plea, citing his failure to complete investigative steps and agreeing to problematic terms. The report states that Acosta's decision was not found to be based on corruption or Epstein's wealth, status, or associations.
| Name | Role | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Acosta | U.S. Attorney |
Made the pivotal decision to resolve the federal investigation of Epstein, participated in drafting the NPA, had plen...
|
| Epstein | Subject of federal investigation |
Federal investigation resolved through a state-based plea, decision to not initiate federal prosecution benefited him...
|
| Epstein's defense counsel | Defense attorney |
Had a 'breakfast meeting' with Acosta in October 2007.
|
| Name | Type | Context |
|---|---|---|
| OPR |
Office of Professional Responsibility; evaluated conduct, conducted investigation, concluded subjects did not commit ...
|
|
| Department |
Refers to the U.S. Department of Justice, whose policy Acosta operated under.
|
|
| USAO |
U.S. Attorney's Office; managers had concerns about legal issues and witness credibility.
|
"OPR found that Acosta made the pivotal decision to resolve the federal investigation of Epstein through a state-based plea and either developed or approved the terms of the initial offer to the defense that set the beginning point for the subsequent negotiations that led to the NPA."Source
"OPR concludes that the subjects did not commit professional misconduct with respect to the development, negotiation, and approval of the NPA."Source
"OPR did not find evidence that his decision was based on corruption or other impermissible considerations, such as Epstein's wealth, status, or associations."Source
"OPR concludes that Acosta's decision to resolve the federal investigation through the NPA constitutes poor judgment."Source
"Acosta failed to consider the difficulties inherent in a resolution that relied heavily on action by numerous state officials over whom he had no authority; he resolved the federal investigation before significant investigative steps were completed; and he agreed to several unusual and problematic terms in the NPA without the consideration required under the circumstances."Source
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