Patel Says Acosta’s Initial Handling Was ‘Original Sin’ In Epstein Case

The “original sin” in the probe of sex offender Jeffrey Epstein was the way that the federal prosecutor at the time, Alex Acosta, first handled the case in 2006, FBI Director Kash Patel said during his testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Tuesday, Axios reported.
Patel told the committee that “the original case involved a very limited search warrant, or set of search warrants, and didn’t take as much investigatory material it should have seized,” emphasizing that if he were the FBI director then, “it wouldn’t have happened.”
In 2008, as a federal prosecutor, Acosta oversaw a highly controversial non-prosecution agreement by which Epstein was eventually sentenced to serve 18 months in a Florida state prison, according to Axios.
Patel pointed out that “Acosta allowed Epstein to enter, in 2008, a plea and non-prosecution agreement, which then the courts issued mandates and protective orders, legally prohibiting anyone from ever seeing that material ever again without the permission of the court.”
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