Here’s why Trump’s Labor chief Alex Acosta won’t survive the Jeffrey Epstein scandal: CNN analyst

AlterNet logoOn Monday, federal prosecutors unsealed their indictment against multi-millionaire Jeffrey Epstein, who is accused of trafficking underage girls for sex.

Federal authorities say they seized nude photos of girls from his Manhattan townhouse, the New York Times reported.

Law enforcement found “hundreds perhaps thousands of sexually suggestive photographs of fully or partially nude females, safe containing compact disks with labels,” reported CNN’s Shimon Prokupecz.

View the complete July 8 article by Tana Geneva from Raw Story on the AlterNet website here.

Jeffrey Epstein taken into custody in New York on new charges related to sex crimes involving minors

NOTE:  Why are we posting this article? The Trump Administration’s Secretary of Labor, Alex Acosta, was the U.S. Attorney who cut the “sweetheart deal” for Mr. Epstein.

Washington Post logoJeffrey Epstein, the well-connected multimillionaire who was sentenced to just more than a year in jail to resolve allegations that he molested dozens of young girls, has been taken into custody in New York on new charges having to do with sex crimes involving minors, a person familiar with the matter said.

The precise nature of the charges — and how they differ from the previous allegations to which Epstein, now 66,pleaded guilty in 2008 — could not immediately be learned. Epstein attorney Martin Weinberg did not respond to a request for comment late Saturday. A spokesman for the U.S. attorney’s office in Manhattan, where Epstein is expected to appear in federal court this week, declined to comment.

The latest charges add a significant new wrinkle to the considerable political and legal saga surrounding Epstein. The wealthy financier — who counted among his friends President Trump and former president Bill Clinton — pleaded guilty in 2008 to state charges in Florida of soliciting prostitution in a controversial arrangement that allowed him to resolve far more serious federal allegations of molesting young girls.

View the complete July 7 article by Devlin Barrett and Matt Zapotosky on The Washington Post website here.