THE PALM BEACH POST © WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10, 2009 Women want sex plea deal unsealed Their attorneys will ask a judge to open Jeffrey Epstein’s records. By SUSAN SPENCER-WENDEL Palm Beach Post Staff Writer WEST PALM BEACH — When wealthy money manager Jeffrey Epstein of Palm Beach pleaded guilty last year to pro- curing teens for prostitution, his case detoured around local and state rules regarding the sealing of court documents. At a plea conference on the state charges, a judge, a defense lawyer and a pros- ecutor huddled at the bench and decided that a deal Epstein Epstein had struck with federal prosecus tors to avoid charges should be sealed, according to a transcript of the hearing. And so it was. But Florida rules of judicial admin- istration, as well as rules of the Palm Beach County court system, require public notification that a court document as been or will be sealed, meaning kept from public view. The rules also require a judge to find a significant reason to seal, See EPSTEIN, 4A > See past coverage of Jeffrey Epstein's sex scandals. PalmBeachPost.com/epstein EFTA00212841

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Public has right to know details of deal, Post attorney will claim D> EPSTEIN from 1A such as protecting a trade secret or a compelling gov- ernment interest. Yet no notification or reason occurred in Epstein’s case, according to court records. Epstein’s own attorneys, in federal filings, have referred to his confiden- tial deferred prosecution agreement with the US. attorney's office, struck in September 2007, as “un- precedented” and “highly unusual.” And it was “a significant inducement” for Epstein to accept the state's deal, observed the state judge who accepted his plea, County Judge Deborah Dale Pucillo. Epstein now faces at least a dozen civil lawsuits in federal and state courts filed by young women who said they had sex with him and now are seeking Attorneys for some of those women want his agreement with federal prosecutors unsealed and will ask Circuit Judge Jef- frey Colbath to do so today. hidden from public scrutiny. As a member of the public, EW. has a right to have these documents unsealed,” wrote former Circuit Judge Bill Berger, now in private practice and representing one of the women. The Palm Beach Post also will ask Colbath to unseal the agreement. Post attor, ney Deanna Shullman will argue that the public has a right to know the specifics of Epstein’s deal. According to various media accounts, Epstein moved in circles that in cluded President Clinton, Donald Trump and Prince Andrew. “International M of Mystery,” de- clared a 2002 New York mag- azine profile of Epstein. Epstein, 56, is in the Palm Beach County Stock- ade, serving an 18-month sentence after pleading guilty nearly a year ago to felony solicitation of prostitution and procuring teenagers for prostitution. He is allowed out from 7 a.m. to 11 p.m., escorted by a deputy, said Palm Beach County SheriffS Office Teri Barbera. During a Palm Beach Police Department in- vestigation, five vcs and 17 witnesses statements. They told. of of young women brought by his assistants to Epstein’s mansion on E] Brillo Way for massages and sexual activity, and then being paid afterward. At Epstein’s plea confer- ence last year, his attorney, Jack oldberger, and then-Assistant State At torney Lanna Belohlavek paper ic Pucillo in sidebar _ conference. Pucillo, who had left the bench nine years earlier, was filling in temporarily as a senior judge. According toatranscript, Goldberger told Pucillo that Epstein had entered a con- fidential agreement with the US. attorney’ office in which federal prosecu- tors brokered not pursuing cha ee him if he guilty i in state court. Pucillo then said she wanted a yep copy of the agreement filed in his case, and Goldberger concurred that he wanted it sealed. Belohlavek later signed off on it. an all-out inquiry into seal- ing procedures across the state following media re- ports in 2006 of entire cases being sealed and disappear- ing from court records. “The public's constitu- tional right of access to court records must remain invio- late, and this court is fully committed to safeguarding this right,” justices wrote in their final report. Epstein’s office on Tuesday referred any questions to Goldberger, who declined to comment. Pucillo also has declined to comment. @susan_spencer_wendel@pbpost.com EFTA00212842