The Vault: The Epstein Files
The battle between JP Morgan and the U.S. Virgin Islands over Jeffrey Epstein became one of the ugliest institutional fights to come out of the Epstein scandal because both sides were effectively accusing the other of enabling him. The USVI sued JP Morgan by arguing that the bank was not merely a passive financial institution but a crucial piece of Epstein’s machinery, claiming it processed huge sums of money for him, ignored glaring red flags, allowed cash withdrawals and payments tied to his abuse network, and continued servicing him long after his sex-crime history was public. The territory’s theory was that Epstein’s operation depended on respectable financial plumbing, and that JP Morgan supplied it while collecting fees, protecting a wealthy client, and looking away from the obvious. JP Morgan denied knowingly helping Epstein’s crimes and fired back by pointing the finger at the USVI itself, arguing that territorial officials gave Epstein tax benefits, political access, licenses, permits, and room to operate on Little St. James while accepting his money and influence. That is what made the litigation so brutal: it was not just about Epstein, but about which institution wanted the court to believe the other side had dirtier hands. The USVI tried to frame JP Morgan as the bank that kept Epstein financially alive; JP Morgan tried to frame the USVI as the jurisdiction that let him build his island kingdom in plain sight. Discovery dragged major names into the fight, including former JP Morgan executive Jes Staley, whose relationship with Epstein became a central part of the bank’s internal blame game. In the end, JP Morgan agreed in September 2023 to pay $75 million to settle the USVI case, while admitting no wrongdoing, after separately agreeing to a $290 million settlement with Epstein victims. The settlement did not answer every question, but it did confirm the larger reality: Epstein’s operation was not just protected by private secrecy, but by a whole ecosystem of banks, lawyers, officials, enablers, and institutions that later tried to shove the blame onto each other once the paper trail became impossible to bury. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
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