Her piece painted him as an enigmatic Jay Gatsby type, a boy from a middle-class family in Brooklyn who had scaled the rungs of the plutocracy, though no one could quite figure out how he made his money. It detailed dubious business dealings and mentioned that Epstein often had lots of beautiful young women around. But it left out Wardâs most important finding.
Twelve years later, in The Daily Beast, Ward wrote about how, in the course of her reporting, two sisters allegedly preyed upon by Epstein, as well as their mother, had spoken to her on the record. But shortly before the story went to press, Ward wrote, Vanity Fair editor Graydon Carter cut that section, saying, of Epstein, âHeâs sensitive about the young women.â (In a statement Monday, Carter said Wardâs reporting hadnât been solid enough.)
Over the last couple of months, Ward told me, sheâs started going through transcripts of the interviews about Epstein she did more than 16 years ago. âWhat is so amazing to me is how his entire social circle knew about this and just blithely overlooked it,â she said of his penchant for adolescents. While praising his charm, brilliance and generous donations to Harvard, those she spoke to, she said, âall mentioned the girls, as an aside.â
On Saturday evening, more than a decade after receiving a sweetheart plea deal in an earlier sex crime case, Epstein was arrested after getting off a private flight from Paris. He has been accused of exploiting and abusing âdozensâ of minor girls, some as young as 14, and conspiring with others to traffic them. Epsteinâs arrest was the rare event that gratified right and left alike, both because it seemed that justice might finally be done, and because each side has reason to believe that if Epstein goes down, he could bring some of its enemies with him.
Both sides are likely right. The Epstein case is first and foremost about the casual victimization of vulnerable girls. But it is also a political scandal, if not a partisan one. It reveals a deep corruption among mostly male elites across parties, and the way the very rich can often purchase impunity for even the most loathsome of crimes. If it were fiction, it would be both too sordid and too on-the-nose to be believable, like a season of âTrue Detectiveâ penned by a doctrinaire Marxist.
Epstein socialized with Donald Trump, who in 2002 described him to New York Magazine as a âterrific guyâ whom heâd known for 15 years. âIt is even said that he likes beautiful women as much as I do, and many of them are on the younger side,â said the future president. In 2000, a porter who worked next door to Epsteinâs Manhattan home told a British newspaper, admiringly, âI often see Donald Trump and there are loads of models coming and going, mostly at night. Itâs amazing.â
Epstein also hung out with Bill Clinton, who rode on his jet several times. Ghislaine Maxwell, a close companion of Epstein who has been accused of working as his procurer, attended Chelsea Clintonâs wedding in 2010, long after Epsteinâs exposure. Following his arrest on Saturday, Christine Pelosi, daughter of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, tweeted, âIt is quite likely that some of our faves are implicated but we must follow the facts and let the chips fall where they may.â
Among the mysteries of the Epstein case are why powerful prosecutors of both parties treated him with such leniency. Alexander Acosta, now Trumpâs labor secretary, was the federal attorney who oversaw the deal Epstein received in 2008. Though facing potential federal charges that could have put him away for life, Epstein was allowed to plead to minor state charges instead, an arrangement that was kept secret from his victims. He served 13 months in a county jail, where he got to spend six days a week in his office on work-release. In February, a judge ruled that Acostaâs teamâs handling of the case violated the Crime Victimsâ Rights Act. (Naturally, Acosta still has his job.)
After Epstein served his time, he had to register as a sex offender. Inexplicably, the Manhattan District Attorneyâs Office, under Democrat Cyrus Vance Jr., asked a judge to downgrade Epsteinâs sex offender status from Level 3, the most serious, to Level 1, the least. The judge, stunned, refused. âI am a little overwhelmed because I have never seen a prosecutorâs office do anything like this,â she said.
In a detention memo submitted on Monday, federal prosecutors outlined some of the evidence seized from a search of Epsteinâs house on Saturday night. It included hundreds â possibly thousands â of sexually suggestive photographs of girls who appear underage, as well as hand-labeled compact discs with titles like âGirl pics nude,â and, with the names redacted, âYoung [Name] + [Name].â
It seems, at first, astonishingly reckless for Epstein not just to allegedly keep such material, but to keep it in Manhattan, instead of, say, on his private Caribbean island. Maybe, however, itâs simply a sign of how protected he felt. âIn my mind there has always been this huge question mark: What is Jeffrey Epsteinâs leverage?â Ward said. If we find out, weâll know just how rotten our rulers really are.
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.