Western Michigan University Cooley Law School Tampa Bay campus Professor and former Miami-Dade Judge Jeffrey Swartz provided the following statement on July 10 regarding charges filed by federal prosecutors in New York against Jeffrey Epstein. Swartz offers insights regarding the ethics and legality of the plea deal reached nearly a decade ago in similar sex-related charges by Epstein and then-U.S. Attorney in Miami Alexander Acosta, who was serving as the Secretary of the U.S. Department of Labor at the time of this statement:
“The original Epstein plea agreement raised eyebrows and was quietly the topic of conversation in South Florida Criminal Law circles (both state and federal prosecutors and defense attorneys) when it occurred. Many questions were asked and few answers were given.
“Mostly this was a hands-on, top-down, decision by Acosta who was known as a Republican operative before his appointment as US Attorney. His involvement, at minimum, could be described as ‘unusual.’
“The Department of Justice should abandon Mr. Acosta, as should the President. He should face the consequences of his acts before the public and ultimately, if warranted, the Florida Bar.
“You cannot convict someone based upon reputation, but certainly one can be suspect as a result of the type of reputation Mr. Epstein had and still has. If his actions are as the SDNY (and the Miami Herald) has alleged, then it is abhorrent and deserving of the sanctions he faces. The victims in this case have a right to be heard and not shamed for what happened to them. They should have the right to face all of their abusers (if more than Mr. Epstein), no matter whomever they may be.”
On July 15, Alexander Acosta did indeed step down as Secretary of Labor.
- Posted July 17, 2019
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
Law professor comments on Jeffrey Epstein

headlines Grand Rapids
headlines National
- ACLU and BigLaw firm use ‘Orange is the New Black’ in hashtag effort to promote NY jail reform
- Judge accused of using ‘game or jail’ tactic, asserting abuse victims get ‘Super Bowl’ neurochemicals
- Prosecutor gets suspension for invading jury’s ‘inner sanctum’
- Lateral hiring bounced back in 2024, especially for associates in BigLaw, new NALP report says
- Refugee ban can’t be enforced against those who received conditional approval, 9th Circuit says
- ABA, more than 50 bar associations condemn ‘government actions that seek to twist the scales of justice’