Deutsche Bank has agreed to pay $75 million to settle a class-action lawsuit filed by alleged sexual abuse victims of disgraced financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, lawyers have confirmed.
The settlement resolves a class-action suit filed by two women, referred to as “Jane Doe” against the banks in November last year.
Rakoff also ruled that the victims could pursue a claim that the bank “negligently failed to exercise reasonable care as a banking institution providing non-routine banking.”
David Boies and Brad Edwards, lawyers for the women who brought the case, said that the settlement—which needs to be approved by a federal judge—will see $75 million made available to more than 125 victims of Epstein who had previously received payouts from a restitution fund established by his estate following his death.
Dylan Riddle, a spokesman for Deutsche Bank, declined to comment on the settlement.
Women Accuse Banks of Enabling Epstein
“In recent years Deutsche Bank has made considerable progress in remedying a number of past issues,” Riddle said.Epstein, 66, died in a New York City jail in August 2019 while awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges.
He had been a client of Deutsche Bank from 2013 to 2018.
“Epstein’s sex-trafficking venture was not possible without the assistance and complicity of a financial institution—specifically, a banking institution—which provided his operation with an appearance of legitimacy and special treatment to the sex-trafficking venture, thereby ensuring its continued operation and sexual abuse and sex-trafficking of young women and girls,” lawyers for the women wrote in the Deutsche Bank lawsuit.
The lawsuit stated that Deutsche Bank aided Epstein in circumventing banking laws to “make profits from Epstein’s widely known sex trafficking venture.”
JPMorgan Chase is also facing a similar lawsuit bought by the U.S. Virgin Islands.
The Epoch Times has contacted Deutsche Bank and JPMorgan Chase for comment.