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United States News and Drama Banksters JPMorgan buy their way around the legal process in Epstein case with a $290 mil no-liability settlement

The Gays From LA

The Gays From LA Took My K.Flay Away
Registered Member
This what happens when you're an elite bank in bed with elite pedos: you just buy your way around the legal process with an "undisclosed settlement" and thus there are no consequences for you for having turned a blind eye to the human trafficking and sexual exploitation of children happening right under your knew.

If you're wondering why I call them banksters, this is why: because their money allows them to exist and act literally above and beyond the law. In the rare case that there is a lolsuit, they just pay the victims hush money and go about their marry way, enabling some other elite pedo whose sex criminal dealings they totally know nothing about.


JPMorgan Chase (JPM) reached a tentative $290 million settlement with victims of Jeffrey Epstein, one of two lawsuits alleging the nation's largest bank ignored warnings about its longtime client and facilitated his alleged sex trafficking.

The deal came roughly two weeks after JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon was asked by lawyers what he knew about the bank's dealings with Epstein. One of Dimon's former top deputies, Jes Staley, was also questioned under oath last weekend.

The case at issue was filed in November of last year by a woman who is listed anonymously as Jane Doe in court papers. She said she was sexually abused by Epstein and that Epstein paid her and other victims with money housed at JPMorgan. The suit sought class-action status on behalf of hundreds of alleged victims.

The bank agreed to pay $290 million, but the terms of the settlement still have to be approved by a Manhattan federal judge. There was no admission of liability by JPMorgan as part of the agreement.

"We all now understand that Epstein’s behavior was monstrous, and we believe this settlement is in the best interest of all parties, especially the survivors, who suffered unimaginable abuse at the hands of this man," a bank spokesman said.

Lawyer David Boies, who represented the victims, said “taken together or individually, the historic recoveries from the banks who provided financial services to Jeffrey Epstein speak for themselves. It has taken a long time, too long, but today is a great day for Jeffrey Epstein survivors and a great day for justice.”

 
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