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As early as 2006, JPMorgan executives were aware of Jeffrey Epstein’s payments to his young victims, and bank officials later joked that he was a “sugar daddy” to girls, according to a new complaint from the U.S. Virgin Islands government.
On Wednesday, the attorney general for the U.S. Virgin Islands filed an amended and unredacted lawsuit against JPMorgan, highlighting internal memos about the late sex-trafficker’s pursuit of teens and one compliance official’s declaration that Epstein “should go.”
In 2011, one senior JPMorgan official argued there was “lots of smoke” and “lots of questions” when it came to the pervy financier, the complaint alleges.
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