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Woman who says Epstein groomed her for sex at 14 sues his estate
By Amy Julia Harris
New York: A New York woman who said Jeffrey Epstein groomed her for sex starting when she was 14 and then raped her a year later is suing his estate, one of many possible lawsuits it may face after his death by an apparent suicide.
While Epstein's death ended a federal criminal prosecution on child sex trafficking charges, his estate may still have to defend against civil suits. He was believed to have been worth at least $US500 million ($740 million).
Other women who have said they were victimised by Epstein said they planned to file lawsuits, and a new state law in New York that expands the amount of time that sexual abuse victims can sue could open the door to more claims.
Epstein, 66, died on Saturday after he hanged himself in a Manhattan federal jail where he had been held since his arrest in early July, authorities said.
In her filing on Wednesday, Jennifer Araoz said she was recruited by an unnamed woman outside her Manhattan high school in 2001 before meeting Epstein and giving him erotic massages once or twice a week in his Upper East Side townhouse.
In 2002, about a year after they met, Epstein pulled Araoz on top of him during a massage and raped her, according to the lawsuit. She did not visit his house again, she said.
His lawyers could not immediately be reached for comment.
Araoz also sued the women she said helped Epstein, including Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein's longtime confidante and the daughter of the late Robert Maxwell, a British publishing magnate. They also include three unnamed household staffers, including Epstein's secretary, his maid and a woman she called "the recruiter".
Dan Kaiser, Araoz' lawyer, said his client did not interact with Maxwell at the townhouse but included Maxwell in the suit because she was "one of the centre spokes of this conspiracy".
"It wasn't just Jeffrey Epstein," Kaiser said. Maxwell "helped maintain the ring and is responsible as a co-conspirator for the injuries that Jennifer suffered. There was a whole circuit of enablers around him, adults who permitted this to go on."
Maxwell's attorneys did not respond to a request for comment. She has emphatically denied past accusations that she participated in sex trafficking.
Araoz, 32, first told her story to NBC News in July, after Epstein was arrested at Teterboro Airport in New Jersey on the federal charges.
The new law, called the Child Victims Act, expands the amount of time that prosecutors can file sexual abuse charges and victims can sue for abuse that occurred when they were a minor.
Crucially, the law created a one-year "look-back window" during which claims that had already passed the statute of limitations could be revived.
Araoz's attorneys said they planned to target Epstein's assets in this suit, which include his properties in New York, Florida and the US Virgin Islands.
While it is possible that Epstein shielded his vast wealth in shell companies, Kaiser said, the real estate properties are "hard assets that are difficult to hide."
In her lawsuit, Araoz said she was groomed by the unnamed "recruiter"— whom she described as a brunette — outside Talent Unlimited High School, where she was in her first year.
Araoz, who was raised in modest means by a single mother in Queens, said she confided to the woman about the recent death of her father from AIDS. She and the woman met for several weeks before meeting Epstein in his house, located a few blocks from her school on the Upper East Side, the lawsuit said.
"Ms Araoz was a prime target for grooming by a paedophile like Mr Epstein," the suit said.
Araoz returned to the house alone, where Epstein gave her a tour of the palatial building, one of the largest private residences in New York City.
The lawsuit contained remarkable details about the home: many rooms had elaborate murals painted on the ceilings, and a trophy room was filled with exotic animals, including a stuffed giraffe.
In Epstein's master bathroom, prosthetic breasts had been mounted on the wall so that he could "look at or play with while in the bathtub," the lawsuit said.
Epstein led her to his "favourite room" in the house, a large massage room with a blue ceiling painted with clouds and angels on one of the upper floors.
Epstein then asked her to take off her top, began fondling her breasts and asked her to give him a massage. Soon, she was coerced into giving him massages once or twice a week, wearing only her underwear, the lawsuit said.
Epstein would masturbate and then flatter and reward Araoz with $US300 in cash, saying he wanted to help her, according to the lawsuit, which was filed in Manhattan.
In the autumn of 2002, the lawsuit said, Epstein instructed her to take off her underwear and climb atop him to give him a massage. He then raped her and told her "that she felt amazing, and that she did nothing wrong", according to the lawsuit.
She did not go to police after the incident. In an opinion piece for The New York Times on Wednesday, she said that for years she did not tell anyone about the abuses because she was intimidated by Epstein's insistence that she stay silent.
She said she was racked with shame and eventually dropped out of high school.
On Wednesday, Araoz said Epstein and the people around him "robbed me of my youth, my identity, my innocence, my self-worth".
Her lawyers said she had spoken to federal prosecutors who were preparing a case against Epstein.
The New York Times
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