Lawsuit exposed deficiencies in JPMorgan’s oversight of clients even as employees urged bank to end work with Epstein.
JPMorgan Chase has reached settlements with the US Virgin Islands (USVI) and former executive Jes Staley to resolve lawsuits over sex trafficking by the disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein, largely resolving a scandal that has weighed on the largest US bank for months.
The settlements conclude the final pieces of litigation in a saga involving women who said Epstein sexually abused them, and which embroiled some of the world’s most powerful figures in finance and business.
JPMorgan said its $75m settlement with the USVI includes $30m to support charitable organizations, $25m to strengthen law enforcement to combat human trafficking, and $20m for attorney’s fees.
Terms of the bank’s settlement with Staley are confidential.
In June, JPMorgan agreed to pay $290m to resolve claims by dozens of Epstein’s accusers.
Epstein had been a JPMorgan client from 1998 until 2013 when the bank terminated their relationship.
“While the settlement does not involve admissions of liability, the firm deeply regrets any association with this man, and would never have continued doing business with him if it believed he was using the bank in any way to commit his heinous crimes,” JPMorgan said.
USVI Attorney General Ariel Smith said the settlement was a “historic victory for survivors and for state enforcement, and it should sound the alarm on Wall Street about banks’ responsibilities under the law to detect and prevent human trafficking”.
Staley’s lawyers did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
A trial had been scheduled for October 23.
Epstein died in August 2019 in a Manhattan jail cell while awaiting trial for sex trafficking. New York City’s medical examiner called his death a suicide.
Deficiencies in oversight
In July, USVI said it wanted JPMorgan to pay at least $190m, including a $150m civil fine, and possibly much more to resolve the lawsuit.
USVI said JPMorgan kept Epstein as a valued client even after his 2006 arrest on prostitution charges and related guilty plea two years later, and said some bank officials stayed in touch with him long after he was dismissed.
Both lawsuits exposed deficiencies in JPMorgan’s oversight of clients, including many communications where employees urged the bank to stop doing business with Epstein.
Tuesday’s settlement resolves a rare public relations problem for Jamie Dimon, who has been JPMorgan’s CEO since 2006.
Dimon testified under oath in May that he had barely heard of Epstein until the financier’s July 2019 arrest.
JPMorgan had argued that the USVI was also to blame for enabling Epstein’s sex trafficking by giving him tax incentives and waiving monitoring requirements, in exchange for cash and gifts to local officials including a former first lady.
Epstein had owned two private islands within the territory, including one he allegedly bought to keep onlookers from spying on his misconduct on the other.
Last November, USVI reached a settlement of at least $105m with Epstein’s estate.
Deutsche Bank, where Epstein was a client from 2013 to 2018, in May reached a $75m settlement with women who said Epstein sexually abused them.
Staley left JPMorgan in 2013 and later spent six years as Barclays’s chief executive.
JPMorgan had wanted him to cover its losses in its other two lawsuits, and have him forfeit eight years of pay.
Staley has expressed regret for his friendship with Epstein and denied knowing about his sex trafficking.