Legal
Deutsche Bank Agrees $75 Million Settlement Linked To Epstein-Related Suit – Report

The controversy around the late Jeffrey Epstein, a disgraced financier accused of running a sex-trafficking ring and who died in 2019 in jail awaiting trial, continues to cause headlines. The German bank has reportedly agreed on a legal settlement to resolve a proposed class-action lawsuit.
Deutsche Bank
has agreed to pay $75 million to settle a class-action lawsuit
alleging that Germany’s largest bank facilitated Jeffrey
Epstein’s sex-trafficking ring, the Wall Street Journal
quoted lawyers. who sued the bank on behalf of alleged victims,
as saying.
A woman who is listed anonymously as Jane Doe in court papers
filed the suit last year in New York on behalf of herself and
other accusers of the disgraced financier, the publication said.
She claimed that Deutsche Bank did business with Epstein for five
years while knowing that he was using money in his bank accounts
to further his sex-trafficking activity.
The Doe plaintiff alleged that she was sexually abused by Epstein
and trafficked to his friends from about 2003 until about 2018;
she was also paid in cash for sex acts. The lawsuit alleged that
Deutsche Bank ignored red flags including payments to numerous
young women. The settlement is expected to compensate dozens of
accusers.
Deutsche Bank declined to comment on the WSJ story when
contacted by Family Wealth Report. A spokesperson
referred, however, to a statement the bank made in 2020: “We
acknowledge our error of onboarding Epstein in 2013 and the
weaknesses in our processes, and have learnt from our mistakes
and shortcomings. In recent years Deutsche Bank has made
considerable progress in remedying a number of past issues,
including investing more than €4 billion [$4.34 billion] to
bolster our controls, as well as training and operational
processes. Further, we have increased the size of our global
Anti-Financial Crime team to more than 1,900 employees.”
Epstein died by suicide in a federal jail in New York in 2019
while awaiting trial for sex-trafficking charges.
The bank didn’t admit wrongdoing as part of the settlement,
according to people familiar with the matter, the WSJ
added.
The Epstein scandal has affected a number of banks. For example,
in November 2021 Jes Staley stepped down as chief executive of UK
banking group Barclays amid pressure from
regulators about how he described his relationship with
Epstein.
The UK’s Financial Conduct Authority and the Prudential
Regulation Authority – the two principal watchdogs in the UK –
told Barclays and Staley their preliminary conclusions from
their investigation into the matter. Staley was also a
senior figure at JP
Morgan before moving to Barclays. JP Morgan has accused
Staley, its former head of private banking, of "intentional and
outrageous conduct" in concealing information about Epstein, with
whom he had been friends. The lawsuit seeks to force Staley to
return eight years of compensation and reimburse JP Morgan for
damages the company might incur in the other lawsuits, a report
had said.
Staley has reportedly acknowledged having been friendly with
Epstein, but expressed regret for their relationship and denied
knowing about the financier's alleged crimes. As subsequently
reported in late April, Staley said in court filings that JP
Morgan was using him as a “public relations shield” in its legal
battle over working with Epstein and trying to “deflect blame”
from its failures.