EPISODE · Jun 20, 2026 · 43 MIN
Mega Edition: How Deutsche Bank Avoided An Epstein Related Trial (6/20/26)
from The Vault: The Epstein Files · host Bobby Capucci
Deutsche Bank avoided an Epstein-related trial by agreeing in 2023 to pay $75 million to settle a proposed class-action lawsuit brought on behalf of women who said Epstein abused or trafficked them. The plaintiffs alleged that the bank knowingly benefited from Epstein’s trafficking operation by accepting him as a client in 2013—after his criminal record and status as a registered sex offender were already public—and then processing payments and maintaining dozens of accounts despite repeated warning signs. The case had been scheduled for trial in September 2023, where internal communications, compliance failures and the actions of bank executives could have been examined publicly before a jury. By settling before that date, Deutsche Bank eliminated the risk of an adverse verdict and prevented the litigation from reaching a full public courtroom accounting.The settlement provided substantial compensation to survivors, but it did not require Deutsche Bank to admit liability or formally concede that it had facilitated Epstein’s crimes. That distinction allowed the bank to resolve the financial threat while avoiding sworn trial testimony, extensive public presentation of evidence and a judicial finding about precisely what its employees knew. Deutsche Bank had already paid New York regulators a separate $150 million penalty in 2020 for significant compliance failures involving Epstein and other clients, yet that regulatory action also stopped short of a criminal prosecution or public trial. In practical terms, the bank was able to purchase legal finality: it paid hundreds of millions of dollars, acknowledged that accepting Epstein as a client had been a mistake, and escaped the far more damaging prospect of having its relationship with him dissected in open court.to contact me:[email protected]
What this episode covers
Deutsche Bank avoided an Epstein-related trial by agreeing in 2023 to pay $75 million to settle a proposed class-action lawsuit brought on behalf of women who said Epstein abused or trafficked them. The plaintiffs alleged that the bank knowingly benefited from Epstein’s trafficking operation by accepting him as a client in 2013—after his criminal record and status as a registered sex offender were already public—and then processing payments and maintaining dozens of accounts despite repeated warning signs. The case had been scheduled for trial in September 2023, where internal communications, compliance failures and the actions of bank executives could have been examined publicly before a jury. By settling before that date, Deutsche Bank eliminated the risk of an adverse verdict and prevented the litigation from reaching a full public courtroom accounting.The settlement provided substantial compensation to survivors, but it did not require Deutsche Bank to admit liability or formally concede that it had facilitated Epstein’s crimes. That distinction allowed the bank to resolve the financial threat while avoiding sworn trial testimony, extensive public presentation of evidence and a judicial finding about precisely what its employees knew. Deutsche Bank had already paid New York regulators a separate $150 million penalty in 2020 for significant compliance failures involving Epstein and other clients, yet that regulatory action also stopped short of a criminal prosecution or public trial. In practical terms, the bank was able to purchase legal finality: it paid hundreds of millions of dollars, acknowledged that accepting Epstein as a client had been a mistake, and escaped the far more damaging prospect of having its relationship with him dissected in open court.to contact me:[email protected]
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Mega Edition: How Deutsche Bank Avoided An Epstein Related Trial (6/20/26)
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