JPMorgan is being sued separately by the Virgin Islands and a woman who says Epstein sexually assaulted her, both claiming the bank knew what was going on but did nothing. The complaint says the Department of Justice’s investigation of the territory “revealed that J.P. Morgan knowingly, negligently, and illegally provided the means of payment through which it paid recruits and victims and was indispensable to the operation and concealment of the Epstein trafficking scheme.” NPR mentioned.
CNBC reported that the agenda entry did not make it clear what the Virgin Islands intends to file for Page in the suit, adding that legal paperwork is still pending. Page wasn’t the only person who may have been affected by the JPMorgan Chase lawsuit, as the Virgin Islands was reportedly planning to subpoena Page’s Google co-founder. Sergey Brinex Disney CEO Michael Ovitz, Hyatt Hotel Group CEO Thomas Pritzker, and billionaire real estate investor Mort Zuckerman. Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan, is set to be impeached later this month.
The lawsuit accuses JPMorgan ignored evidence “for more than a decade because of Epstein’s financial footprint, and because of the deals and clients Epstein brought in and promised to bring to the bank.” It added that the bank allegedly “facilitated and concealed banking and cash transactions that aroused suspicion of – and were, in fact, part of – a criminal enterprise whose currency was the sexual slavery of dozens of women and girls in the Virgin Islands and beyond, the complaint states.