Epstein's accountant and lawyer reveal DOJ never questioned them about disgraced financier's crimes
A former accountant and lawyer for the disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein both told the House Oversight Committee earlier this month that the Department of Justice had never interviewed them about...
By Fox News · Fox News
A former accountant and lawyer for the disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein both told the House Oversight Committee earlier this month that the Department of Justice had never interviewed them about Epstein’s crimes. "I’ve never been questioned by any government authority," Epstein's ex-accountant Richard Kahn said. He noted that he had received a grand jury subpoena from the Southern District of New York and from the U.S. Virgin Island’s Department of Justice for documents about Epstein’s property. "Both of the requests were for the same thing. They were asking for Epstein’s estate documents. They wanted to see his will and his 1953 trust," Kahn said. HOUSE OVERSIGHT SUBPOENAS AG BONDI IN PROBE OF EPSTEIN CASE 'MISMANAGEMENT' Similarly, Darren Indyke said he had never been asked about Epstein’s dealings. "Personally no," Indyke told the Oversight Committee. "I don't believe I have." When asked if that surprised him, Indyke told investigators he believed it was consistent with the scope of his employment. "Given my role as a transactional attorney for Mr. Epstein, no," Indyke said. Epstein, a former financier with a formidable social circle, died in 2019 while imprisoned on charges of sex trafficking minors. His death, which was ruled a suicide, left behind questions about whether Epstein had facilitated illegal sexual encounters for some of his contacts and prompted public demands for accountability for possible accomplices. Like many public figures, Kahn and Indyke both appear in the Epstein Files — troves of documents released by the DOJ in compliance with the Epstein Files Transparency Act. HOUSE OVERSIGHT COMMITTEE CALLS BILL GATES, LEON BLACK TO TESTIFY OVER JEFFREY EPSTEIN TIES Their communications in the files do not, on their own, implicate any wrongdoing and neither does their appearance before the House Oversight Committee. Their depositions come among a series of other interviews from lawmakers on Capitol Hill. Interviewers have called figures like forme…