JPMorgan knew by 2006 that Jeffrey Epstein was accused of paying cash to have underage girls and young women brought to his home, seven years before the lender dropped him as a client, the Financial Times’ Joe Miller and Brooke Masters report, citing legal filings in New York. Mary Erdoes, who currently serves as the head of asset management at the major bank, said under oath that the company was aware of the accusations by 2006, the authors say, citing newly unredacted portions of a lawsuit filed against the bank by the U.S. Virgin Islands. Reference Link
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