A US judge on Thursday local time approved JPMorgan Chase's $290 million (NZ$492m) settlement with women who said Jeffrey Epstein abused them, and that the largest US bank turned a blind eye to the late financier's sex trafficking.
US District Judge Jed Rakoff called the deal "a really excellent settlement" that he said could prevent future sex trafficking by alerting banks to the consequences of facilitating transactions linked to it.
"This case sent a message through this very substantial settlement that banking institutions... have responsibilities that perhaps were not fully recognised in the past," the judge said.
The deal followed embarrassing disclosures that JPMorgan ignored internal warnings and overlooked red flags about Epstein because he had been a valuable client.
Epstein was a JPMorgan client from 1998 to 2013. The bank kept him on even after he was arrested in 2006 on prostitution charges and pleaded guilty two years later.
JPMorgan did not admit wrongdoing in agreeing to settle.
"This was a fair and just outcome for the nearly 200 survivors who bravely came forward," a JPMorgan spokesperson said after the hearing.
Earlier on Thursday, Rakoff rejected a request by 16 US states and Washington DC to change wording in the agreement that they said could limit their ability to seek damages arising from sex trafficking by Epstein and his associates.
James Grayson, a lawyer for New Mexico, said the state has an ongoing investigation into the matter and was concerned JPMorgan could seek to block claims states may bring in the future. He did not provide further details of the state's probe.
Epstein owned a ranch in New Mexico, where some women have said he abused them.
Rakoff countered that the states had not yet brought any claims, and noted that the US Virgin Islands - which also sued JPMorgan last year - had reached a US$75m settlement with the bank in September. Epstein owned two islands in the territory.
"You guys sat on your hands and now you want to object to the settlement," Rakoff said.
The settlement covered more than 100 women, led by a former ballet dancer known as Jane Doe 1, who said Epstein abused them. Simone Lelchuk, a lawyer appointed to oversee the distribution of the funds, said in court that 191 people had applied to the fund, though "probably a few" did not have legitimate claims.
The judge expressed some concern that the settlement did not detail "guidance as to how to determine who gets what" and asked Lelchuk to send him summaries of her decisions every three months.
Rakoff approved fees of 30 percent of the settlement value for the lawyers representing the class of women.
David Boies, one of the lawyers, told reporters after the hearing that the deal's approval was "a great step forward for survivors."
Rakoff on October 20 gave final approval to a similar US$75m settlement between Epstein's accusers and Deutsche Bank, where Epstein banked after JPMorgan fired him.
Epstein died in a Manhattan jail cell in 2019 at age 66 while awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges. New York City's medical examiner ruled the death a suicide.
Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein's former girlfriend and longtime associate, is serving a 20-year prison sentence after being convicted in December 2021 of recruiting and grooming teenage girls for him to abuse. She is appealing her conviction.
- This story was first published by Reuters