KEY POINTS
  • Lawyers for a Jeffrey Epstein victim asked a federal judge to allow them to take new testimony from JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon and other executives.
  • The lawyers, who deposed Dimon for the suit last month, alleged in a Manhattan District Court filing that JPMorgan has "strategically" failed to promptly turn over documents to them as part of the case.
  • The bank is being sued by the accuser and the government of the U.S. Virgin Islands for allegedly facilitating and financially benefiting from Epstein's sex trafficking of young women when he was a JPMorgan customer.

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Lawyers for a Jeffrey Epstein victim asked a federal judge on Friday to allow them to take new testimony from JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon and others as part of a lawsuit against the bank over its dealings with sex predator Epstein.

The lawyers, who deposed Dimon for the suit last month, alleged in a Manhattan District Court filing that JPMorgan has "strategically" failed to promptly turn over documents to them as part of the case, as required by Judge Jed Rakoff.

In this article