Denise George is one of the highest-ranking law enforcement officials who got involved in the Jeffrey Epstein saga. And, as many online predicted would happen once she stepped into the massive mess of Epstein’s sickening crimes, has now been terminated from her position.
That position was as the Attorney General for the US Virgin Islands, where she served under Virgin Islands Governor Albert Bryan. Bryan, however, fired her just days after the lawsuit she filed against JP Morgan Chase for its alleged role in helping Jeffrey Epstein keep his operation shielded and running smoothly.
The Daily Mail, reporting on AG George’s firing and the potential reason for it, noted that:
The attorney general of the US Virgin Islands has been fired by the territory’s governor, just days after filing a lawsuit accusing JPMorgan Chase of ‘turning a blind eye’ to Jeffrey Epstein’s prolific sex crimes.
USVI Governor Albert Bryan Jr confirmed in a statement on Sunday that he had ‘relieved Denise George of her duties as attorney general this weekend’ without offering further details.
[…]She did not warn Bryan of her intent to file the lawsuit, and the incident was the final straw in the governor’s increasingly frustrated relationship with her, the Virgin Islands Consortium reported, citing a source familiar with the matter.
Bryan’s spokesman told DailyMail.com that press reports citing the JPMorgan suit as the reason for George’s dismissal were ‘not entirely accurate.’
In the lawsuit, AG George alleged that JP Morgan Chase had “provided and pulled the levers through which recruiters and victims were paid.” In the complaint’s words:
“The Attorney General brings this action, after presenting her findings in September 2022, in her ongoing effort to protect public safety and to hold accountable those who facilitated or participated in, directly or indirectly, the trafficking enterprise Epstein helmed. The investigation revealed that JP Morgan knowingly, negligently, and unlawfully provided and pulled the levers through which recruiters and victims were paid and was indispensable to the operation and concealment of the Epstein trafficking enterprise.”
Continuing, George alleges in the complaint that financial institutions like JP Morgan can choke human trafficking networks if they step up and do so, but that JP Morgan instead “knowingly” helped Epstein with his trafficking network by facilitating and concealing his activities and network.
Further, George alleges that JP Morgan facilitated very suspicious payments, particularly wire and cash transactions, and that those were for Epstein’s “criminal enterprise whose currency was the sexual servitude of dozens of women and girls in and beyond the Virgin Islands.”
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