Jeffrey Epstein lawyer Roy Black dies in Florida at age 80, firm says

Guno צְבִי

We fight, We win, Am Yisrael Chai
Black was among the team of attorneys who handled the infamous Epstein case when the prominent financier was accused of sexually abusing children for more than a decade, the Associated Press reported.

While Epstein never sat for trial, he pleaded guilty to the solicitation of prostitution and solicitation of a minor for prostitution in Florida in 2008.

 
Not likely yet another MOSSAD murder....80 is old.....and killing him does not help....too many other people know what he knew.
 
He was a great lawyer, I watched him in trial once.

Married a juror from the William Kennedy Smith trial.


The timing is odd!
 
I did not know that. That just is not right.
They claimed that they first spoke only after the trial, which is possible.

It would not be the first time I have seen a lawyer choose a juror because they were attracted to them.
 
They claimed that they first spoke only after the trial, which is possible.

It would not be the first time I have seen a lawyer choose a juror because they were attracted to them.
It is probably legal, but has the appearance of corruption. I am thinking disbarment.

I do hate breaking up love, but some people cannot be allowed to be together in our society.
 
It is probably legal, but has the appearance of corruption. I am thinking disbarment.

I do hate breaking up love, but some people cannot be allowed to be together in our society.
Seriously do not believe it could be stretched to disbarment.

You basically have to demonstratablely lie to a judge, or steal someone's money to get disbarred. There are other situations but not the norm.
 
Seriously do not believe it could be stretched to disbarment.

You basically have to demonstratablely lie to a judge, or steal someone's money to get disbarred. There are other situations but not the norm.
I could be wrong, but this feels extremely borderline to me.

Would it have been OK for Black to give the juror a million dollars as a gift a few years later? Both lawyer and juror claim it has nothing to do with the trial, and was just a gift... For no particular reason.
 
I could be wrong, but this feels extremely borderline to me.

Would it have been OK for Black to give the juror a million dollars as a gift a few years later? Both lawyer and juror claim it has nothing to do with the trial, and was just a gift... For no particular reason.
Technically nothing improper. Seems like it would be, but no. If they did not know each other before.
 
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