Bank of America Settles Epstein Lawsuit

Bank was accused of ignoring 'numerous red flags'
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Mar 17, 2026 5:24 PM CDT
Bank of America Settles Epstein Lawsuit
This photo provided by the New York State Sex Offender Registry shows Jeffrey Epstein, March 28, 2017.   (New York State Sex Offender Registry via AP, File)

Bank of America has tentatively settled a lawsuit claiming it ignored suspicious financial transactions involving Jeffrey Epstein while he was sexually abusing hundreds of girls and women. The proposed settlement was revealed in filings in Manhattan federal court on Monday, the same day that billionaire financier Leon Black was originally scheduled to be deposed in the case, the AP reports. Terms were not disclosed. The bank declined to comment through a spokesperson. Though not a defendant, Black was recently described as a "critical witness" in the case by Sigrid McCawley, a lawyer for Epstein victims.

During a hearing last week, a lawyer for Black persuaded Judge Jed S. Rakoff to postpone Black's deposition for 10 days on the grounds that the parties were close to settling. In a statement, McCawley paid tribute to the "brave and fearless voices" of Epstein victims, saying their "road to justice" has been long and trying, but the Bank of America settlement "is one more step on the road to much deserved justice."

  • The October lawsuit accused the bank of ignoring $170 million Black paid from a Bank of America account to Epstein purportedly for "tax and estate planning advice." It said the bank ignored "numerous red flags" of improper financial dealings, and "went far beyond what a non-complicit bank would have done and instead assisted Epstein in setting up the necessary financial structure to operate his sex-trafficking venture."

  • The lawsuit, brought on behalf of a woman identified in court papers only as Jane Doe and "all others similarly situated," said the woman was living in Russia when she met Epstein in 2011 and was "coerced into a cult-like life." It said she was paid by Epstein through a Bank of America account as she was controlled "financially, emotionally, and psychologically" by Epstein from 2011 through 2019 as he sexually abused her on at least 100 occasions, including raping her and forcing her to engage sexually with other women for his sexual gratification.
  • The lawsuit alleged that Epstein paid her rent and income from a phony job through a Bank of America account, and held her immigration status "over her head, until her ultimate escape when Jeffrey Epstein died."
  • In a statement Tuesday, Sen. Ron Wyden, an Oregon Democrat who sits on the Senate Finance Committee, said the bank's decision to settle was a "step towards justice and a vindication of my staff's investigation into how major Wall Street banks enabled Epstein's crimes." He said the bank "willfully looked the other way" as Black paid Epstein the $170 million through "huge wire transfers," often in $10 million or $20 million installments.
  • In March 2021, Black stepped down as CEO of Apollo Global Management, saying he wanted to focus on his family, health, and "many other interests." A committee of the company's board had issued a report two months earlier concluding that Epstein, who died in a federal jail in August 2019 as he awaited trial on sex trafficking charges, had advised Black personally on estate planning, tax issues, charitable giving, and running his "family office," but provided no services to Apollo or invested in Apollo funds. The report also said the review—which Black requested—found "no evidence" that he was involved with Epstein's alleged criminal activities "in any way" or "at any time."
  • Similar lawsuits were settled by Deutsche Bank and JPMorgan in 2023.

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