JPMorgan Chase has reached a settlement in a US class action lawsuit with victims of financier Jeffrey Epstein.
Epstein was arrested in 2019 on federal charges accusing him of paying under-age girls hundreds of dollars in cash for massages and then molesting them at his homes in Florida and New York.
He was found dead in jail on August 10 of that year, aged 66. A medical examiner ruled his death a suicide.
The lawsuit filed in Manhattan federal court last November sought to hold JPMorgan financially liable for Epstein’s decades-long abuse of teenage girls and young women.
A related lawsuit has been filed in the US Virgin Islands.
Terms of the settlement were not disclosed.
The bank said in a statement on Monday: “The parties believe this settlement is in the best interests of all parties, especially the survivors who were the victims of Epstein’s terrible abuse.”
Litigation is still pending between the US Virgin Islands and JPMorgan Chase, as well as JPMorgan Chase’s claims against former executive Jes Staley.
According to the lawsuits, JPMorgan provided Epstein loans and regularly allowed him to withdraw large sums of cash from 1998 to August 2013, even though it knew about his sex trafficking practices.
Both lawsuits were filed after New York state in November enacted a temporary law letting adult victims of sexual abuse to sue others for the abuse they suffered, even if the abuse occurred long ago.
The bank has denied the allegations and sued Staley, saying he hid Epstein’s crimes to keep him as a client.
The bank continued to count Epstein as a client despite the fact that Epstein was arrested and pleaded guilty to sex crimes in 2008 in Florida.
“Any association with him was a mistake and we regret it,” the bank said in a prepared statement.
“We would never have continued to do business with him if we believed he was using our bank in any way to help commit heinous crimes.”
JPMorgan chief executive Jamie Dimon has testified that he never heard of Epstein and his crimes until the financier was arrested in 2019, according to a transcript of the videotaped deposition released last month.
The settlement is subject to court approval.
Shares of JPMorgan rose slightly before market opening.