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Which victims and alleged crimes were listed in the 2019 arrest documents?

Checked on November 15, 2025
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Executive summary

Available results do not include a specific 2019 arrest document listing victims and alleged crimes by name; reporting about a high‑profile 2019 federal arrest (Jeffrey Epstein) notes prosecutors alleged “dozens” of underage girls and that federal officials identified 36 girls, some as young as 14, in earlier investigations [1]. Other search results are general arrest‑record resources or national arrest statistics and do not supply a 2019 arrest affidavit or a victim list [2] [3] [4].

1. What the closest, high‑profile 2019 arrest paperwork said — summary from reporting

The most detailed narrative in the provided material concerns Jeffrey Epstein’s July 2019 federal arrest: the indictment alleged sex‑trafficking of “dozens” of underage girls brought to his homes, and federal officials previously identified 36 girls, including some as young as 14, in the earlier Florida probe [1]. The reporting also says interviews, witnesses and physical evidence allegedly showed some girls were under 18, with many under 16 [1].

2. What the supplied sources do not provide — no document text or full victim list

None of the supplied search results include the text of a 2019 arrest document, an arrest affidavit, or a publicly posted list naming individual victims and each alleged crime as recorded in such a document. The available items are either encyclopedic coverage of Epstein (summary) or broad arrest and crime‑data resources; they do not reproduce an arrest filing with enumerated victims and charges [1] [2] [3] [4].

3. Official counts and phrasing you can cite from these sources

Wikipedia’s compilation of reporting states federal officials identified 36 girls in earlier investigations and the 2019 grand jury/indictment used the phrase “dozens” of underage girls in allegations spanning Epstein’s Florida and New York residences [1]. That source also notes Epstein was arrested on July 6, 2019, on federal charges of sex trafficking during roughly 2002–2005 [1].

4. Limits of relying on encyclopedic summaries and aggregated data

A Wikipedia entry synthesizes multiple reports and court filings but is not itself primary legal documentation; it summarizes that investigators interviewed victims and witnesses and found corroborating items, but it does not reproduce the indictment line‑by‑line [1]. The other documents in the search results concern state statutes, national arrest statistics, or databases and therefore cannot confirm who appears on any single 2019 arrest affidavit or complaint [5] [2] [3] [4].

5. How victims are typically handled in federal charging papers (context from sources)

The search results include procedural and statistical material about arrests and victim information systems, showing that law enforcement records and criminal‑justice data sets capture victim types and counts but that public arrest record portals and state databases vary in what they publish; they often omit sensitive victim names, especially minors, from public releases [4] [6]. The exact practices for disclosing victim identities depend on jurisdictional rules and privacy protections, which the provided sources discuss in general terms but do not give a rule specific to any 2019 document [4].

6. Alternate explanations and what to check next

If you are seeking the precise victims and crimes listed in a particular 2019 arrest document, available search results do not include that document. To find it, check primary sources: the federal court docket for the case in question, the US Attorney’s Office press release or local court clerk’s electronic records; those primary filings (indictments, affidavits, minutes) are not present among the results provided here (not found in current reporting). Meanwhile, press reporting compiled in encyclopedic entries (e.g., the Epstein summary) provides high‑level counts and descriptive allegations—36 identified girls and “dozens” alleged victims as noted above [1].

7. Bottom line for readers wanting authoritative lists

The single detailed, relevant narrative among the provided results describes allegations (number ranges and ages) rather than a publicly published, itemized 2019 arrest document listing each victim and crime [1]. For definitive, item‑by‑item content, consult the actual charging documents or court docket entries directly; those primary documents are not included in the supplied search results (not found in current reporting).

Want to dive deeper?
Who were the victims named in the 2019 arrest documents and what were their ages and locations?
What specific charges and alleged crimes appear in the 2019 arrest paperwork?
Were any suspects identified as repeat offenders or linked to other cases in the 2019 documents?
What evidence and witness statements are described in the 2019 arrest filings?
How did prosecutors and defense attorneys respond to the allegations in the 2019 arrest records?