In order to understand, let alone judge, people's attitudes around a past event, you need to start by figuring out not just what information was available, but how widely disseminated it was and what space in the popular mind it occupied. When trying to get a handle on that context, you should probably start with how the mainstream press, particularly the paper of record, covered the story.
If you want to explain how people continued to associate with Epstein after that first conviction, possibly the best place to look is how the New York Times broke the story. The article also spells out in painfully embarrassing detail how complicit the paper of record was in whitewashing and enabling the serial pedophile's crimes, and how hypocritical and self-serving it has been with its retrospectives.
When evaluating an article, what is included is often less important than how it is framed — and often, even more significantly, when it is presented. In particular, this last point often makes it impossible to assign blame for really egregious examples. We know from leaks within the organization that many of the most widely and deservedly criticized aspects of NYT articles came from unnamed editors rather than the reporters whose names appeared in the bylines.
Lots of publications (and the New York Times is arguably the worst offender here) like to burnish their reputations by selectively quoting old stories on a subject, leaving out the central context both within the article and in the coverage from competitors. That's how the NYT, which effectively buried the Pam Bondi scandal in 2016 until the Washington Post and other papers forced them to address it, can depict itself as having broken the story.
The primary purpose of journalism is to inform its audience. Therefore, any evaluation of reporting has to take into account how that audience consumes the news. While there are readers who carefully pore over every line beginning to end and make a genuine effort to make up their own minds and to understand what they've read, it's reasonable to assume that considerably more skim the story, read the first few paragraphs, or passively let themselves be led to the writer's conclusions.
With that established, what impression would most NYT readers have come away with when they first learned about the Epstein arrest?
For starters, most probably wouldn't realize just how disturbing even that initial round of details was. They would have to get six paragraphs in before finding out about this pertinent bit of information.
But Mr. Epstein also paid women, some of them under age, to give him massages that ended with a sexual favor, the authorities say.
But it gets worse.
There's been a great reluctance in the coverage of this story to make certain uncomfortable but essential distinctions. Hopefully almost all of us can agree that statutory rape is wrong, but we need to acknowledge that some cases are far worse than others. Unknowingly having sex with a 17-year-old is quite different than deliberately procuring a 14-year-old.
Readers would have to wait ten more paragraphs to learn the age of the girl who filed that first complaint.
The legal drama began in 2005, when a young woman who gave Mr. Epstein massages at his Palm Beach mansion told the local police about the encounter. She was 14 at the time, and was paid $200.
The police submitted the results of their investigation to the state attorney, asking that Mr. Epstein be charged with sexual relations with minors.
I have just quoted every time the article mentioned the fact we were talking about under-aged girls. Only those readers who were paying close attention and made it at least halfway through the article would have any idea just how bad the scandal was.
But what was emphasized might be even worse than what was downplayed. The compulsion to sympathize with rich people — to see things from their side and lend them support and comfort — is deep in the DNA of the New York Times and is prominently on display here. While the victims were barely an afterthought, Epstein is depicted as introspective and remorseful, a decent guy who fell victim to temptation, trying to do better in the future and manfully standing up to a challenging and even traumatic turn of events.
Think I'm exaggerating? Judge for yourself.
“I respect the legal process,” Mr. Epstein, 55, said by phone as he prepared to leave his 78-acre island, which he calls Little St. Jeff’s. “I will abide by this.”
...
He has paid for college educations for personal employees and students from Rwanda, and spent millions on a project to develop a thinking and feeling computer and on music intended to alleviate depression.
...
People from all walks of life break the law, of course. But for the rich, wrapped in a cocoon of immense comfort, it can be easy to yield to temptation, experts say.
...
Sitting on his patio on “Little St. Jeff’s” in the Virgin Islands several months ago, as his legal troubles deepened, Mr. Epstein gazed at the azure sea and the lush hills of St. Thomas in the distance, poked at a lunch of crab and rare steak prepared by his personal chef, and tried explain how his life had taken such a turn. He likened himself to Gulliver shipwrecked among the diminutive denizens of Lilliput.
“Gulliver’s playfulness had unintended consequences,” Mr. Epstein said. “That is what happens with wealth. There are unexpected burdens as well as benefits.”...
His lawyers say Mr. Epstein never knew the young women were under age, and point to depositions in which the masseuses several of whom have filed civil suits admitted to lying about their age. ["She was 14" -- MP]
...
As it became clear that he was headed for jail, Mr. Epstein has tried to put on a brave face.
“Your body can be confined, but not your mind,” he said in a recent interview by phone.
...
Looking back, Mr. Epstein admits that his behavior was inappropriate. “I am not blameless,” he said. He said he has taken steps to make sure the same thing never happens again.
For starters, Mr. Epstein has hired a full-time male masseur (the man happens to be a former Ultimate Fighting champion). He also has organized what he calls a board of directors of friends to counsel him on his behavior.
This by no means closes the book on the New York Times' complicity in this story. Lots of questions remain to be answered about what various people at the paper knew and when they knew it. It does, however, provide us with a useful tool for understanding how such damaging revelations could have such little impact on the social standing of the wealthy and prominent.


