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Lawmakers ask DOJ to investigate additional alleged abusers named by former Epstein assistant

Lawmakers ask DOJ to investigate additional alleged abusers named by former Epstein assistant

Sarah Kellen alleged that Philip Levine and Frédéric Fekkai had abused her.

House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer (R-Ky.) on Thursday asked the Justice Department to investigate allegations of sexual abuse raised by a former assistant toJeffrey Epsteinduring her interview with the committee last month, according to a letter from Comer and three other Republican lawmakers.

Sarah Kellen, a longtime personal assistant to Epstein, told the Oversight Committee that she was sexually abused by Epstein for over a decade, and disclosed for the first time allegations that she was also abused by Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein's convicted accomplice, and by two other men in his orbit, according to a transcript of Kellen's interview made public Thursday.

Kellen alleged that celebrity hairstylist Frédéric Fekkai and Philip Levine, a wealthy businessman who was later elected mayor of Miami Beach, were the other men who had also abused her.

Comer's letter asks the DOJ to "use all available tools, including immunity for certain witnesses, to investigate the allegations against, and any other criminal conduct committed by, Philip Levine and Frédéric Fekkai." The committee also asked the DOJ for an explanation as to why Kellen was never interviewed by law enforcement until Epstein's arrest in July of 2019.

Both men, through their representatives, denied the allegations in statements to ABC News.

Kellen'sclosed-door appearancebefore the Oversight Committee, which took place May 21, was part of the panel's ongoing inquiry into the federal government's handling of investigations into Epstein and his alleged co-conspirators.

One of four women named as potential co-conspirators in Epstein's controversial 2007non-prosecution agreement, Kellen was previously a subject of criminal investigations in Florida and New York. She has never been charged -- due, in part, to her own allegations of persistent sexual abuse at the hands of the disgraced financier, according to court documents and records released earlier this year by the Justice Department.

"I was there only to serve and to submit. Only after Jeffrey confirmed that I would submit to his sexual abuse did he begin paying me," Kellen told the committee in her opening remarks.

Kellen said she did not know her name was included in Epstein's non-prosecution agreement until the document was made public a few years later. The deal allowed Epstein to avoid federal charges for alleged sexual crimes involving dozens of underage girls.

"The Federal Government of the United States branded me a criminal in a secret deal with my own abuser, without ever once speaking to me," Kellen said. "I have spent every year since trying to live underneath that piece of paper."

Kellen appeared before the committee voluntarily, accompanied by two attorneys. The scope of her appearance was limited -- by advance agreement with the committee -- and focused primarily on her own alleged victimization. On advice of her counsel, she largely declined to answer questions about other alleged victims and about Epstein's scheme to recruit underage girls for massages -- the core activity that led to Epstein's criminal charges.

"She's not going to answer questions about other victims and questions specific to massages in Palm Beach [that] could implicate other victims," said attorney Kimberly Hamm, citing privacy concerns and Kellen's constitutional rights.

Kellen told the lawmakers she would be "a hundred percent" willing to answer more questions if given immunity by Congress or the Justice Department.

In advance of Kellen's appearance, Comer told reporters that committee members were split on their perceptions of her, given the allegations that Kellen was involved in scheduling some of Epstein's massages.

Source: ABC News - Breaking News, Latest News and Videos