For a brief period in 2017, Alex Acosta looked like one of the safer Trump cabinet picks. A former federal prosecutor, a confirmed assistant attorney general under George W. Bush, dean of Florida International University’s law schoolโhis resume was conventional, his confirmation was uneventful, and he settled into the Labor Department with the low public profile most labor secretaries cultivate. By July 2019, he was out, his career effectively ended by a plea deal he had approved more than a decade earlier and the renewed national attention that deal received once Jeffrey Epstein was arrested again.
The Acosta story is one of the cleanest examples in modern politics of a single past decision catching up with a public official at exactly the wrong time.
The 2008 plea deal that wouldn’t go away
In 2007 and 2008, Acosta was the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Florida when his office reached a non-prosecution agreement with Jeffrey Epstein. The agreement was extraordinary: Epstein, who federal investigators believed had abused dozens of underage girls, pleaded guilty to two state-level prostitution charges, served 13 months in a county facility with extensive work-release privileges, and received broad immunity for himself and unnamed co-conspirators. Victims weren’t notified before the deal was finalizedโan omission a federal judge later ruled violated the Crime Victims’ Rights Act. The deal was unusual enough at the time that it drew internal Justice Department scrutiny, but it largely receded from public view for a decade.
The 2018 Miami Herald investigation
What changed Acosta’s trajectory was a November 2018 Miami Herald series by reporter Julie K. Brown titled “Perversion of Justice.” Brown identified additional victims, reconstructed how the deal had been negotiated, and documented Acosta’s role in approving terms his own line prosecutors had pushed back against. The reporting was thorough enough that congressional offices took notice, and the Justice Department’s Office of Professional Responsibility eventually opened a review. The OPR report, released in 2020 after Acosta had already resigned, criticized his judgment but stopped short of finding misconduct. By then the political damage was complete.
The arrest and the resignation
Epstein’s July 2019 arrest on federal sex trafficking charges in New York revived every question about the 2008 deal at maximum intensity. Acosta held a defensive press conference defending his earlier decisions, arguing that state prosecutors would have given Epstein an even lighter outcome and that the federal involvement at least produced some accountability. The press conference did not stabilize the situation; if anything, it crystallized the perception that Acosta could not credibly continue as a cabinet secretary while the deal he approved was the dominant national news story. Within days, he announced his resignation. Trump, who had initially defended him, accepted it. Epstein died in custody the following month, and the deal Acosta authored became one of the case’s most-examined chapters.
The takeaway
Acosta’s fall wasn’t really about 2019. It was about 2008, surfaced by reporting that made it impossible to ignore eleven years later. Cabinet careers are durable structures, but a single sufficiently well-documented decision in the past can still bring one down on a few weeks’ notice.
Leave a Reply