JPMorgan is resisting calls for its CEO to be made to answer questions under oath in a lawsuit that alleges the bank played a role in the crimes of notorious sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

The U.S. Virgin Islands is seeking damages from JPMorgan over its links to Epstein, claiming the banking giant turned a blind eye to evidence of human trafficking on his private island there because of the deals and clients he promised to bring to the company.

The lawsuit, filed in December, accused JPMorgan of facilitating and benefiting from Epsteins sex trafficking.

On Feb. 23, the U.S. Virgin Islands filed documents to the court to demand JPMorgan submit further documents from its CEO, Jamie Dimon. The territorys legal representatives argued that although they had been given documents from Dimon dating to 2014, the banks relationship with Epstein may have continued until 2019.

They demanded documents from Dimon dating between 2015 and 2019, labeling him a likely source of relevant and unique information on the banks decisions surrounding Epstein.

The Financial Times reported that lawyers also wanted Dimon to be deposed, claiming he played a role in JPMorgans decision to continue to provide banking services to Epstein despite red flags about his activity.

However, in documents filed to a New York court on Tuesdayseen by news agency ReutersAmericas biggest bank accused the U.S. Virgin Islands of using Dimon to gain media attention by making demands to further investigate its CEO.

Lawyers for the lender said Dimon himself had not been involved in any decision making when it came to Epsteins account with the bank. They also noted that Epstein had been dropped as a client in 2013.

Dimon is not relevant to this action, JPMorgans lawyers said. If there were evidence supporting discovery from JPMorgan Chase from 2014 to 2019, [the U.S. Virgin Islands] would have found it.

Representatives for JPMorgan declined to comment on the latest developments in the case.

Lawyers for the U.S. Virgin Islands were not immediately available when contacted by Fortune.

While JPMorgan insisted Dimon should not be compelled to answer lawyers questions, it did agree to find a date in March for a top executive, Mary Erdoes, to be deposed in the case, according to the FT. Erdoes heads up JPMorgans asset and wealth management division, where Epstein was a client.

In Tuesdays filing, JPMorgans legal team also hit out at the U.S. Virgin Islands, labeling its demands for documents a fishing expedition. The bank said the territory had already obtained a massive trove of information in earlier lawsuits against Epsteins estate, where it had been awarded more than $105 million.

Epstein victims case

Separately on Tuesday, JPMorgans lawyers asked a judge to throw out a demand for documents from Epstein victims in their own case against the company.

JPMorgan, alongside Deutsche Bank, is being sued by Epstein accusers over claims the banks aided and benefited financially from Epsteins trafficking operation. The lawsuit is separate to the one filed by the U.S. Virgin Islands.  

Dimon is not a defendant in either case.

Both of the lawsuits draw on Epsteins relationship with Jes Staley, who served as a private banking executive at JPMorgan before becoming CEO of Barclays in 2015. Staley stepped down from Barclays in 2021 amid a probe into his friendship with the disgraced financierbut he reportedly received a payoff worth around $2.8 million.

Epstein was a powerful financier who died of an apparent suicide in 2019 while awaiting trial for sex trafficking and conspiracy chargeshis alleged crimes included paying girls under the age of 18 to perform sex acts.

Epsteins accusers have alleged that Little St. Jameshis private island in the U.S. Virgin Islandswas central to his sex trafficking ring.

The disgraced money manager served 13 months of an 18-month prison sentence between 2008 and 2009 for soliciting a minoridentified in court papers as a 14-year-old girlfor prostitution. He avoided federal charges, which would have meant a life sentence, thanks to a plea bargain described by the Miami Herald as the deal of a century.

The billionaire and registered sex offender was arrested and charged with sex trafficking charges in July 2019.

Last year, Ghislaine Maxwell, a former socialite and long-time associate of Epstein, was sentenced to 20 years in prison for procuring teenage girls for Epstein to abuse.

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