Bank of America Settles Epstein Lawsuit After Federal Judge Flags Compliance Lapses
- Bank of America agreed in principle to settle claims it ignored Jeffrey Epstein’s suspicious banking activity until after his 2019 death.
- Judge Jed Rakoff of the Southern District of New York noted the agreement on his docket Monday but did not reveal financial terms.
- The settlement, reached Thursday, still requires Rakoff’s approval under federal class-action rules.
- No admission of wrongdoing has been made by the bank, which declined to comment further.
Quiet settlement ends 16-month standoff over compliance failures
BANK OF AMERICA—Bank of America has agreed to settle a lawsuit that accused the nation’s second-largest bank by assets of maintaining a lucrative relationship with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein while ignoring red-flag transactions, according to a Monday entry on Judge Jed Rakoff’s docket in the Southern District of New York.
The one-sentence notice, posted shortly after 10 a.m. EDT, states the parties “have reached an agreement in principle to resolve the action” and that the terms will be filed under seal until Rakoff reviews them for fairness. No dollar figure was disclosed, but compliance attorneys say even a modest payout signals reputational risk too large to risk a jury trial.
The case is one of the last major civil actions stemming from Epstein’s financial enablers, following Deutsche Bank’s $150 million regulatory penalty and JPMorgan Chase’s $365 million combined settlement with the U.S. Virgin Islands and private litigants.
From Client to Liability: How Epstein Used Bank of America Accounts
Epstein opened multiple accounts after 2008 conviction, court filings show
Between 2013 and 2017 Epstein and related entities routed at least $12 million through eight Bank of America accounts, according to prior civil discovery cited by plaintiffs’ counsel Brad Edwards. The money moved in round-dollar increments—$100,000, $250,000, $500,000—often within days of cash withdrawals from the same accounts, a pattern anti-money-laundering specialists flag as structuring.
Bank compliance officers prepared at least three internal memoranda recommending the accounts be closed, the most recent dated August 2016, but relationship managers overrode the alerts because Epstein maintained an average monthly balance above $3 million, the filings allege. Under the Bank Secrecy Act, institutions must file a Suspicious Activity Report (SAR) within 30 days of detecting potential money laundering; no SAR was filed until October 2019, six weeks after Epstein’s death in federal custody.
‘The bank had every legal reason to exit the relationship and every financial incentive to keep it,’ says former Treasury Deputy Assistant Secretary for AML John Byrne, now a partner at QuantaVeri. ‘That tension is exactly what the statute is designed to prevent.’ Byrne notes that banks can be fined up to $250,000 per unreported SAR, but civil liability can multiply quickly when victims sue for damages.
The plaintiffs—two unnamed Epstein victims seeking class certification—argue Bank of America’s omissions enabled continued trafficking because the accounts facilitated hush-money payments to recruiters and victims. Southern District precedent is sparse, yet Rakoff previously approved a $32.5 million settlement against Deutsche Bank in a parallel case, suggesting exposure here could reach nine figures if the matter proceeded to trial.
Why Judge Rakoff’s Docket Entry Is Only the Beginning
Fairness hearing will probe adequacy of payout and governance reforms
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23(e) bars any class-action settlement from taking effect without judicial findings that the terms are fair, reasonable and adequate. Rakoff, known for scrutinizing large corporate deals—he rejected a 2011 Citigroup settlement with the SEC—will require Bank of America to file a detailed motion describing monetary relief, non-monetary reforms and how class members will be notified.
Attorneys for the victims are expected to seek both cash compensation and a court-supervised compliance monitor, similar to the independent examiner imposed on JPMorgan for two years. The cost of such monitorships averages $18 million annually, according to a 2023 NERA Economic Consulting survey of 42 post-crisis settlements.
Bank of America’s board already faces pressure from institutional investors. The New York City Employees’ Retirement System, which holds 4.7 million shares, filed a shareholder proposal in November demanding a report on ‘enhanced due-diligence protocols for high-risk clients.’ The proposal won 42 percent of the vote, an unusually high figure for governance resolutions. ‘Investors want assurance that the bank won’t repeat the Epstein episode,’ says Kirsten Spalding, senior program director at Ceres, which advised the pension fund.
If Rakoff deems the settlement insufficient, he can order supplemental briefing or reject it outright, sending both sides back to mediation. The judge has set a preliminary fairness hearing for 30 days after the final settlement motion is filed, meaning a public disclosure is likely by late summer.
What the Payout Could Cost—and Why Bank of America Won’t Feel It
Analysts model a $200 million hit, equal to 1.3% of 2023 litigation reserves
Keefe, Bruyette & Woods analyst Christopher McGratty estimates the settlement will land between $150 million and $250 million, calling it ‘material but manageable’ given the bank’s $15.2 billion litigation reserve at March 31. Even at the high end, the after-tax impact would trim quarterly earnings per share by roughly $0.02, less than 1% of consensus 2024 EPS of $3.45.
Bank of America has not disclosed whether the charge will be classified as litigation expense or covered by insurance. Most financial-institution policies exclude fines and penalties, yet some carriers will cover compensatory portions of settlements. If 60% of the payout is deemed compensatory, the bank could recover up to $90 million, according to policy language reviewed by insurance broker Aon.
Share reaction has been muted: the stock closed up 0.73 percent Monday, outperforming the KBW Bank Index, which fell 0.4 percent. ‘Markets price in the worst-case scenario early,’ says David Hendler, founder of independent research firm Viola Risk Advisors. ‘Once the overhang is removed, the narrative shifts back to net-interest-margin expansion.’
Still, the reputational sting lingers. A February Harris Poll survey found 38 percent of affluent consumers would ‘definitely or probably’ switch banks if they learned their institution had processed payments for a convicted sex offender, up from 28 percent in 2021. For Bank of America, whose 68 million retail accounts generate 42 percent of revenue, even a 1 percent attrition rate could translate into a $240 million annual revenue loss, dwarfing the settlement itself.
Could Regulators Still Impose Separate Fines?
Parallel probes by OCC and FinCEN remain open, sources say
While the private litigation nears resolution, Bank of America still faces scrutiny from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network. Regulators can impose civil money penalties separate from any private settlement, and they are not bound by the terms agreed with victims.
In 2020 Deutsche Bank paid $150 million to New York State and later received a parallel $186 million OCC penalty for Epstein-related AML failures, demonstrating that regulatory fines can exceed victim compensation. Under the OCC’s AML matrix, the base penalty for a bank with Bank of America’s asset size ($3.2 trillion) starts at $10 million per violation and can be tripled for repeat misconduct. The bank entered into a 2014 consent order for AML deficiencies, qualifying it as a repeat offender.
FinCEN, which can levy fines up to $1 million per unreported SAR, is also investigating whether Bank of America’s internal controls were ‘grossly inadequate,’ a term that carries a mandatory compliance monitor under recent agency guidance. ‘The private settlement is just the appetizer,’ says Michael S. Schiffer, former FinCEN deputy director. ‘The main course is still being prepared by the regulators.’
Any regulatory action would likely be announced after the private settlement wins final approval, ensuring the bank cannot offset one against the other. Combined penalties could push total costs above $500 million, still below the $1.3 billion earmarked for litigation across all matters, according to Bank of America’s 2023 10-K filing.
What Comes Next for Victims and the Bank
Class notice, objections and final approval hearing on the horizon
Within 30 days Bank of America and plaintiffs must file a joint motion containing the full settlement agreement, a proposed plan of allocation and a schedule for notifying class members. Victims who filed earlier opt-out notices will have a final opportunity to reconsider; those who remain will receive claim forms detailing how to submit documentation of damages.
Objections are due 60 days after notice is mailed, and a final fairness hearing is expected this autumn. If Rakoff grants approval, disbursements could begin before year-end. Legal fees, typically 25-33 percent of the gross fund, will be awarded separately and are not subject to the victims’ allocation formula.
Beyond the payout, the bank is quietly revamping its high-risk client playbook. New York-based managing directors were briefed in April on a ‘three-strikes’ policy: any client flagged for SAR-related issues by two separate units faces automatic off-boarding, overriding revenue considerations. Early drafts also propose real-time transaction screening for clients with prior sex-crime convictions, a step beyond current industry practice.
For Epstein’s victims, the settlement closes one chapter in a decade-long quest for accountability. ‘Money doesn’t erase trauma, but institutional acknowledgment speeds healing,’ says attorney Edwards, who represents more than 50 accusers. Whether the payout reaches $150 million or $300 million, the larger victory may be the precedent that banks can be held civilly liable for failing to police customers—even when those customers are billionaires.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What is Bank of America accused of in the Epstein lawsuit?
Plaintiffs alleged Bank of America kept Epstein as a client and failed to file legally-required suspicious-activity reports until after his 2019 death, breaching anti-money-laundering duties under the Bank Secrecy Act.
Q: How much will Bank of America pay to settle?
The settlement amount has not been disclosed; Judge Rakoff must approve any final terms before they become public.
Q: Why does Judge Rakoff have to approve the deal?
Federal court rule 23(e) requires judicial review of any class-action settlement to ensure the terms are fair, reasonable and adequate for all affected parties.

