Judge Robin L. Rosenberg has made sure that those decades old Grand Jury transcript will not see the light of day. If she is trying to protect someone then that someone would be Michael McAuliffe, her current husband, who was the successor to Florida State Attorney Barry Krischer. Though these Grand Jury proceedings and the now infamous “sweetheart deal” preceded Michael McAuliffe’s time in office as Florida State Attorney for Palm Beach County (January 2009-March 2012), McAuliffe held the position of Palm Beach County’s “Elected prosecutor and chief law enforcement official for Fifteenth Judicial Circuit” for almost the entirety of Epstein’s house arrest/probation (July 2009–July 2010). It seems likely that McAuliffe failed to have his department enforce any of the rules for his house arrest and his probation, despite allegedly having knowledge of these violations. But Michael McAuliffe started in his role at State Attorney AFTER the criminal court case and long after the Grand Juries related to this case were impaneled and convened. Is she hiding something, or maybe getting pressure from her husband to keep them sealed? Maybe someone else is ensuring that she keeps the secrets contained therein from being revealed? One open secret that seems to be on very few officials’ and legacy media outlets’ minds is Judge Rosenberg’s husband Michael McAuliffe’s direct connection and involvement with the Jeffrey Epstein criminal case in Florida back in 2009 (and possibly earlier)…why is that?
BACKGROUND:
“THE DEAL OF THE CENTURY!”
Despite having pled guilty to two felonies of solicitation of prostitution and Krischer’s charge of solicitation of a minor for prostitution, Epstein only received 18 months in jail but only end up serving 13. What’s worse, for some inexplicable reason, Krischer and Acosta seemed to go out of their way to make Epstein’s sentence even lighter by offering him an unprecedented deal regarding how he would serve his time. This became known as the “sweetheart deal” and would later be dubbed “The Deal of the Century.” Krischer was part of the prosecutorial team that ended up offering Jeffrey Epstein the now infamous “sweetheart deal” that allowed the convicted sex offender/rapist/pedophile to only spend the evenings in the Palm Beach jail during his incarceration period. Jeffrey Epstein was released from jail and submitted to house arrest in July of 2009 while Judge Rosenberg’s husband Michael was in office as Florida State Attorney of Palm Beach county. It was in April of 2010 that Michael McAuliffe, by then having succeeded Krischer as Florida State Attorney for Palm Beach County in January of 2009, that then Florida State attorney McAuliffe was contacted by Epstein’s attorneys asking for a suspension of his house arrest, acording to Holly Baltz, in her Palm Beach Post article from July 8, 2025:
“Epstein is released from jail to spend a year on house arrest but he is allowed to travel frequently — such as to his private island in the U.S. Virgin Islands — as long as he’s back in 24 hours. His lawyers ask to end house arrest early, a request rejected by Krischer’s successor, Michael McAuliffe. A few potential violations of house arrest are documented in state attorney’s files, but no one takes action. A violation could have sent Epstein back to jail.”
Read the rest on Brian’s Substack!
The post “Judge Who Denied Pres. Trump’s Bid to Unseal Florida Federal Grand Jury Epstein Transcripts is Married to then-Successor of State Attorney Who Helped Broker Epstein’s ‘Sweetheart Deal’ with Acosta” appeared first on DailyClout.
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Author: Brian O’Shea
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