Epstein Crime Victims Act
H.R. 4946 – Epstein Crime Victims Act: Civil lawsuits when victims are not told of plea deals
119th Congress
H.R. 4946 would change federal crime victims’ rights law to let victims sue the U.S. Government if it makes a plea bargain or deferred prosecution agreement and does not notify them in time. It also updates the law to cover nonprosecution agreements. It has been introduced in the House and sent to the Judiciary Committee.
- Bill Number
- HR4946
- Chamber
- house
What This Bill Does
This bill changes a section of federal law that lists rights for people who are victims of federal crimes. Current law gives victims the right to be told about plea bargains and deferred prosecution agreements, but it limits how they can enforce those rights. The bill first updates the law to make clear that victims also have the right to be informed about nonprosecution agreements. These are formal decisions not to charge someone, often in exchange for cooperation or other conditions. Next, the bill adds a new right to sue the federal government in a specific situation. If the government enters into a plea bargain or a deferred prosecution agreement and does not tell the victim in a timely way, the victim may bring a civil action in a U.S. district court. Through that lawsuit, the victim could ask the court to enforce any crime-victim rights that are still “remaining” and “applicable” under the existing list of rights in the law. The bill keeps the general rule that the crime victims’ rights law does not create money-damage claims against the government, but it carves out this new exception for failures to notify victims about plea bargains or deferred prosecution agreements.
Why It Matters
This bill could change how federal prosecutors handle communication with crime victims when making plea deals or deferred prosecution agreements. Knowing that victims may sue if they are not told in time may push government agencies to strengthen their notice systems and record-keeping. For victims, the bill would create a clearer path to ask a court to step in if they were left out of important decisions about resolving a case. It does not spell out what specific remedies courts must give, so the actual impact on case outcomes and government behavior would depend on how judges interpret and apply the new right over time. For the public and the justice system, the bill touches on the balance between efficient plea negotiations and victims’ participation rights. It may lead to more court review of how federal plea agreements are reached and communicated, but the extent of that change is not defined in the bill text.
