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The Latest: Massage therapist recalls Epstein's island

NEW YORK — The Latest on developments in the sex trafficking case against Jeffrey Epstein (all times local):

2 p.m.

A massage therapist says she went to one of Jeffrey Epstein’s private Caribbean islands to work dozens of times in the early 2000s and saw “nothing out of the ordinary.”

She said she saw girls there on two occasions.

The woman spoke to The Associated Press on condition of being identified only by her initials, H.W., because she feared losing business.

She says she was never asked to do anything improper and didn’t make anything of seeing the girls on Little St. James Island, Epstein’s main retreat in the U.S. Virgin Islands. She was then in her 50s.

H.W. says one girl appeared to be 16 or 17 and rode an ATV. She glimpsed another girl hurrying from Epstein’s house.

Epstein faces federal charges of abusing dozens of underage girls in New York and Florida in the early 2000s. He’s pleaded not guilty.

Several employees who worked on Epstein’s property have refused to talk because they signed non-disclosure agreements.

— By Danica Coto in San Juan, Puerto Rico

12:30 p.m.

Financier Jeffrey Epstein’s lawyers argue he should be held under house arrest with electronic monitoring pending trial despite prosecutors’ claims he could flee to dodge sex trafficking charges.

The lawyers argued for bail in court papers Thursday in Manhattan federal court. A bail hearing for the 66-year-old is set for Monday.

Prosecutors argued in court this week for Epstein to be jailed ahead of trial. They say a trove of what seems to be nude pictures of underage girls was found in his mansion after his arrest on charges that he sexually exploited and abused dozens of underage girls from 2002 to 2005.

Epstein’s lawyer says the new charges are “ancient history” and can’t be brought because of a decade-old federal non-prosecution agreement when he pleaded guilty in Florida state court.

The Associated Press