Prep school lacrosse player's accused killer found not guilty of murder
Valle was also acquitted of first- and second-degree intentional assault. The jury was deadlocked on charges of first-degree reckless manslaughter and first- and second-degree reckless assault. Judge Shari Murphy declared a mistrial on those deadlocked charges.
Valle, now 20, was tearful during an emotional reaction to the verdict. He was 16 when McGrath, 17, was stabbed to death during a booze-fueled teenage brawl following a house party. McGrath played lacrosse at Fairfield College Preparatory School.
Outside the courtroom, McGrath's father, Kevin McGrath, reacted to the verdict with shock.
"I'm astonished at the results, but, you know, it's due process. [Valle] is entitled to it. And at the end of the day, the jury made their verdict," he said. "I'm not sure if, you know, if they were in the same courtroom as we all were together, but that's the verdict, and we'll live with it."
He described himself as "perhaps overconfident" that Valle would be convicted when he learned that the jury had returned a verdict.
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"I'm shocked. You know, it's probably why I'm in control," he said. "I'm shocked right now of the verdict."
However, McGrath said the trial was fair.
"Raul Valle received a fair trial," he said.
"I don't believe Raul Valle woke up Saturday morning and said he was going to kill Jimmy McGrath. You know, I never believed that. They didn't know each other. I'm just in shock that an innocent young man with a brilliant potential is not with us anymore. And the person that took his life is right now free tonight."
McGrath thanked the first responders, investigators, the court and the media for conducting themselves professionally throughout the criminal justice process.
The family's attorney, Michael Rosnick, mentioned in passing that the state could retry Valle on the lesser included charges where a mistrial was declared.
"There are lesser included charges," he said. "I anticipate, we anticipate, that the state's attorney's office will file an information, but I'm going to let the state's attorney's office speak for itself."
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Donna Rotunno is a criminal defense attorney and Fox News contributor.
She told Fox News Digital that the not-guilty verdict on the murder charge is justified.
"I don't think that the punishment would fit the elements of the crime in this circumstance," she said Wednesday afternoon. "I don't think this rises to the level of … where somebody should spend the rest of their life in prison. And it's an awful, terrible, tragic situation. But I don't think that there was the level of intent necessary to spend the rest of their life in prison.
"There is never an intent to use [a weapon]. Your hope is to have it in case you need it and I think the facts and circumstances of this situation lend to that analysis. I think that this was a circumstance where a fight broke out. I do believe that [Valle] felt that he was in danger. I believe he felt that his friends were in danger, and therefore those were the decisions that he made. And, you know, knife or not, that was that."
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The jury was deadlocked at 11-1 on Monday and Tuesday before deliberations continued Wednesday morning, as NBC Connecticut reported. Valle testified during the trial, claiming the stabbing was self-defense.
"I think those stories are very compelling for jurors. I think jurors really try to get it right," Rotunno told Fox News Digital on Tuesday, before the jury reached the verdict. "Obviously, there are some cases where maybe that analysis doesn't fit or somebody makes the claim of self-defense [and] it doesn't make sense under the law. But … given the way this jury has been out now for a couple of days, and they're clearly deadlocked … [defense attorneys] have made a compelling argument to at least one or some."
She added that any time a defendant asserts self-defense, "the burden shifts to you to show that … you were in reasonable fear."
Valle took the witness stand in his own defense last week, which Rotunno said is "almost necessary" in cases like his.
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Valle attended St. Joseph High School in Trumbull near Fairfield Prep, where McGrath was a junior. Both had been at a house party on the evening of May 14, 2022 that involved a fight and underage drinking prior to the stabbing, which occurred at another house party later that night.
Police responded to several 911 calls reporting a fight that occurred just before midnight on May 14, 2022 outside a residence on Laurel Glen Drive in Shelton and found multiple victims on the front lawn. The owner of the residence where the party took place was home at the time of the incident, according to a warrant.
At one point, there were about 25 people engaged in the fight on the front lawn of the home, witnesses told police. At least three juvenile suspects are mentioned in the report, including Valle, who is suspected of having a knife. McGrath had "one stab wound to the left side of the chest," the warrant states. "The stab wound went through the rib and heart."
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A doctor from the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner of Connecticut told police that there were approximately 1.8 liters of blood in McGrath's lungs.
During his emotional testimony, Valle said he never intended to kill anyone that evening. He said a friend handed him the knife during a large fight involving dozens of teenagers who surrounded him. He alleged that at one point during the fight, he lost consciousness.
Valle further said he was swinging the knife in all directions and felt overwhelmed, according to Court TV.
"So I think that it's very difficult in a self-defense case for a jury to not hear from the defendant," Rotunno explained. "Sometimes, you can establish it through other witnesses, but if you have a defendant that can take the stand, and you have somebody who … is going to do a good job telling the jury what happened, I almost think it's necessary in these cases."
Rotunno said that "in a melee, you have to remember, you're talking about split-second situations." She noted that at one point during his testimony, Valle was asked whether someone next to him was coming directly at him during the fight, to which he responded that he could not remember.
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"I think that for the defense, the best piece of information is just the fact that this is a total fight. You have no idea who's coming at you. You don't know what's going to happen to you. You're in fear, and you act," she said. "And in any circumstance, I understand that the prosecution is going to say, he brought this knife to a fist fight, right? … But just because you have a weapon on you doesn't mean that there was an intent to use it. And if you're not the aggressor, it doesn't mean you don't have a right to then defend yourself."
If the jury does not come to an agreement, the judge may declare a mistrial. That could result in the case going "back to square one," Rotunno said. The defense could also argue for Valle's release in the case of a mistrial.
A representative from St. Joseph told Fox News Digital in 2022 that Valle had been in good academic standing and had not been in any fights at school before the May 14 incident.
Valle was released on $2 million bond just days after his arrest in May 2022.
An obituary for McGrath described the 17-year-old as the "sunshine" of his parents' life and his sister's "best friend and confidant."
"Many described Jim as a wonderfully happy person with a big heart who was a loving friend to many," the obituary states. "He loved his school, Fairfield Prep, and he excelled as an athlete in every sport he chose. He played football and lacrosse for Fairfield Prep and as a youth for Shelton and Connecticut Wolves as well. He understood the meaning of being part of a team."Original article source: Prep school lacrosse player's accused killer found not guilty of murder
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Trump's team promised transparency on Epstein. Here's what they delivered.
WASHINGTON – For years, members of President Donald Trump's inner circle have called on federal officials to release their files on Jeffrey Epstein, a disgraced financier and convicted sex offender who died in a Manhattan jail cell in 2019 while awaiting trial on federal sex trafficking charges. Since Trump took office, Trump administration officials have propelled that campaign forward, suggesting new names from Epstein's purported client list and new accountability were in store. "Absolutely," Alina Habba said when asked by British journalist Piers Morgan in February if "we are likely to see criminal actions being taken" in relation to Epstein. Habba was serving as counselor to the president and is now the acting U.S. attorney for New Jersey. "To hide lists, to protect political friends, all of that, we don't have time for that." "It's a new day, it's a new administration, and everything's going to come out to the public," Attorney General Pam Bondi told Fox News host Sean Hannity in a March interview. Many who were eagerly awaiting the administration's next steps are now stewing in disappointment at what the Trump administration has delivered. In a July memo, the Justice Department and FBI said their "systematic review" of documents related to Epstein "revealed no incriminating 'client list.'" "(W)hile we have labored to provide the public with maximum information regarding Epstein ... no further disclosure would be appropriate or warranted," the offices said. After his team made such concrete promises, the report this week was tough for many Trump loyalists to swallow. Some of the president's most ardent supporters were in uproar. "I'm going to go throw up actually," said right-wing radio show host Alex Jones in a July 7 video post on X, as tears welled up in his eyes. "Shut down the FBI," former Trump spokeswoman Liz Harrington posted on X July 8. "No one believes there is not a client list," Republican Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene said in a July 8 post on X. The outrage comes after years of claims from Trump's inner circle that the government has been hiding information on Epstein's possible associates and the circumstances of his death. More: Epstein case fallout reaches fevered pitch with reports FBI's Dan Bongino could resign While conspiracy theories have mounted online that a political elite had Epstein killed so he couldn't reveal the identities of others involved in his alleged sex-trafficking crimes, New York's chief medical examiner ruled in 2019 that Epstein died by suicide. The Justice Department memo this week echoes that finding. That hasn't stopped some right-wing commentators from speculating that the administration is perpetuating a cover-up. "Why is Pam Bondi's Justice Department covering up Jeffrey Epstein's crimes and murder?" right-wing political commentator Tucker Carlson posted on X July 8. USA TODAY combed through years of public statements that may shed light on why so many Trump supporters are angry. Trump allies and top-ranking members of his administration have long promoted theories that there was more to the Epstein story and that Trump, if re-elected, would reveal the full picture. Here's a timeline of what they've said: "Remember when we learned that our wealthiest and most powerful people were connected to a guy who ran a literal child sex trafficking ring? And then that guy died mysteriously in a jail? And now we just don't talk about it," the future vice president posted on X on June 4, 2021, a few weeks before announcing his bid for a U.S. Senate seat in Ohio. "What possible interest would the US government have in keeping Epstein's clients secret? Oh…" Vance said in a post on X on Dec. 30, 2021. Vance pointed in his post to a right-wing activist's claim that Biden's Justice Department made a deal to keep a "little black book" of Epstein associate and convicted sex trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell's contacts secret. "There are a lot of people who are knee-deep in the Washington swamp who are not telling you the truth about serious allegations out there that Epstein may have had video and audio of people out there doing things they shouldn't have been doing," said Bongino, who was speaking on the "The Dan Bongino Show" on May 1, 2023. The future deputy director of the FBI said at the time, "Jeffrey Epstein isn't with us anymore and nobody seems to want to talk about it outside of a few entrepreneurial media outlets saying, 'Hey, this is a big deal.'" Kash Patel, who would become Trump's FBI director, told right-wing media personality Glenn Beck on Dec. 13, 2023, that the head of the FBI under Biden had direct control of Epstein's "black book." "That's why you don't have the black book," Patel added. "And, to me, that's a thing I think President Trump should run on. On Day 1, roll out the 'black book.'" "It's the same thing with Epstein's list. It's like, what the hell are these Republicans doing?" Patel said to right-wing media personality Benny Johnson on Dec. 19, 2023, a few months after his "Government Gangsters" book on an alleged anti-Trump "deep state" was published. He said, "I don't care about the (Epstein) list itself, but release the names, right? What the hell are the House Republicans doing? They have the majority. You can't get the list?" He also said, "Put on your big boy pants and let us know who the pedophiles are. We have an election coming up, and we need to adjudicate this matter at the polls." And he went on to say, "God knows the FBI and DOJ aren't going to do anything, but how are you going to reward the FBI with the new headquarters building ... and we can't even get basic documents out? This is why America hates Congress, and this is why I'm tired of the Republican majority saying they're going to get the job done and failing." Robert F. Kennedy Jr. told Fox News' Jesse Watters on Dec. 5, 2023, during his 2024 presidential election campaign: "We should get real answers on what happened to Jeffrey Epstein and any of the high-level political people that he was involved with. All of that should be open to the public. It should be absolutely transparent." RFK Jr. now serves as Trump's secretary for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. He also told Watters, "I don't see why any of those records would have any redactions in them. Why would we be hiding that from the American public? I think that's outrageous." "Yeah, yeah, I would (declassify the Epstein files)," Trump said on Fox & Friends Weekend on June 3, 2024. "I think that less so because, you know, you don't know if, you don't want to affect people's lives if it's phony stuff in there, cause there's a lot of phony stuff with that whole world. But I think I would." He also said, "Certainly about the way he (Epstein) died, it would be interesting to find out what happened there because that was a weird situation and the cameras didn't happen to be working, etcetera, etcetera. But yeah, I'd go a long way toward that one." "How is it that my father can be convicted of 34 crimes, but no one on Epstein's list has even been brought to light?" Donald Trump Jr. said at a Turning Point Action convention on June 17, 2024, as he was campaigning on behalf of his father. "It's almost like they're trying to protect those pedophiles for some reason. I can't imagine why. We're not allowed to say they're groomers, but when they act a lot like groomers (it) sort of tells you everything you need to know, right?" "A lot of big people went to that island. But fortunately, I was not one of them," former President Donald Trump said on podcaster Lex Fridman's show on Sept. 3, 2024. Trump added that the list of Epstein's clients who went to that island "probably will be" made public. "I'd certainly take a look at it." "Seriously, we need to release the Epstein list, Vance, then a U.S. Senator and Trump's vice presidential pick, said on Oct. 22, 2024, on podcaster Theo Von's show. "That, that is an important thing." Asked whether the Justice Department might release the list of Jeffrey Epstein's clients, Attorney General Pam Bondi told Fox News host John Roberts Feb. 21, 2025, "It's sitting on my desk right now to review. That's been a directive by President Trump. I'm reviewing that." When asked if she had seen anything yet that caused her to say, "Oh my gosh," Bondi said, "Not yet." (At a July 8, 2025 Trump cabinet meeting, Bondi said of her remarks to Roberts: "I was asked a question about the client list and my response was, 'It's sitting on my desk to be reviewed,' meaning the file," not the client list.) Bondi told Fox News host Jesse Watters on Feb. 26, 2025, "I think tomorrow, Jesse, breaking news right now, you're going to see some Epstein information being released by my office." She said, "What you're going to see, hopefully tomorrow, is a lot of flight logs, a lot of names, a lot of information." Asked about Bondi's promise to release the Jeffrey Epstein files, then-counselor to the president Alina Habba said, "We are going to be promises made, promises kept," in comments on Piers Morgan's show on Feb. 27, 2025. "In this case, in Epstein's case, it is incredibly disturbing. We have flight logs, we have information, names that will come out." Habba, who is now the acting U.S. attorney for New Jersey, also said, "I won't say they're guilty until they go through their time in court, but again, now it's time for accountability." When Piers Morgan said no man associated with Epstein has been put in prison and asked whether "we are likely to see criminal actions being taken," Habba responded, "Absolutely. I think it would be negligent for us not to." Habba added that, "You have to hold individuals who are indeed rapists accountable. We have to have them tried." She said, "To hide lists, to protect political friends, all of that, we don't have time for that." The Justice Department released documents on Feb. 27, 2025, that it said had previously been leaked, but were never formally released by the government. The department called the move the "First Phase" of declassifying Epstein files. It said that "thousands of pages" of never-before-disclosed documents had been left out when Bondi previously requested all the files. The FBI was being ordered to deliver the remaining documents swiftly. "The Department remains committed to transparency and intends to release the remaining documents upon review and redaction to protect the identities of Epstein's victims," according to the press release. Bondi told Fox News host Sean Hannity on Mar. 3, 2025, that an order she issued in February resulted in a "truckload" of Epstein files being delivered by the FBI. "Thousands of pages of documents. I have the FBI going through them," Bondi said. "We believe in transparency, and America has the right to know." "Sadly, these people (the Biden administration) don't believe in transparency. But I think, more unfortunately, I think a lot of them don't believe in honesty. And it's a new day, it's a new administration, and everything's going to come out to the public," Bondi told Hannity."It's really, it's not sad, it's infuriating that these people thought that they could sit on this information, but they can't. It's a new day, and we believe in transparency, and it's going to come out." On July 7, the Justice Department, which Bondi leads as attorney general, released a memo stating that a "systematic review revealed no incriminating 'client list'" and that Jeffrey Epstein died by suicide. "Perpetuating unfounded theories about Epstein serves neither" to combat child exploitation nor bring justice to victims, according to the memo. "No further disclosure would be appropriate or warranted," it said. After the years of statements from Trump and his circle indicating there were hidden associates of Epstein and the new administration would be naming them, Trump expressed bewilderment on July 8 when a reporter asked Bondi at a cabinet meeting about lingering mysteries in the wake of the Justice Department's Epstein memo. "Are people still talking about this guy, this creep?" the president asked. "That is unbelievable." (This story has been updated to correct a spelling error.) 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Epstein case fallout reaches fevered pitch with reports FBI's Dan Bongino could resign
The fallout from a Justice Department memo that appeared to close the Jeffrey Epstein case reached a fevered pitch this week amid reports that a top FBI official may resign. FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino, the second-highest official at the bureau, didn't come into work on July 11, various news outlets reported. What's more, the former Secret Service agent and Fox News show host is weighing leaving the bureau altogether, less than four months after joining it, according to CNN and Semafor, which each cited sources familiar with the situation. The FBI didn't immediately respond to USA TODAY's request for comment. The developments come after the Justice Department and FBI released a memo July 7 stating that a "systematic review" of evidence failed to reveal any incriminating client list associated with Jeffrey Epstein, a disgraced financier and convicted sex offender who died in his jail cell in 2019 as he awaited trial on sex-trafficking charges. "Perpetuating unfounded theories about Epstein serves neither" to combat child exploitation nor bring justice to victims, the memo said. "No further disclosure would be appropriate or warranted." Many loyalists of President Donald Trump have been incensed by the memo, which followed years of suggestions by Trump associates that the government was hiding a list of Epstein clients who may have been involved in sex trafficking and that Epstein may have been murdered to prevent those names from becoming public. New York's chief medical examiner ruled in 2019 that Epstein died by suicide, and the Justice Department's memo backs up that finding. More: Trump's team promised transparency on Epstein. Here's what they delivered. The memo threw a range of conservative commentators into an uproar. "I'm going to go throw up, actually," right-wing radio show host Alex Jones said in a July 7 video post on X, as his eyes teared up. "I just really need the Trump administration to succeed ... and then for them to do something like this – tears my guts out." Bongino himself sounded alarm bells well before he took on a top role in Trump's FBI. "There are a lot of people who are knee-deep in the Washington swamp who are not telling you the truth about serious allegations out there that Epstein may have had video and audio of people out there doing things they shouldn't have been doing," Bongino said on his "The Dan Bongino Show" on May 1, 2023. "Jeffrey Epstein isn't with us anymore, and nobody seems to want to talk about it outside of a few entrepreneurial media outlets saying, 'Hey, this is a big deal,'" Bongino added. Attorney General Pam Bondi recently fanned the flames of those espousing a government cover-up about the Epstein evidence. Bondi characterized the Biden administration's effort on the case as lackluster, telling Fox News host Sean Hannity on March 3 that she had instructed the FBI to review a "truckload" of Epstein files that were delivered as a result of an order she issued in February. "It's infuriating that these people (the Biden administration) thought that they could sit on this information, but they can't. It's a new day, and we believe in transparency, and it's going to come out," Bondi said. However, Bondi largely seemed to close the door on future revelations at a July 8 cabinet meeting following the memo's release. She said various videos within the review turned out to be child sexual abuse materials, but said her department was looking for some further videos it hoped to release in connection with Epstein's jail facility. "And that's it on Epstein," Bondi said. Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, the second-highest official at the Justice Department after Bondi, said in a July 11 post on X that he'd worked closely with Bongino and FBI Director Kash Patel on the polarizing memo and they'd mutually signed off on its contents and conclusions. "The suggestion by anyone that there was any daylight between the FBI and DOJ leadership on this memo's composition and release is patently false," Blanche said. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Epstein fallout looms large amid reports top FBI official may resign
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Trump rips 'so-called' friends' attacks on Bondi, tells MAGA to move on from Epstein
WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump threw his full support behind Attorney General Pam Bondi in a furious social media post that lit into his "so-called 'friends'" in MAGA and told them to move on from fevered demands that she release files related to disgraced financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. "They're all going after Attorney General Pam Bondi, who is doing a FANTASTIC JOB! We're on one Team, MAGA, and I don't like what's happening. We have a PERFECT Administration, THE TALK OF THE WORLD, and 'selfish people' are trying to hurt it, all over a guy who never dies, Jeffrey Epstein," Trump wrote on July 12 in a lengthy post on Truth Social. Trump loyalists have been steadily berating Bondi since the Justice Department and FBI said that a "systematic review" of documents related to Epstein "revealed no incriminating 'client list.'" The statement led to allegations from far-right personalities, including Tucker Carlson, that the Trump administration was engaged in a cover-up. Bondi said earlier this year in an interview on Fox News after she was asked about Epstein's client list that it was "sitting on my desk right now to review." She promised at another point that "everything's going to come out to the public." Defending her stance at a July 8 Cabinet meeting at the White House, Bondi told reporters: "I was asked a question about the client list and my response was, 'It's sitting on my desk to be reviewed,' meaning the file, not the client list." Trump took another tack. In his statement on social media this weekend, he alleged that the government documents could have been written by political opponents and critics such as former President Barack Obama and former FBI Director James Comey, whom he fired during his first term. Epstein timeline: Trump's team promised transparency on Epstein. Here's what they delivered. "They created the Epstein Files, just like they created the FAKE Hillary Clinton/Christopher Steele Dossier that they used on me, and now my so-called 'friends' are playing right into their hands," Trump wrote. The dossier, assembled by former British spy Christopher Steele, contained salacious allegations about Trump, including alleged connections between the Republican's 2016 presidential campaign and Russia. Trump said he'd consider declassifying the Epstein files during the 2024 presidential campaign. Vice President JD Vance called for the release of Epstein's purported client list last fall. FBI Director Kash Patel repeatedly pushed for the alleged client list to be released when Joe Biden was in the White House. "To me, that's a thing I think President Trump should run on. On Day 1, roll out the 'black book,'" Patel told Glenn Beck on Dec. 13, 2023. In his social media post on July 12, the president offered the now-FBI director some cover. He said Patel and the FBI "must be focused on investigating" allegations of voter fraud and other red meat issues for the base, "instead of spending month after month looking at nothing but the same old, Radical Left inspired Documents on Jeffrey Epstein." He told his supporters not to "waste Time and Energy on Jeffrey Epstein, somebody that nobody cares about." "LET PAM BONDI DO HER JOB – SHE'S GREAT!" he said. Contributing: Aysha Bagchi This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Trump defends AG Pam Bondi, asks MAGA to move on from Epstein case