LA mayor calls for 2028 Olympic board member to step down after Epstein connection

Los Angeles, California mayor Casey Bass
Los Angeles, California mayor Casey BassKirby Lee-Imagn Images

Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass on Monday said Casey Wasserman should step down as chairman of the committee organizing the 2028 Olympic Games following revelations of his interactions with convicted sex trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell.

Files published by the U.S. Justice Department late last month included flirty email exchanges ‌from more than two decades ago between Casey Wasserman and Ghislaine Maxwell, ‌the former girlfriend of the late Jeffrey Epstein, the notorious serial sex offender.

Wasserman ‌has denied having a personal or business relationship with Epstein. He ‌has previously apologized for his association with Maxwell, saying their relationship came before her or Epstein's crimes were revealed.

The board of LA28 last week said ‌Wasserman would stay on as chairman after a ⁠review found his relationship with ‌Epstein and Maxwell did not go beyond what had already been publicly documented.

"My ​opinion is that he should step down," Bass said in an interview with CNN. "That's not the opinion of the ​board."

The board determined that 23 years ago, before Wasserman or the public knew of Epstein and Maxwell's crimes, Wasserman and his then-wife ⁠flew on a humanitarian ​mission to Africa on Epstein's plane at the invitation of the Clinton Foundation.

LA28 said this was his single interaction with Epstein, and shortly after, he exchanged emails with Maxwell.

The board praised Wasserman's "strong leadership" in ‌running LA28 over the past decade.

Former USA women's soccer team star Abby Wambach, who was once under Wesserman's agency, left after his name was mentioned in the Epstein files, as did country music star Orville Peck (who also posted the news on his Instagram) and a boat-load of others under his agency.

According to the Wall Street Journal, Wasserman even decided to sell the agency after his name was mentioned in the files. 

Bass said she does not have the power to fire Wasserman, and her focus is on preparing the city to host the Games.

"The board made a decision," she said. "I think that decision was unfortunate. I don't support the decision. I do think that we need to look at the leadership."

"However, my job as mayor of Los Angeles is to make sure that our city is completely prepared to have the best Olympics ‌that has ever happened in Olympic history," she said.

"So my focus ​is a little different, but the behavior of Maxwell, what ‌they were involved in is abhorrent, and it's an issue that I've worked on for a long time."

Last week, The Wall Street Journal reported that Wasserman was putting his talent and marketing agency up for sale, telling employees that he felt he ⁠had "become a distraction" to its ⁠work and had begun the ‌process of selling the company.

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