Courtney Wild
CVRA Plaintiff & Victims' Rights Advocate
Background
Courtney Wild is an Epstein survivor and long-running victims' rights litigant who proceeded for years in federal court as Jane Doe 1. Public court records show she challenged the 2007-2008 non-prosecution agreement (NPA), arguing that federal prosecutors failed to confer with identified victims before resolving the investigation. Her filings became a central part of the legal record around the Crime Victims' Rights Act (CVRA) and the government's handling of the Epstein case.
Wild later addressed federal proceedings in person, including 2019 and 2022 statements preserved in court-related records and victim-testimony materials. Her name also appears in financial-litigation records tied to settlements with banks over Epstein-related conduct. Wild has not been accused of wrongdoing in the Epstein matter; she appears in the archive as a victim-plaintiff and public advocate for stronger victim-notification and participation rights.
Key Facts
- Filed as Jane Doe 1 in CVRA litigation challenging Epstein's federal non-prosecution agreement
- Appears in the archive's 2008 court-filing records alongside Jane Doe 2 in the original CVRA petition
- Delivered a 2019 victim statement challenging the NPA in federal proceedings
- Gave a victim statement at Ghislaine Maxwell's 2022 sentencing hearing in SDNY records
- Identified in archive materials as a long-running public advocate for crime-victim rights reform
- Referenced in financial case records as Jane Doe 1 in Epstein-related banking litigation documents
Connection to Documents
Courtney Wild appears directly in victim-testimony records, CVRA court filings, and related financial-litigation materials in the archive. The records include her statements as a victim-plaintiff, the Jane Doe 1 filings challenging the NPA process, and later documents tied to bank-settlement proceedings connected to Epstein.
Related Document Categories
Related Documents in Archive(3)
Disclaimer: All information in this profile is sourced from publicly available court records, government FOIA releases, and credible news reporting. This is informational content. Inclusion or mention of any individual does not imply wrongdoing. All persons are presumed innocent unless proven guilty in a court of law.