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CNI

Madison County judge finds name in Epstein files because of legal representation

As an associate at an Edwardsville law firm, he represented Epstein in a 2013 debt collection matter  

Beth HundsdorferJanelle O'DeaIllinois Answers ProjectbyBeth Hundsdorfer,Janelle O'Deaand1 others
March 17, 2026
in Courts, Investigations
A A
Judge Andrew Carruthers

Madison County Associate Judge Andrew Carruthers found his name in the recently released U.S. Department of Justice files regarding Jeffrey Epstein, a sex offender accused of trafficking minors. Carruthers was assigned Epstein’s case in a collection matter in Lake County, Illinois, but said he never met him or communicated with him. Photo: Provided

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Article Summary

  • Andrew Carruthers was an associate in the Edwardsville civil firm HeplerBroom when he was assigned a collection case related to Jeffrey Epstein in 2013.
  • Carruthers, who was appointed to the bench eight years later, said Epstein “was completely unknown to us” when the firm accepted his business.
  • Carruthers said he never met or communicated with the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, but acted as local counsel to enforce a judgment handed down in the Virgin Islands.
  • Epstein’s plane made maintenance stops at a Metro East airport, including one in July 2001 with passengers Epstein and his co-conspirator, Ghislaine Maxwell and survivor of the sex-trafficking ring Virginia Roberts Guiffre.

This summary was written by the reporters and editors who worked on this story.

EDWARDSVILLE — A man wearing a sandwich board protesting outside of the Edwardsville courthouse last month revived sleeping worries and anxieties Madison County Judge Andrew Carruthers had hoped to leave in the past.

That single protester’s sign put on display what Carruthers already knew.

His name is in the Epstein files because he once represented Epstein on a collection matter more than a dozen years ago.

In the 3 million documents that contained horrific descriptions of child sexual abuse, photographs and videos released in January by the U.S. Department of Justice regarding the disgraced child sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein, there were legal filings signed by then-fledgling associate Carruthers.

“I was assigned to serve as local counsel for attorneys in another jurisdiction seeking to enforce a civil money judgment for their client who, at the time, was completely unknown to us, just as he was unknown to most of the country 13 years ago,” Carruthers said in a statement he provided after speaking with reporters.

It all began in 2013 with a collection matter, a foreign judgment for $250,000 that Epstein won in the U.S. Virgin Islands that had laid around for a couple of years. It was the result of a contract dispute over unfinished or subpar work at Little St. James, Epstein’s private island, as well as Epstein’s New York City townhouse.

The Virgin Island lawyer needed Illinois representation to collect the debt on the business that was registered in Illinois. The Virgin Islands lawyer knew a partner at the Illinois-based HeplerBroom and asked for help.

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Carruthers, then a new associate at the Edwardsville civil defense firm, was the “clean-up man” handling the extraneous minute legal matters that big civil clients bring to their legal firms — traffic tickets, wills, probate, small civil issues and collection matters.

There were no conflicts that prevented working on the case, so Carruthers filed the judgment in Lake County, near Chicago. He proceeded to try to collect the debt, always communicating through a lawyer in the Virgin Islands.

Carruthers said he never met Epstein, never spoke to him, never even communicated in writing with him. He had no idea of his Florida conviction in 2008 of soliciting a minor for prostitution.

Eventually, the debtor went bankrupt. Carruthers’ representation was over.

There’s hardly a mention of Carruthers’ firm HeplerBroom in the files, only canceled checks to them for $900, $1,300 and a wire transfer for $1,000. Carruthers eventually left the firm, moving on to the Madison County state’s attorney’s office’s civil division.

In 2019, Epstein was indicted on federal charges related to an international sex trafficking ring involving minors. Carruthers said he found out who Epstein was and what he was accused of around the time everyone else did.

Two months after that indictment, authorities said Epstein died after hanging himself in his prison cell.

Carruthers carried on with his legal career.

In 2021, Madison County circuit judges appointed him as an associate judge.

He is a utility player as judge, just as he had been at the law firm. Carruthers volunteered to restart a docket in nearby Granite City where he would hear traffic tickets, misdemeanors and ordinance violations. The location has been closed since the pandemic. He organized a food drive and read to schoolkids.

He presides over the busy asbestos and probate docket. Lawyers who appeared before Carruthers gave him a 91% rating in an Illinois State Bar Association judicial advisory poll. Associate judges must receive at least 65% to be recommended by the ISBA.

In January, the Justice Department released its files, detailing Epstein’s associations. They  were wide-ranging, including entertainment moguls, titans of industry, tech giants, two U.S. Presidents, the British royals, an Israeli prime minister and, incidentally, a Madison County lawyer turned judge.

What Carruthers had dreaded had come to pass: Finding out those court filings with his name on them are part of the infamous Epstein files.

Even bad guys need lawyers

Carruthers has worried, lost sleep. He’s a father to three teenage girls, a husband to a professor at a nearby university; a symbol in his local legal community. His family, his career and his reputation weighed heavily on his mind.

Attorneys know what it is to represent a client with an unsavory reputation, one expert said, but even bad guys need lawyers.

“If every controversial client you had disqualified you, there would be very few lawyers who would be eligible to serve as judges,” said Carol Needham, a professor at St. Louis University School of Law who specializes in ethics.

An associate judge is elected by circuit judges. Circuit judges are elected by the voters. The Third Judicial Circuit, which includes Madison and Bond counties, has eight circuit judges. Carruthers is one of 13 associate judges who serve four-year terms.

The circuit judges will decide whether to return Carruthers to the bench in 2029.

Carruthers isn’t the St. Louis area’s only distant tie to the now-deceased pedophile and financier. Epstein took trips through the St. Louis area and had at least one plane serviced in Cahokia, according to court documents and emails in the trove of files published by the U.S. Department of Justice. The trips included at least one flight with Virginia Giuffre and Ghislaine Maxwell that landed at the Downtown St. Louis Airport in Cahokia, about 10 minutes east of the Gateway Arch.

The three came through Cahokia at least one time, on July 11, 2001, according to a court transcript of an interview with a private pilot, David Rodgers, who worked for Epstein. Giuffre was a trafficking victim of Epstein beginning when she was a teenager, and she grew up to become an outspoken survivor of the abuse committed by Epstein and Maxwell. She died by suicide in April 2025.

Maxwell was a close associate of Epstein and currently is serving a 20-year prison sentence in Texas for sex trafficking.

Rodgers worked for Epstein as a private pilot for almost three decades. In the court transcript from a 2020 case against Maxwell, Rodgers confirmed the July 2001 flight from Teterboro, New Jersey, to Cahokia, Illinois. He also confirmed Maxwell, Giuffre, Epstein and a third unidentified person as passengers on the flight.

Rodgers at times flew the Boeing 727 now famously known as “The Lolita Express.” He denied ever witnessing Maxwell say or do anything to indicate she was helping Epstein traffic children and women. The flight to St. Louis was on Epstein’s Gulfstream jet, a different plane.

“And nothing you saw or heard in the roughly 30 years you worked for Epstein ever gave you even the slightest hint that anything like that was going on; isn’t that right?” a lawyer asked Rodgers.

“That’s correct,” he said.

On other trips, Epstein’s Gulfstream jet also underwent renovations and repairs at the St. Louis Downtown Airport in Cahokia. Beginning in the late 1980s, Epstein began doing business with Midcoast Aviation, and through the 2000s, Epstein’s aircraft were painted, refurbished, serviced and fueled by Midcoast. The full-service aircraft company has operated under the name Jet Aviation since 2011.

Epstein spent at least a quarter of a million dollars on services from Midcoast and Jet Aviation. FedEx records show a Midcoast employee sending an 8-pound package to Epstein’s Zorro Ranch in New Mexico on July 14, 2001, three days after Epstein, Maxwell and Giuffre came through Cahokia. The package was addressed to “Shannon at Zorro Ranch.”

Jet Aviation declined to comment through a Zurich-based spokeswoman.

Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service that distributes state government coverage to hundreds of news outlets statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.

Tags: Andrew CarruthersCahokiaCarol NeedhamEdwardsvilleGhislaine MaxwellGranite CityJeffrey EpsteinLake CountySt. LouisU.S. Department of Justice (DOJ)Virginia Giuffre
Beth Hundsdorfer

Beth Hundsdorfer

Beth has worked in journalism for 25 years, mostly at the Belleville News Democrat. She joined CNI in 2021. Beth has been a past recipient of the George Polk Award, the Investigative Reporter and Editor Award, the National Headliners Grand Award and two Robert F. Kennedy journalism awards.

Janelle O'Dea

Janelle O'Dea

Janelle O’Dea is based in St. Louis as an investigative reporter with the Illinois Answers Project State Investigations Team. Her beat covers Southern Illinois and the Metro East. Before joining the Illinois Answers Project, she worked in Colorado, Florida, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch and the Center for Public Integrity. She is a graduate of the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and grew up in central Illinois.

Illinois Answers Project

Illinois Answers Project

The Illinois Answers Project is Illinois’ nonpartisan investigations and solutions journalism news organization. We are published by the Better Government Association, Illinois’ nonprofit full-service watchdog organization.

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Madison County judge finds name in Epstein files because of legal representation

by Beth Hundsdorfer, Janelle O'Dea and Illinois Answers Project, Capitol News Illinois
March 17, 2026

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