Prosecutors defend newer charges against Ghislaine Maxwell
NEW YORK -- Prosecutors hope to preserve a July trial date
for Ghislaine Maxwell by defending a late-hour expansion of charges against
her, saying they developed when a woman spoke after Maxwell’s arrest about her
abuse at the hands of Jeffrey Epstein in the early 2000s.
The rewritten indictment lodged against the 59-year-old
British socialite on March 29 added sex trafficking charges to allegations that
Maxwell recruited three teenage girls from 1994 to 1997 for then-boyfriend
Jeffrey Epstein to sexually abuse. New charges stretched the conspiracy to
2004.
Two days after the superseding indictment was returned in
Manhattan federal court, defense attorney Bobbi Sternheim called it “shocking,
unfair, and an abuse of power," saying the charges were based on evidence
prosecutors had in their possession for years.
“That the government has made this move late in the game —
with trial set for July 12th — is obvious tactical gamesmanship,"
Sternheim wrote in a letter to the judge.
She said defense lawyers had not yet decided whether to ask
to postpone the trial, but her letter suggested it was highly likely and would
be further grounds for Maxwell's release on bail.
On Friday, prosecutors wrote to the judge saying they would
oppose any delay of a trial set to occur almost exactly a year after Maxwell
was arrested at a secluded New Hampshire home.
They said the timing of the new charges “was dictated by
developments in the Government’s ongoing investigation, not the nefarious
motivations suggested by the defense."
Prosecutors conceded that the woman whose claims led to the
new charges was interviewed in 2007 during a probe of Epstein in Florida. But
they said she did not agree to be interviewed in the government's current probe
until last July. And in-person interviews were not finished until January.
Prosecutors said they then spent two months corroborating
the woman's claims before seeking the superseding indictment in late March.
Maxwell's arraignment on the new charges is scheduled for this month.
According to the indictment, the woman was sexually abused
multiple times by Epstein between 2001 and 2004 at his Palm Beach, Florida,
residence, beginning when she was 14 years old. It said Maxwell groomed the
girl to engage in sex acts with Epstein by giving her gifts and cash.
Epstein was facing sex trafficking charges when he took his
life in a Manhattan federal jail in August 2019.
Maxwell has pleaded not guilty. She has been held without
bail at a federal lockup in Brooklyn. A judge has repeatedly rejected bail packages
that would require the posting of $28.5 million in assets and require Maxwell
to remain at home, with armed guards preventing flight.
Prosecutors say they will oppose any request to grant bail
if the trial is postponed. Defense lawyers say Maxwell's health is
deteriorating behind bars. Prosecutors say that is untrue.
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