Ghislaine Maxwell Trial Reveal Jeffrey Epstein Secrets
Ghislaine Maxwell is used to being the woman of the hour.
The 59-year-old British aristocrat was a fixture of the London and New York
social scenes throughout the 1990s and early 2000s, rubbing shoulders and
champagne flutes with an international cast of power players that included two
US presidents and at least one prince. In her jet-setting, party-hopping days,
she allegedly lived a double life as a groomer of girls, serving up underage
victims to Jeffrey Epstein and the megawatt men who moved alongside him.
All eyes are again on Maxwell as her trial opens in
Manhattan federal court, just steps from the lower Manhattan jail where Epstein
was found dead in his cell two years ago. The charges against her for her role
in Epstein’s decades-long international sex abuse ring include six counts
related to child sex trafficking in the decade spanning 1994 to 2004, involving
four girls — the youngest aged 14. The alleged crimes occurred at Epstein’s
residences in Manhattan, Palm Beach, and New Mexico, as well as Maxwell’s
London apartment.
Maxwell faces a separate trial, as yet unscheduled, for an
additional two counts of perjury for statements she made in connection with a
long-settled 2015 defamation suit against her. If convicted on all counts,
Maxwell could face 80 years in prison. She has always denied any involvement
in, or knowledge of, Epstein’s crimes, and pleaded not guilty to all charges.
Epstein’s death in federal custody in 2019 left Maxwell
bearing the brunt of public outrage at the chronic mishandling of his sex
crimes by law enforcement and the courts. Still, Maxwell’s time with Epstein
raises many questions: If she did indeed assist in his crimes, what motivated
her? Was she in love with him? Was she aiding and abetting him in exchange for
financial support? Apparently, not even Maxwell can explain the nature of her
partnership with Epstein. We know that they were lovers, and at one point she was
managing his households. But when asked in a 2016 deposition if she was
Epstein’s girlfriend, she responded, “That’s a tricky question. There were
times when I would have liked to think of myself as his girlfriend.”
Contradictions abound. On the one hand, she is a wealthy,
Parisian-born heiress with an Oxford education and an enviable black book. On
the other hand, she is, like Epstein, a person “mysteriously made and
mysteriously protected.”
So Maxwell goes to trial in Epstein’s stead. The challenge for
her defense team will be to wash away that guilt by association — to sever her
public image from Epstein’s. But Maxwell without the Epstein tinge is still a
strange figure with a strange past. And a closer look at the woman of the hour
brings up more questions than answers.
Maxwell appears to have entered Epstein’s life in the early
1990s, at around the same time his sophisticated sex trafficking operation
began in earnest. According to his victims, it was Maxwell who recruited minors
from schools, spas, and the streets, and delivered them to Epstein. Sometimes,
the girls claim, she participated in the abuse, and trained them to recruit
still more girls.
But how Maxwell entered Epstein’s orbit is itself a strange
story. It may have something to do with the death of her father, media baron
Robert Maxwell.
A Czechoslovakian Jew born Ján Ludvík Hyman Binyamin Hoch,
Robert Maxwell fled to France as a teenager during the early years of World War
II and eventually joined the British army, earning the rank of captain and a
prestigious medal in 1945. While most of his family perished in the Holocaust,
Maxwell became a naturalized British subject after the war and built a
billion-dollar publishing empire that included the Daily Mirror and the New
York Daily News.
Maxwell had a mythic capacity for self-invention. He
Anglicized himself, changing his name, adopting a posh British accent, and
living like a lord at Headington Hill Hall, the massive Maxwell family estate
in Oxford.
In 1991, he was found dead in the sea off the Canary
Islands. It was believed that he had fallen from his yacht — named the Lady
Ghislaine after his supposed favorite child.
There had long been rumors that Maxwell was an Israeli,
Soviet, or British spy (or perhaps all three at once). These rumors compounded
when he was given a state funeral in Israel and buried on the Mount of Olives.
Reportedly, six current and former heads of Israeli intelligence were in
attendance.
Whispers of espionage reached a fever pitch when, weeks
after his death, it was revealed that “Captain Bob” had looted nearly £500
million from the pension fund of his Mirror Group Newspapers. Today,
speculation still swirls: Did he jump from his yacht? Was he pushed?
The shadows of Robert Maxwell and Jeffrey Epstein flank
Ghislaine Maxwell’s public image: The loss of one mysterious man led her
straight into the arms of another, so the story goes.
Some theorize that Robert Maxwell and Epstein knew each
other before Ghislaine came into the picture. There are rumors that Maxwell had
in fact introduced his daughter to Epstein. Miami Herald journalist Julie K.
Brown, whose bombshell reporting brought massive additional attention to the
Epstein case, claims in her new book that Maxwell hired Epstein in the 1980s to
hide his money offshore. Maxwell’s status as a suspected spy, combined with the
claims that Epstein’s sex trafficking ring operated as a honey trap for
powerful men across the public and private sectors, make this theory, if true,
a game changer in the Epstein case.
But proof that Ghislaine Maxwell and Epstein knew each other
before her father’s death is scant. One piece of documentary evidence, however,
might hold an eerie clue. It’s the first known photograph of Maxwell and
Epstein, published by the Daily Mail in 2020. The photograph was taken in late
1991 at a memorial dinner for Robert Maxwell at the Plaza Hotel in New York
City. Epstein is seated next to Maxwell, and they’re smiling at each other.
That photograph could be a tip-of-the-iceberg document. Why
would Epstein be seated at her table, at her father’s memorial, if he were only
a casual acquaintance? It’s a tantalizing narrative, to be sure: What if Robert
Maxwell — a Jewish immigrant who elbowed his way into British aristocracy,
built a massive (if rickety) empire, and is rumored to have had ties with
Mossad and various figures in the international arms trade — knew Jeffrey Epstein,
a college dropout from Brooklyn who built a similarly inscrutable empire from
nothing and seems to have had ties to US intelligence?
However they met, it’s said that Ghislaine Maxwell was the
bridge between Epstein and the upper echelons of society — that she put an
aristocratic gloss on Epstein’s image. Together, they were photographed at
parties, charity galas, and fashion shows from 1991 to 2005. They were even
invited by Prince Andrew, a friend of Maxwell’s, to the Queen’s beloved
Sandringham estate (where the royal family traditionally spends Christmas) for
a “straightforward shooting weekend” in December 2000.
(Prince Andrew is currently locked in a civil suit with one
of Epstein’s victims, Virginia Giuffre, née Roberts, who has long claimed that
she was trafficked to the prince as a minor.)
Maxwell’s social graces and British charm are the very
things that allegedly put Epstein’s victims at ease. Here was “the most elegant
thing in the world,” as one of Maxwell’s accusers describes her, offering a
job, easy money, or a modeling audition. She’s wearing Chanel or Ralph Lauren,
sporting a perpetual pixie cut — swank but sophisticated in an old-world way.
What’s not to trust?
Just days before Epstein’s arrest, court records from
Giuffre’s defamation suit against Maxwell were ordered unsealed, and the first
batch of documents was released to the public in August 2019. The next day,
Epstein was found dead in his prison cell.
Although Epstein was allegedly sexually assaulting minors
long before he and Maxwell met (one ongoing lawsuit places his earliest assault
in 1978), it was during Maxwell’s tenure as his sometime-girlfriend and
employee that he allegedly received massages from three girls a day, every day.
His victims claim that he sexually assaulted them during these massages.
Dozens of Epstein’s accusers have spoken both on and off the
record about the structure of his sex trafficking operation. Each girl received
$200 for every massage she gave Epstein and $300 for every new girl she
recruited. Some claim to have recruited upwards of 50 other girls from places
like shopping malls and schools. And many allege that Maxwell was effectively
managing the operation.
All the while, Epstein’s proclivity for young girls — very
young — was an open secret.
The dam should have broken in 2005, when the mother of one
of his 14-year-old victims called the Palm Beach police. Michael Reiter, police
chief at the time, launched an investigation. When he suspected state
prosecutors were stalling, he contacted the FBI. That’s when Alex Acosta, then-US
attorney for the Southern District of Florida, took over the case. In 2007,
Acosta decided not to charge Epstein with federal sex crimes and instead signed
a nonprosecution agreement, despite the fact that the FBI had interviewed some
40 victims. The “sweetheart deal” allowed Epstein to avoid federal prosecution
by pleading guilty to lesser state charges. It also granted immunity to “any
potential co-conspirators,” named or unnamed.
Instead of lewd acts with a minor, Epstein was formally
convicted of soliciting prostitution and procuring a minor for prostitution in
2008. The conviction has since been roundly criticized for, at the very least,
flagrantly faulty logic: How can a minor (who, by definition, cannot consent)
be rightly referred to as a sex worker?
Epstein was sentenced to 18 months in the Palm Beach County
Stockade — an odd landing place for a sex offender. He served just 13 months in
custody, during which he was allowed to leave the jail on work release six days
a week.
With Epstein’s case closed and immunity granted to all
co-conspirators, Maxwell was in the clear. Her time with a convicted sex
offender didn’t seem to stain her reputation: She was photographed attending
charity galas, the Vanity Fair Oscar Party, and Chelsea Clinton’s 2010 wedding.
She popped up at policy events around the world between 2012 and 2015 promoting
her ocean nonprofit, TerraMar. Under its auspices, she gave a TED Talk,
attended the Clinton Global Initiative, and advocated for saving the oceans at
the UN. Ostensibly a grant-making foundation, TerraMar never gave out more than
a few hundred dollars. It was dissolved in December 2019, shortly after the New
York Post reported that the charity was under FBI investigation for ties to
Epstein.
The Woman of the Hour Comes Into Focus
It wasn’t until 2015 that Maxwell’s protective bubble began
to shrink. The timeline of mounting pressure was quick. In December 2014,
Virginia Giuffre accused Maxwell of grooming and sexually assaulting her,
beginning when Giuffre was 16 years old. Maxwell called Giuffre a liar and, in
January 2015, Giuffre sued Maxwell for defamation. Crucially, Maxwell gave
depositions in this suit in 2016. The perjury charges against her today stem
from statements she made under oath in those depositions.
By late 2016, Maxwell had all but disappeared from the
social circuit. She sold her New York townhouse and was married, in secret, to
Scott Borgerson, a billionaire tech founder who has since stepped down as CEO
of his maritime tracking company, CargoMetrics.
Giuffre’s defamation suit was settled in 2017, with Maxwell
reportedly paying millions. Epstein was bankrolling Maxwell’s legal bills until
about 2017. And, last year, she sued his estate to recoup her legal costs,
claiming that Epstein had promised to always fund her legal bills.
Then, in 2018, the dam broke for good when Julie K. Brown
dusted off Epstein’s decade-old sweetheart deal. Brown’s Miami Herald exposé
brought to light the expansive nonprosecution agreement brokered by Acosta (who
was, by this time, serving as labor secretary in the Trump administration) that
shielded Epstein and company from federal prosecution in 2008. The series
sparked outrage, putting Epstein’s name back in the headlines and inspiring
more victims to come forward.
In February 2019, a federal judge ruled that Acosta had
illegally withheld the 2008 plea deal from Epstein’s more than 30 victims. The
nonprosecution agreement that granted immunity to Epstein and “any potential
co-conspirators” was thrown out, and all who were party to Epstein’s crimes
became fair game.
Five months later, Epstein was arrested on federal sex
trafficking charges at Teterboro Airport in New Jersey. He had just gotten off
a return flight from France.
Just days before Epstein’s arrest, court records from
Giuffre’s defamation suit against Maxwell were ordered unsealed, and the first
batch of documents was released to the public in August 2019. The next day,
Epstein was found dead in his jail cell.
Maxwell is still fighting to keep documents from that
defamation suit under seal, but they continue to be released to the public in
batches. These documents — unsealed and largely unredacted — constitute the
fullest picture we’ve had yet of Epstein’s sex trafficking operation. Among the
documents are thousands of pieces of evidence: flight logs, email exchanges
between Maxwell and Epstein, and, of course, Maxwell’s deposition transcripts.
Those that have been unsealed can be read in full here.
Maxwell remained free for about a year after Epstein’s July
2019 arrest, and, in that time, the prosecution argues, she “made intentional
efforts to avoid detection.”
She shuttered her nonprofit, TerraMar, and purchased her New
Hampshire home, in cash, through an anonymous LLC. She moved hundreds of
thousands of dollars around her accounts, registered a new phone number under
“G Max,” and had packages delivered to her address under phony names. Court
records show that she had a security detail of British ex-military guarding her
home.
The Knock She Must Have Expected
On the morning of July 2, 2020, the FBI raided Maxwell’s New
Hampshire home, a sprawling property dubbed “Tuckedaway” for its wooded
seclusion. They found a cellphone wrapped in tin foil on a desk — a move the
prosecution called “a seemingly misguided effort to evade detection.”
Her arrest was the first major development in the Epstein
case since the financier’s death in federal custody the year before. And
Maxwell’s will be the first criminal case in the Epstein saga to make it to
trial. (Her lawyers have not responded to a request for comment.)
To date, Maxwell is one of two alleged co-conspirators to be
criminally charged in relation to Epstein’s crimes. (The other is French
modeling agent Jean-Luc Brunel, who was charged with rape and sexual assault of
minors in December 2020 and is now in custody in Paris.) Given that she has an
estimated $20 million across some 15 bank accounts, as well as British and
French passports (France does not have an extradition treaty with the US),
Maxwell was ruled an extreme flight risk. She has requested bail six times.
Maxwell’s trial is expected to last an estimated six weeks.
As for her legal strategy, we know that “false memory” expert Elizabeth Loftus
will testify as a witness for the defense, likely in an effort to dispute the
recollections of Epstein’s victims. Loftus is known for having testified for
the defense in many child molestation and sexual assault cases, including those
of Harvey Weinstein, Bill Cosby, and Jerry Sandusky.
In the event of a guilty verdict, Maxwell’s legal team will
most certainly file an appeal.
The Epstein saga is far from over, and our biggest questions
remain unanswered: Who and what were really involved? And to what end? At any
moment, a new piece of information could cause us to rip up everything we think
we know about this case.
And yet there is a sense that we’ve lived an entire lifetime
with it — Epstein’s victims certainly have. Their fight for justice has been
decades in the making, and it has included multiple state and federal
investigations, a lawsuit against the federal government (that Epstein’s
victims won), and countless other suits, countersuits, and appeals. So far,
it’s caused a prince to step back from royal duties, a labor secretary of the
United States to resign, and the heads of some of the world’s largest
corporations to be ousted from their posts.
Right now, we turn our attention toward Ghislaine Maxwell in
anticipation of a spectacle that will likely prove short on answers. Perhaps
only in the years of criminal and civil cases to come will we arrive at a
fuller picture of the truth.
Comments
Post a Comment