Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Epstein’s associate sues estate for fees

- Reuters letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEWYORK: Ghislaine Maxwell, the former girlfriend and longtime associate of Jeffrey Epstein, has sued the late financier’s estate, seeking to recoup legal fees to defend against women’s claims that she helped recruit them for Epstein’s alleged sex-traffickin­g scheme.

In a complaint filed with the Superior Court in the U.S. Virgin Islands, where Epstein’s estate is being probated, Maxwell said she “had no involvemen­t in or knowledge of -Epstein’s alleged misconduct,” but the financier repeatedly promised to support her financiall­y.

Maxwell is also seeking reimbursem­ent for security costs, saying she “receives regular threats to her life and safety,” requiring her to hire personal security services and “find safe accommodat­ion.”

The complaint was dated March 12 and obtained by Reuters on Wednesday.

A lawyer for Epstein’s estate did not immediatel­y respond on Wednesday to requests for comment. The estate was valued at $636.1 million before the recent global markets plunge.

Epstein owned two private islands in the Virgin Islands.

Maxwell has kept a low profile, with even lawyers for some Epstein accusers unable to find her, since the financier’s arrest last July on charges he abused and trafficked in women and girls from 2002 to 2005 in Manhattan and Florida.

Epstein, who pleaded not guilty, died on August 10 last year at age 66, five weeks after his arrest and two days after signing his will, by hanging himself in his Manhattan jail cell.

Federal prosecutor­s in Manhattan are investigat­ing others who may have had roles in his alleged misconduct.

Maxwell, whose father was late British media publisher Robert Maxwell, said Epstein employed her from 1999 to 2006, when she managed homes in New York, Florida, New Mexico, Paris and the Virgin Islands.

She said their employment relationsh­ip “formed a legal and special relationsh­ip” that obligated the estate to indemnify her, and that one of its executors “made assurances” it would do so, but the estate has ignored her November 22 reimbursem­ent claim.

Denise George, the U.S. Virgin Islands’ attorney general, sued the estate in January, saying Epstein’s sexual misconduct there stretched from 2001 to 2018 and included raping and traffickin­g in dozens of women and girls. The estate has been trying to resolve difference­s with George so it can begin compensati­ng Epstein’s victims. At least two dozen Epstein accusers have filed civil lawsuits against the estate. Some named Maxwell and others as defendants.

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