Scottish Daily Mail

GHISLAINE’S TEARS AS SHE’S TOLD: YOU MUST STAY IN JAIL

Maxwell pleads on video link to stay in luxury hotel ++ Breaks down in court after bail refused ++ Told she faces 35 years... and 12 MONTHS behind bars before trial

- From Stephen Wright in London and Daniel Bates in New York

GHISLAINE Maxwell broke down in tears last night after a judge ruled she must remain in jail for at least a year pending her trial on sex traffickin­g charges.

The British socialite was denied bail after a court was told she had the ‘motive and opportunit­y’ to flee the

United States to avoid prosecutio­n over allegation­s she groomed girls as young as 14 for her paedophile friend Jeffrey Epstein to abuse.

Maxwell, appearing via video link at a virtual court hearing, tilted her head down and rested her chin on her hands as US

District Judge Alison Nathan told her she must stay behind bars. The 58-year-old wiped away tears as she learnt her fate.

The judge said the risks of releasing Maxwell were ‘simply too great’, adding that ‘no combinatio­n of her conditions’ could assure her appearance in court. The court also heard that: Maxwell is pleading not guilty to the six federal counts she faces;

She used an alias and posed as a journalist to view her £800,000 hideaway in the forest of New Hampshire;

The socialite asked to be bailed to a ‘luxury hotel in Manhattan’;

No further charges against her are anticipate­d at this time;

Maxwell kept her mobile phone wrapped in tinfoil to stop it being hacked.

Judge Nathan said Maxwell, who faces up to 35 years in jail if convicted of all charges, had failed to give a full account of her finances, which meant setting bail would be impossible.

The judge also criticised her decision to hide for the past year, including buying the house in New Hampshire through an anonymised company.

Maxwell, prosecutor­s said, posed as a journalist called Janet Marshall when she went to view the secluded property, which was paid for in cash.

Maxwell asked to be bailed to a ‘luxury Manhattan hotel’ ahead of her trial next year but Judge Nathan said the US Government’s case against her ‘appears strong’.

The ruling was delivered at the end of a bail hearing during which two of Maxwell’s alleged victims branded her a ‘sexual predator’ and a ‘monster’ who had never shown any remorse.

One of her accusers, who asked for anonymity and was referred to as Jane Doe, said in a statement read out in court: ‘Without Ghislaine, Jeffrey could not have done what he did. The sociopathi­c manner in

‘I know she has no remorse’

which she nurtured our relationsh­ip and abused my trust… she would have done anything to satisfy Mr Epstein... If she is out, I need to be protected.

‘I know what she has done, I know how many lives she has ruined and I know she has no remorse.’

Another alleged victim, Annie Farmer, said she had met Maxwell when she 16.

She called her ‘a sexual predator’ who abused her. ‘She also has a demonstrat­ed contempt for our legal system by committing perjury,’ she added.

Miss Farmer, who has accused the defendant of enabling her abuse, told the court that Maxwell ‘has never shown any remorse for her heinous crimes’ and ‘the danger she poses must be taken seriously.’

‘She is a sexual predator who groomed and abused me and countless other children and young women,’ Miss Farmer said.

Maxwell’s failed bid for bail came almost a year to the day after Epstein was remanded in custody on child sex charges. Weeks later he killed himself in prison.

She is accused of grooming girls as young as 14 for Epstein to abuse between 1994 and 1997, a period when she was his girlfriend.

The British socialite was dressed in a brown shirt, with her normally short hair in a bun, as Judge Nathan set an anticipate­d trial date of July 12, 2021.

Maxwell is being held in the fortress-like Metropolit­an Detention Centre in Brooklyn where she is wearing paper clothes to ensure she does not kill herself.

She is being closely monitored as the Department of Justice wants to ensure she does not kill herself like her former boyfriend.

Maxwell’s legal team had offered a £4million bail package for her to be freed from jail after she was arrested at her New Hampshire bolthole earlier this month.

As part of the package, her lawyers said she would be confined to a luxury hotel in the New York area, surrender all her travel documents and be subject to GPS monitoring.

But the court hearing in New York last night was told that along with her three passports, connection­s to some of the world’s most powerful people and her own fortune of more than £8million, Maxwell has every incentive to try to flee. Prosecutor­s said Maxwell was ‘skilled at living in hiding’, has ‘few if any’ community ties and therefore should be denied bail because she is the ‘very definition of a flight risk’. They argued against her being granted bail, citing that due to holding French and British passports, she has the ability to ‘live beyond the reach of extraditio­n indefinite­ly’.

Assistant US Attorney Alison Moe claimed that when Maxwell bought her Bradford, New Hampshire home, she toured the property in November last year using the alias of ‘Janet Marshall’ and claiming to the estate agent that she worked as a journalist.

‘There are serious red flags here,’ the prosecutor said, adding that Maxwell had a ‘strong incentive to flee’ to avoid accountabi­lity for her

 ??  ?? Ghislaine Maxwell: Judge feared she would flee the US
Ghislaine Maxwell: Judge feared she would flee the US
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