The Sunday Telegraph

Ex-assistant to Maxwell may be next in line for prosecutio­n

An Epstein victim who was groomed by Maxwell tells her story to Charlotte Lytton

- By Josie Ensor in New York

AT Ghislaine Maxwell’s sentencing, one question loomed large in the courtroom: if she had helped Jeffrey Epstein run a far-reaching pyramid scheme of sexual abuse, as the New York judge was contending, where were the financier’s other alleged enablers?

The name of one assistant to the couple came up repeatedly during Maxwell’s four-week federal trial. It was on the lips of victims who took the stand, and in black-and-white handwritte­n flight logs for Epstein’s private jet.

Yet, when Maxwell was last Tuesday sentenced to 20 years in prison for sex traffickin­g, Sarah Kellen was nowhere to be found.

Ms Kellen, 43, has been described in legal filings as Epstein’s “lieutenant” and “right-hand woman” for allegedly sourcing and booking women and underage girls for “massages”, where the financier would rape them.

Victims of the couple questioned why Ms Kellen, the New York-based wife of Nascar driver Brian Vickers, and the other “assistants” who facilitate­d their abuse never faced charges. Larry Visoski, his private pilot, testified that she worked as a personal assistant for both Epstein and Maxwell. She scheduled flights on Epstein’s jets, flying 350 times between 2001 and 2006.

In court, southern district of New York judge Alison Nathan identified Ms Kellen as “a knowing participan­t in the criminal conspiracy” and said she was “a criminally responsibl­e participan­t.”

In reference to Maxwell, he said: “The defendant was Epstein’s number two and the lady of the house. At some point, Kellen took over some of the defendant’s duties.”

Carolyn, a witness at the trial who requested only to use her first name, testified that on at least one occasion Ms Kellen took nude photos of her before a sexualised massage with Epstein.

Ms Kellen was one of four women granted immunity from Florida prosecutio­n over Epstein’s abuse through a deal with the government in 2018. The others included Adriana Ross, Lesley Groff and Nadia Marcinkova.

However, Judge Nathan proclaimed that other states were not bound by what happened in Florida.

‘Maxwell knew exactly what she was getting all these women – girls – into. And that’s just disgusting’

Gretchen Rhodes was working at a spa when Ghislaine Maxwell first came in to recruit her as a private masseuse in 2001. The 24-year-old Rhodes told her to make arrangemen­ts through the receptioni­st, but Maxwell persisted. “No, no, no, I don’t want to do that, I want you to come and work for me,” she urged, handing over her card. That was the first of several visits she made to get Rhodes to acquiesce, repeatedly “trying to upsell” the prospect. “Like this is something super fancy,” says Rhodes. “We pick you up in a boat, bring you back in a boat, you know, it’s like the lifestyles of the rich and famous.”

Working to support her ambition of becoming a singer, and worn down by weeks of the “well-coiffed” Maxwell’s visits, Rhodes eventually returned her call. The first time she stepped foot on the island, the socialite warned her “that this is a ‘speak when spoken to’ situation”. “Don’t ask questions,” Maxwell told her. “If you see anything, you’re going to keep it to yourself.”

Rhodes has never before spoken publicly about what happened at Little St James, the private Caribbean island on which Maxwell and her one-time boyfriend, paedophile financier Jeffrey Epstein, spent over a decade traffickin­g and abusing girls and grown women.

In Ghislaine Maxwell: the Making of a Monster, a three-part documentar­y beginning this week on Channel 4, the former managers of Epstein’s Caribbean estate explain that Maxwell had been given the task of finding him a never-ending conveyor belt of massage therapists – “the younger the better”. Maxwell “just made sure that he got his massages,” they recall. “Come hell or high water, she made sure he was happy.”

For the first few months, Rhodes massaged Maxwell. Then, having apparently passed muster, she was taken to Epstein. Maxwell walked her to his room, repeating again that “whatever happens during the massage, you keep to yourself ”. Inside, Maxwell stripped, reclothed herself, and then left – after which Rhodes massaged Epstein. Following that bizarre introducti­on, the session passed quite normally, she remembers. In fact, he wanted to help her. He told Rhodes that enabling people to achieve their dreams was “kind of my thing”, adding that he would fly her to New York to meet record label executives. He duly did and, when they returned to the Caribbean, she gave him another massage. This time, she was made to rub his nipples as he masturbate­d.

Rhodes struggles now to talk about what went on, still “taken aback” by the first in a series of such encounters, and why she couldn’t “just jump off ” the rollercoas­ter Maxwell set her on. Being sworn to secrecy worked as an effective isolation tool, leaving her too fearful to seek help, and believing that she had done something wrong to be treated in that way.

Now 20 years on, aged 45, she can see that “because of [Maxwell], I was abused by him. She was calculated and manipulati­ve every step of the way.” There is no question, she says, that Maxwell “knew exactly what she was getting all these women – girls – into, and she did it with joy; with the joy of what that power brings to her. And that’s just disgusting.”

It is evident how raw the abuse has left her, prompting a silence that lasted until two summers ago, when she saw a documentar­y about Epstein’s “paedophile island” on Netflix. She was staying with her family in the Midwest, and told them what had happened. Then, another two weeks down the line, she came clean to her husband.

“I felt such shame, and embarrassm­ent of myself, never really having dealt with it at that point. And never having had anybody say, ‘this wasn’t your fault, you didn’t do this, because these were predators. You are a victim’. I hadn’t heard that yet.”

Rhodes, who went on to tour with Fleetwood Mac, is “tired of living in fear”, speaking out now only because “I want to make this my story, not have this story own me”. It’s a mentality that lawyer Sigrid McCawley has heard repeated many times in the eight years since she first began representi­ng Epstein’s victims, several of whom were in the courthouse in New York on Tuesday as the sentence of 20 years in prison for Maxwell’s role in a highsociet­y sex-traffickin­g ring was announced. “I don’t think for survivors of abuse, there’s ever much closure,” she says. “But I do think there’s relief in knowing that they fought the fight.”

McCawley, who appears in the documentar­y and also litigated in Virginia Giuffre’s civil suit against the Duke of York, says her clients have “got a lot of peace from the fact that Ghislaine will be in prison for the rest of her life”. She believes that, regardless of privilege, the ruling “sends a message – that if you engage in that kind of conduct, you will be held responsibl­e”. Still, it is not over: the lawyer says the US authoritie­s must “do more work” to bring others involved in the Maxwell traffickin­g ring to justice.

In court, the 60-year-old daughter of disgraced media tycoon Robert Maxwell was always “obstructio­nist” – half-answering questions with “an air of entitlemen­t” that suggested “I know presidents. I know princes. And I should not be bothered with these kinds of allegation­s,” according to

McCawley. “Even now, it’s very clear to me that she does not accept responsibi­lity for her crimes. She never apologised directly for what she did,” something McCawley believes will count against Maxwell if she appeals against her sentence, which she will “without question”.

The outcome means that, for McCawley, this case has come full circle as “the most heart-wrenching, difficult, personally challengin­g, and rewarding that I’ve ever participat­ed in. I couldn’t not do it again.”

For Rhodes, resolution is further off. On first hearing Maxwell’s sentence, she says she “felt sick to my stomach. It’s not like a good, solid 65 or 55 or 45 [years]. I feel like she got off very lightly.” As for the prospect of Maxwell trying to reduce her sentence through the courts, Rhodes is horrified. “You’re in jail, for so many reasons… and you still think you’re right?” she says, incredulou­s. “Go to hell.”

It will take time for the wounds to heal, if they ever do, and for Rhodes to feel ready to talk to other victims. And to tell her daughter, 11, what she has been through. Rhodes now both sings and teaches singing, beginning and ending sessions with each group of children chanting the same mantra three times: “I’m worthy, I’m confident and I love myself.” This way, she believes, she is safe in that knowledge that they will “have that to fall back on for the rest of their lives”, no matter what terrible circumstan­ces might arise. If she can instill that bravery in them, “I’m winning,” she says. “I’m not a victim; I’m helping to empower other people.”

‘Ghislaine Maxwell: The Making of a Monster’ begins on Channel 4 on Tuesday at 10pm

 ?? ?? Ghislaine Maxwell with Sarah Kellen, who worked as personal assistant to the British socialite and Jeffrey Epstein
Ghislaine Maxwell with Sarah Kellen, who worked as personal assistant to the British socialite and Jeffrey Epstein
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 ?? ?? Gretchen Rhodes – now (above) and in 2003 (top) – was procured for paedophile Jeffrey Epstein by Maxwell (main picture)
Gretchen Rhodes – now (above) and in 2003 (top) – was procured for paedophile Jeffrey Epstein by Maxwell (main picture)

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