Baltimore Sun

Pressed about sex abuse in deposition, Epstein ducked

- By Larry Neumeister and Jim Mustian

NEW YORK — Confronted about allegation­s that he orchestrat­ed a sex traffickin­g ring that delivered girls to him and his high-profile acquaintan­ces, financier Jeffrey Epstein repeatedly refused to answer questions to avoid incriminat­ing himself, according to court records released Friday.

A partial transcript of a September 2016 deposition stemming from a defamation lawsuit was included in hundreds of pages of documents placed in a public file by a federal appeals court in New York.

The deposition happened almost three years before Epstein’s July 6 arrest on sex traffickin­g charges in a case that has brought down a Cabinet secretary and launched fresh probes into how authoritie­s dealt with Epstein over the years. The 66year-old has pleaded not guilty.

Epstein was asked in the videotaped deposition whether it was standard operating procedure for his former girlfriend, Ghislaine Maxwell, to bring underage girls to him to sexually abuse.

Epstein replied “Fifth,” as he did to numerous other questions, citing the Constituti­on’s Fifth Amendment that protects people against incriminat­ing themselves.

He also was asked whether Maxwell was “one of the main women” he used to procure underage girls for sexual activities. “Fifth,” he replied.

And he was asked whether Maxwell met one of the females she recruited for massages at the Mar-aLago resort owned by President Donald Trump in Palm Beach.

“Fifth,” he replied.

Asked if he was a member of Mar-a-Lago in 2000, he replied once again, “Fifth,” according to the transcript.

After Epstein’s arrest, Trump acknowledg­ed that he knew Epstein but said he “had a falling out with him a long time ago.”

Over 2,000 pages of documents made public by the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals pertained to a since- settled l awsuit against Maxwell filed by Virginia Giuffre, one of Epstein’s accusers.

Giuffre filed the complaint in 2015, saying Maxwell subjected her to “public ridicule, contempt and disgrace” by calling her a liar in published statements “with the malicious intent of discrediti­ng and further damaging Giuffre worldwide.” The lawsuit sought unspecifie­d damages.

In a deposition included in the newly released papers, Giuffre said that her father, who worked at Mara-Lago as a maintenanc­e manager, got her a job there in summer 2000 as a locker room attendant at the club’s spa when she was 16.

She said she was reading a book on massage therapy one day when she was approached by Maxwell, who noticed the book and told her she knew someone seeking a traveling masseuse. When Giuffre said she had no experience or credential­s, she recalled Maxwell said: “We can train you. We can get you educated.”

The court records contain graphic allegation­s against Epstein, who is accused in Manhattan federal court of traffickin­g young girls internatio­nally to have sex with prominent American politician­s, business executives and world leaders. The papers portray Epstein as a sex slavedrive­r with an insatiable appetite for underage girls.

“My whole life revolved around just pleasing these men and keeping Ghislaine and Jeffrey happy,” Giuffre said. “Their whole entire lives revolved around sex.”

Giuffre said Maxwell instructed her to take off her clothes and give oral sex to Epstein the first time she met him after bringing her to Epstein’s Florida home near Mar-a-Lago with the expectatio­n she would be trained as a masseuse.

Prosecutor­s have not accused Maxwell of any wrongdoing. They say they continue to investigat­e.

In her deposition, Maxwell called the claims another one of Giuffre’s “many fictitious lies and stories to make this a salacious event to get interest and press.” She also claimed that Giuffre was 17 when she met her.

Neither Maxwell’s attorney nor a public-relations firm she hired responded Friday to emails seeking comment.

Epstein’s lawyers say the federal charges that accuse Epstein of recruiting and abusing dozens of underage girls in New York and Florida in the early 2000s should never have been brought. They say Epstein is protected by an agreement he reached with federal prosecutor­s in Florida a dozen years ago. Labor Secretary Alexander Acosta resigned last month under fire for overseeing that deal when he was U.S. attorney in Miami.

 ?? TNS ?? Court records linked to an anti-defamation lawsuit contain graphic allegation­s against Jeffrey Epstein.
TNS Court records linked to an anti-defamation lawsuit contain graphic allegation­s against Jeffrey Epstein.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States