Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Plea deal could be key in Epstein confidante’s case

- By Tom Hays and Michael R. Sisak

A plea deal made in 2008by Jeffrey Epstein with federal prosecutor­s could play a role in Ghislaine’s Maxwell’s case.

NEW YORK » Before Jeffrey Epstein’s jailhouse suicide last year, his defense hinged on a 2008 deal with federal prosecutor­s in Florida over his alleged sexual abuse of multiple teenage girls. His lawyers said it prevented him from being charged with further crimes.

Could that same deal now help Ghislaine Maxwell, the Epstein confidante arrested Thursday, evade charges she helped lure at least three girls into sexual liaisons with him?

Maxwell’s lawyers haven’t outlined their defense strategy, but her legal team is bound to raise the issue in the months ahead.

The British socialite was arrested Thursday in New Hampshire on charges that she acted as a recruiter of underage girls for Epstein, usually under the guise of hiring them to perform massages, and sometimes participat­ed in his sexual abuse of the teens.

The allegation­s against the couple date back many years, but Epstein, for a while, appeared to have resolved them under a deal with federal and state prosecutor­s in South Florida in which he pleaded guilty to lesser state charges and served 13 months in jail and a work-release program.

After a Miami Herald expose brought new attention to the case, the U.S. attorney in Manhattan brought new charges against Epstein last July, arguing that the 2008 deal only applied to the specific U.S. attorney’s office in Florida that made the agreement — not all 94 federal prosecutor’s offices in the country.

A key for Maxwell is that agreement also sought to prevent criminal charges from being brought “against any potential co-conspirato­rs of Epstein.”

The agreement lists four women by name, possibly because they received subpoenas or “target letters” from the government over allegation­s they were paid to recruit girls for Epstein. However, the agreement notes, it is “not limited to” only them.

Maxwell was not one of the four women identified by name in the agreement, but former Miami federal prosecutor David Weinstein said the “not limited to” wording is broad enough for her lawyers to contend it applied to her, too.

Maxwell’s lawyers could argue “just because her name wasn’t mentioned doesn’t mean she wasn’t protected by the agreement,” Weinstein said Friday.

Gerald Lefcourt, a lawyer who negotiated the 2008 agreement, told the AP last year that he “would never have signed the agreement or recommende­d it unless we believed that it resolved what it said: all federal and state criminal liability.”

In Maxwell’s indictment, the New York prosecutor­s appeared to build in an insurance policy — deliberate­ly charging her with crimes occurring in the 1990s, a time period slightly before the activities with underage girls that were the subject of Epstein’s 2008 guilty plea.

If a judge were to rule that the New York prosecutor­s were indeed bound by the non-prosecutio­n agreement, they could then argue that “this stuff happened before, so it’s not covered and therefore Maxwell’s not protected,” Weinstein said.

A message seeking comment was left Friday for Maxwell’s lawyer. She is being held without bail in New Hampshire and has previously denied any wrongdoing.

Maxwell may not have necessaril­y counted on the Epstein deal to protect her. In court papers filed Thursday, prosecutor­s said she went into hiding after Epstein’s arrest last year and took steps to avoid detection before she was apprehende­d in New Hampshire.

In a memo requesting that she remain jailed until her trial, prosecutor­s said Maxwell, 58, is linked to more than 15 bank accounts with balances ranging from hundreds of thousands of dollars to more than $20 million.

Furthermor­e, they said, she has citizenshi­p in France, where she was born; the United Kingdom, where she has long lived; and the U.S., where she was naturalize­d in 2002, and possesses passports from all three countries.

As authoritie­s closed in on Epstein, Maxwell continued to travel frequently, prosecutor­s said, making at least 15 internatio­nal flights in the last three years to places including the UK, Japan, and Qatar before ending up in a home on a 156acre property in Bradford, New Hampshire, that was purchased for more than $1 million in cash through a limited liability corporatio­n last December.

That’s where she was arrested.

While in seclusion, prosecutor­s said, Maxwell changed her phone number and registered it under the name “G Max,” adopted a new email address and ordered deliveries that had a different name on the shipping label.

After Epstein’s death last August, Attorney General William Barr warned that “any co-conspirato­rs should not rest easy.”

“Let me assure you that this case will continue on against anyone who was complicit,” Barr said at the time. “The victims deserve justice, and they will get it.”

One famous name, Britain’s Prince Andrew, has denied a woman’s allegation that Maxwell arranged for them to have sex at her London townhouse in 2001, when she was 17. Andrew has said the woman was “totally lying.”

The woman’s allegation was not included in the charges filed Thursday against Maxwell, but at a news conference following the arrest, Acting U.S. Attorney Audrey Strauss said her office was still interested in speaking with the prince.

 ?? DOMINIQUE MOLLARD - ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this Nov. 7, 1991, file photo Ghislaine Maxwell, daughter of late British publisher Robert Maxwell, reads a statement in Spanish in which she expressed her family’s gratitude to the Spanish authoritie­s, aboard the “Lady Ghislaine” in Santa Cruz de Tenerife. Maxwell, a British socialite who was accused by many women of helping procure underage sex partners for Jeffrey Epstein, was arrested Thursday in New Hampshire, the FBI said.
DOMINIQUE MOLLARD - ASSOCIATED PRESS In this Nov. 7, 1991, file photo Ghislaine Maxwell, daughter of late British publisher Robert Maxwell, reads a statement in Spanish in which she expressed her family’s gratitude to the Spanish authoritie­s, aboard the “Lady Ghislaine” in Santa Cruz de Tenerife. Maxwell, a British socialite who was accused by many women of helping procure underage sex partners for Jeffrey Epstein, was arrested Thursday in New Hampshire, the FBI said.
 ?? WINSLOW TOWNSON - ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A police K-9 walks outside the Merrimack County correction­al facility Friday in Boscowen N.H., where Ghislaine Maxwell was being held after her arrest Thursday at a wooded estate in Bradford, N.H.
WINSLOW TOWNSON - ASSOCIATED PRESS A police K-9 walks outside the Merrimack County correction­al facility Friday in Boscowen N.H., where Ghislaine Maxwell was being held after her arrest Thursday at a wooded estate in Bradford, N.H.

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