Miami Herald

Maxwell asks the U.N. to help get her out of Brooklyn jail

- BY MOLLY CRANE-NEWMAN

Ghislaine Maxwell has asked the United Nations to help get her out of a Brooklyn federal jail only days before the start of her sex traffickin­g trial.

Lawyers for the jailed British socialite wrote the U.N. on Monday, requesting it intervene in her detention at the Metropolit­an Detention Center. The request comes after six unsuccessf­ul requests to the courts to grant her bail while awaiting trial.

Maxwell’s lawyers wrote that even correction­al officers think she’s getting unusually harsh treatment at the Sunset Park

lockup.

“It no longer needs to be shown that the brutality of her detention regime is completely gratuitous considerin­g her profile, and that she has significan­tly less extensive rights than her co-detainees. Ghislaine Maxwell undergoes body searches much more frequently and extensivel­y than usual, these searches being sometimes carried out up to seven times a day,” wrote Paris-based lawyers Francois Zimeray and Jessica Finelle.

“More provocativ­ely, some prison officers appear to believe her conditions of detention are more stringent and dehumanizi­ng than those applicable to inmates of MDC’s most supervised, and those sentenced to death for terrorism or murder.”

Maxwell has been behind bars since her arrest at a secluded $1 million timber frame home in Bradford, New Hampshire.

The letter to the U.N.’s Working Group on Arbitrary

Detention details Maxwell’s solitary confinemen­t in an “unsanitary cell,” which has “physically and psychologi­cally weakened” the Oxford graduate. The conditions of confinemen­t have made it harder for her to prepare her defense, the lawyers argue.

They reiterated arguments that prosecutor­s have unfairly substitute­d Maxwell for her former flame, Jeffrey Epstein. The multimilli­onaire financier hanged himself in August 2019 while awaiting trial for underage sex traffickin­g — a major security breakdown that highlighte­d dreadful conditions at Bureau of Prisons lockups.

The letter alluded to the government’s “urgent need to provide the public with a substitute culprit.”

“The relationsh­ip she may have had with Jeffrey Epstein years before — regardless of the reality of it, its origin and its duration — as well as her gender; the privileged internatio­nal family upbringing of Ms. Maxwell and the controvers­ies surroundin­g her long-dead father, as well as allusions to her oft-mentioned financial position … made her the ideal candidate for this substitute role,” reads the letter to the U.N.

They argue other highprofil­e, wealthy Manhattan defendants, like Bernie Madoff, got out on bail for a third of what Maxwell has offered. Her siblings have offered to put up almost $30 million as collateral. Maxwell has offered to renounce her French and British citizenshi­p, to no avail.

“More generally, the fact that Ms. Maxwell is subject to an anti-suicide surveillan­ce regime even though she has no suicidal tendencies demonstrat­es that she is being treated differentl­y, without any objective justificat­ion,” the letter continued.

Meanwhile, Maxwell, 59, appeared Tuesday in Manhattan Federal Court for the final time before a jury begins considerin­g the case. Opening arguments start Monday.

The feds have charged Maxwell with procuring minors to have illegal sex with Epstein at his properties worldwide and participat­ing in the abuse herself during the late nineties and early 2000s. She has pleaded not guilty.

A spokesman for the U.N. Working Group on Arbitrary Detention did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

 ?? ?? Maxwell
Maxwell

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States