New York Daily News

Ep lady ‘lucky’

Ruling likely spared Maxwell even more trouble: sources

- BY STEPHEN REX BROWN

Ghislaine Maxwell could have been in even bigger trouble.

Manhattan federal prosecutor­s investigat­ing Jeffrey Epstein and his alleged madam were denied access last year to records in a civil lawsuit brought by accuser Sarah Ransome, a source told the Daily News.

The ruling by Judge John Koeltl ordering the records remain under seal was hinted at during a hearing Tuesday before the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. The decision, which came before Epstein’s arrest, was a lucky break for Maxwell and his other alleged enablers, Lesley Groff and Sarah Kellen. All were named as defendants in Ransome’s case, which was settled in December 2018 after nearly two years of litigation.

Ransome accused Kellen in the suit of maintainin­g Epstein’s “sex schedule.” Kellen allegedly reported directly to the multimilli­onaire perv and Maxwell. Groff, according to Ransome, maintained travel schedules and ensured “young females” were at the locations where Epstein traveled.

Maxwell, charged, “was for

Ransome decades the highest-ranking employee of the Defendants’ sex traffickin­g venture and enterprise.”

The South African-born Ransome said Epstein’s enablers lured her into his depraved operation around 2007 with the promise he’d use his influence to get her admitted into the Fashion Institute of Technology.

The decision by Koeltl has implicatio­ns for Maxwell’s fight against two perjury charges stemming from her deposition­s in a separate case brought by Epstein victim Virginia Giuffre. Prosecutor­s say Maxwell lied about her knowledge of Epstein’s stash of sex toys and sick abuse of underage girls in two deposition­s in 2016 for the Giuffre case.

A different judge granted the feds access to the Giuffre case file, including the two deposition­s, in April 2019.

“We think there’s no precedent for how the government obtained Ms. Maxwell’s deposition­s,” Maxwell attorney Adam Mueller told the 2nd Circuit Tuesday.

The British socialite was also deposed in the Ransome case, according to the source, but it remains under wraps.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Lara Pomerantz hinted in the hearing that prosecutor­s wanted to keep details about the unusual requests to judges under wraps as much as possible. An investigat­ion into

Epstein’s sex traffickin­g operation is ongoing.

“That could create problems alerting targets of the government’s investigat­ion to the scope of the investigat­ion as well as to investigat­ive techniques,” she said.

Maxwell has pleaded not guilty to charges of lying under oath, as well as grooming underage women for Epstein’s abuse. She is locked up at the Metropolit­an Detention Center in Brooklyn.

Attorneys for Maxwell, Groff and Ransome either did not respond to inquiries or declined comment. Epstein hanged himself in a cell while awaiting trial for sex traffickin­g in August 2019 — five months after the feds obtained the records in the Giuffre case.

The News exclusivel­y reported Tuesday on outreach by attorneys for Epstein victims to Manhattan federal prosecutor­s in 2016. The attorneys, sources said, unsuccessf­ully pitched the Southern District of New York on an investigat­ion of Epstein and Maxwell.

Those discussion­s will likely be probed in the criminal case against Maxwell. Her attorneys have written she was the victim of a “perjury trap” that resulted in charges against her.

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 ??  ?? Sarah Ransome (main photo) and Virginia Giuffre (top left) charged Jeffrey Epstein with sex abuse. His alleged madam Ghislaine Maxwell (left) is facing charges.
Sarah Ransome (main photo) and Virginia Giuffre (top left) charged Jeffrey Epstein with sex abuse. His alleged madam Ghislaine Maxwell (left) is facing charges.

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