Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Epstein victims cheer arrest of friend Ghislaine Maxwell

- By Ben Wieder and Julie K. Brown Miami Herald

Jeffrey Epstein’s longtime madam, Ghislaine Maxwell, has been arrested by federal authoritie­s and is in the custody of federal authoritie­s. She was arrested at 8:30 Thursday morning in a residence in the small town of Bradford, New Hampshire.

The British socialite allegedly helped procure girls for the financier, who died in August 2019 in a jail cell after being arrested himself a month earlier on federal charges of sex traffickin­g.

Maxwell has been charged with four counts of sex traffickin­g a minor and two counts of perjury, according to the federal indictment.

The charges against Maxwell involve three girls who were under the age of 18 when Maxwell allegedly recruited them to engage in sexual acts with Epstein between the years of 1994 and 1997. Maxwell allegedly groomed the three girls for Epstein and, in one case, took part in the sexual activity. The girls were allegedly abused at multiple locations, including Epstein’s New York mansion, his estate in Palm Beach, his ranch in New Mexico and Maxwell’s personal residence in London.

“Maxwell’s presence as an adult woman helped put the victims at ease as Maxwell and Epstein intended,” said Audrey Strauss, the acting U.S. attorney in announcing the charges against Maxwell at a Thursday press conference.

Speaking about the perjury charges brought against Maxwell, based on statements Maxwell made in 2016 in a civil suit

by one of Epstein and Maxwell’s alleged victims, Strauss said, “Maxwell lied because the truth, as alleged, was almost unspeakabl­e.”

“Maxwell has three passports, large sums of money, extensive internatio­nal connection­s, and absolutely no reason to stay in the United States and face the possibilit­y of a lengthy prison sentence,” prosecutor­s wrote in a filing Thursday.

The charges come nearly a year after the new charges had been filed last July against Epstein for alleged crimes between 2002 and 2006.

“This case against Ghislaine Maxwell is the prequel to the earlier case we brought against Jeffrey Epstein,” Strauss said.

Epstein’s charges were driven in part by the Miami Herald’s Perversion of Justice series, which detailed Epstein’s lenient sentence for sex charges a decade earlier.

Epstein was found hanging in his cell in New York City the day after thousands of court documents were released detailing Maxwell’s role in luring hundreds of women and underage girls to his homes in Palm Beach, New York and elsewhere — and providing new informatio­n on the powerful men who befriended Epstein and are suspected in some cases to have had sex with the women and girls.

The Epstein case is also the focus of an ongoing investigat­ion by the Department of Justice’s Office of Profession­al Responsibi­lity, which is looking into whether there was any corruption on the part of federal prosecutor­s who failed to bring charges against Epstein in 2007-2008 when they had the case.

Maxwell is the daughter of the late British media mogul Robert Maxwell, who himself died under mysterious circumstan­ces in 1991.

Maxwell’s whereabout­s have been a subject of much interest since the new charges were filed against Epstein. Her lawyer claimed last year that Maxwell’s e-mail server had been hacked.

At times she appeared to play a cat-and-mouse game with the public, such as when she was photograph­ed at a Los Angeles area In-N-Out Burger sitting at a table while holding a spy book — a photo published in the New York Post last August.

Rumors have linked both Maxwell and Epstein to intelligen­ce agencies.

Lawyers representi­ng alleged victims of Epstein and Maxwell said that their clients were relieved to see the charges.

“Today is a long time coming for many victims,” said Bradley Edwards, an attorney who represents more than 20 alleged victims. “I have talked with many of my clients this morning who are relieved that justice is being served. They are so thankful for the dedicated work of the New York prosecutor­s.”

Spencer Kuvin, an attorney representi­ng a number of other alleged victims, said his clients hope the charges against Maxwell are the first of several against other Epstein assobrough­t ciates alleged to have taken part in the sexual abuse of underage women.

“With the arrest of Ghislaine Maxwell, this welcomed news will hopefully be the first of many co-conspirato­rs to face the consequenc­es of this horrific crimes,” Kuvin said in a statement.

One of Epstein’s alleged victims, Virginia Giuffre, stated in a defamation suit against Maxwell that Maxwell had recruited her in 2000 to be a personal masseuse for Epstein.

Maxwell had seen Giuffre around the time of Giuffre’s 17th birthday reading at President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, where Giuffre had been working at the time as a spa assistant, Giuffre said.

Giuffre said in court documents that she had been directed by Epstein and Maxwell to have sex with a number of prominent men, including Prince Andrew, former New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, lawyer Alan Dershowitz, former U.S. Senator George Mitchell and Hyatt Hotels magnate Tom Pritzker, among others. The men have denied her accusation­s. The suit was settled in 2017 and Dershowitz, who was part of Epstein’s legal team, filed a separate defamation suit.

Epstein’s many prominent friends over the years have included President Donald Trump and former President Bill Clinton. Giuffre said she was not directed to have sex with either of those men and had no knowledge of them having sex with any of the other girls allegedly recruited by Epstein and Maxwell.

Strauss said Thursday that the investigat­ion into Epstein’s co-conspirato­rs is ongoing and encouraged anyone who believed they were victimized or had informatio­n about abuse to come forward.

She didn’t rule out trying to seek cooperatio­n from Maxwell, despite the perjury charges.

David Weinstein, a former federal prosecutor, said that Maxwell could be looking at 10 to 20 years in federal prison and that the fact that federal prosecutor­s are seeking her cooperatio­n suggests that there could be high-profile targets on their radar.

“They will use all of this to pressure her into cooperatin­g against other known and unknown conspirato­rs,’’ said Weinstein who is now in private practice. “Those co-conspirato­rs would have to be high profile individual­s to warrant accepting her cooperatio­n.’’

The fact that the case is being handled by the office’s public corruption unit, which typically handles investigat­ions into misdeeds by public officials, has raised questions by some legal observers about the scope of the current federal investigat­ion.

“If I was Alexander Acosta today, I would be having a very lousy weekend,’’ said Frank Figliuzzi, a former FBI assistant director.

“This case is not over. I’ve supervised these kinds of cases in big cities and I’ve never seen public corruption prosecutor­s involved and if they are still in it, there is a reason for it.’’

Acosta, who resigned last year shortly after Epstein’s arrest, would be someone that public corruption prosecutor­s would be looking at, he said.

“Because of the lenient posture that Acosta took with Epstein, it begs the question as to why he chose to go lightly on Epstein, and that question, and at what level and for whom he was doing this for -- is likely the subject matter of investigat­ion.’’

 ??  ?? Maxwell
Maxwell
 ?? JOHN MINCHILLO/AP ??
JOHN MINCHILLO/AP
 ?? BEBETO MATTHEWS/AP ??
BEBETO MATTHEWS/AP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States