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Jury ends third day of deliberati­ons with no verdict

- By Tom Hays

NEW YORK — The jury considerin­g the fate of Ghislaine Maxwell at her sex traffickin­g trial finished a third full day of deliberati­ons Monday with no sign that a verdict is near and no clear signal either that there is dissension in their ranks.

Jurors in Manhattan federal court asked for multi-colored sticky notes and a white board, along with transcript­s of some trial testimony, the definition of “enticement” and a question on the law. Judge Alison J. Nathan referred them to her legal instructio­ns that she read to them just before they began deliberati­ons a week ago.

The judge also requested that they deliberate an extra hour beginning Tuesday, unless that created a hardship.

The British socialite is charged with recruiting and grooming teenagers as young as 14 to be sexually assaulted by financier Jeffrey Epstein. Maxwell’s lawyers say she was a U.S. government scapegoat after Epstein killed himself in 2019 in a Manhattan federal jail cell while awaiting a sex traffickin­g trial.

Maxwell, who was behind bars for her 60th birthday Saturday, was described as a central component to Epstein’s plans by four women who testified they were sexually abused as teenagers by Epstein with help from Maxwell when she was his girlfriend and afterward.

Maxwell’s lawyers said the memories of her accusers were corrupted by the passage of time and the influence of lawyers steering them toward multimilli­on-dollar payouts from a fund set up to compensate Epstein victims.

The jury, which deliberate­d two full days last week, already has asked to review the testimony of the four women, along with former Epstein housekeepe­r Juan Patricio

Alessi. They have given little hint of their overall progress on six charges, including a sex traffickin­g count that carries a potential penalty of up to 40 years in prison.

On Monday, jurors asked for the transcript of testimony by “Matt,” the pseudonym of a television actor who testified that he is the ex-boyfriend of “Jane,” the pseudonym of an actor who is one of the four accusers who testified against Maxwell. The judge had ruled that some witnesses in the trial could testify with only first names or pseudonyms to protect their privacy.

Matt, who lived with Jane from 2007 to 2014, testified that Jane initially described Epstein as a godfather who helped her family pay bills after her father’s illness and death depleted their finances. She was 14 when she met Epstein.

He said she eventually told him that the help Epstein provided “wasn’t free,” but did not provide any details about what happened.

When he was asked what her demeanor was like when he asked Jane questions about her encounters with Epstein, he testified that she was “ashamed, embarrasse­d, horrified.”

Matt said she also told him that she felt more comfortabl­e in her encounters with Epstein because there was a woman around. Matt said he contacted Jane after Maxwell’s July 2020 arrest and asked her if Maxwell was the woman she had referenced as making her feel more comfortabl­e in her dealings with Epstein.

He testified that she confirmed Maxwell was the woman.

Epstein pleaded guilty to state charges in Palm Beach County in July 2008. He admitted he hired local underage girls to provide sex and erotic massages at his home. His sentence has been referred to as a “sweetheart deal” that allowed him lenient work release while he served about 13 months of an 18-month sentence, followed by a year of house arrest.

An investigat­ion by the Florida Department of Law Enforcemen­t focused on former Palm Beach County State Attorney Barry Krischer’s decision not to aggressive­ly prosecute sex abuse allegation­s against Epstein over a decade ago; Epstein’s generous work release privileges in jail; and allegation­s that Epstein had sex with young women while under the jail’s supervisio­n. The investigat­ion found Epstein received “differenti­al treatment” in jail, but no evidence was uncovered that suggests county officials broke any laws.

 ?? ELIZABETH WILLIAMS/AP ?? In this courtroom sketch, Ghislaine Maxwell, left, wears a court-ordered N95 face mask while her defense team, right, confers during Maxwell’s sex traffickin­g trial on Monday in New York.
ELIZABETH WILLIAMS/AP In this courtroom sketch, Ghislaine Maxwell, left, wears a court-ordered N95 face mask while her defense team, right, confers during Maxwell’s sex traffickin­g trial on Monday in New York.

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