The Guardian (USA)

Ghislaine Maxwell deposition should be unsealed quickly, judge rules

- Guardian staff and agencies

Transcript­s of interviews lawyers conducted with Ghislaine Maxwell involving her former boyfriend, the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, should be released as soon as possible, a New York judge ordered on Tuesday.

US district judge Loretta Preska signaled that the transcript­s of two days of deposition­s in 2016, during civil litigation, of British socialite Maxwell, the daughter of the late UK media baron, Robert Maxwell, required speedy revelation.

Preska said the deposition­s and related documents – along with the deposition transcript of an anonymous accuser – should be released publicly as soon as is practicabl­e.

She gave lawyers an unspecifie­d amount of time to make “minimal

redactions” to block personally identifiab­le informatio­n that would reveal the names of non-parties or their families.

A day earlier, the second US circuit court of appeals in Manhattan ruled that Preska properly decided that the public had a right to access documents from legal proceeding­s and that transcript­s should be unsealed because arguments by Maxwell’s lawyers were meritless.

The deposition­s were taken as part of a civil lawsuit brought against Maxwell by one of Epstein’s accusers. The lawsuit was eventually settled.

Lawyers for Maxwell, 58, had argued that the documents reflecting seven hours of interviews over two days should remain sealed in part to protect her right to a fair trial in July on criminal charges that she helped Epstein traffic and sexually abuse teenage girls in the 1990s.

They noted that portions of the transcript­s relate to perjury charges in the indictment she faces. She has pleaded not guilty.

Maxwell has been incarcerat­ed since her arrest in New Hampshire early July. If convicted, she could face up to 35 years in prison.

The arrest came a year after 66year-old Epstein was arrested and charged with sex traffickin­g.

He killed himself in August 2019 at a federal jail in Manhattan, where he was awaiting trial.

In 2008 in Florida, Epstein pleaded guilty to state charges of soliciting and procuring a person under age 18 for prostituti­on. He spent 13 months in jail, paid settlement­s to victims and remained a registered sex offender.

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