The Daily Telegraph

Maxwell lawyers ask to keep proposed questions private

- By Josie Ensor in New York

GHISLAINE MAXWELL’S lawyers have made a highly unusual request to keep secret questions they plan to ask the judge and prospectiv­e jurors, ahead of what is set to be a bombshell trial.

Ms Maxwell has fought the unsealing of documents in the case several times, claiming they are not in the public interest and are a violation of her privacy.

“The defence respectful­ly requests that the joint proposed juror questionna­ire and joint proposed voir dire be filed under seal to avoid media coverage that may prejudice the jury selection process,” court documents filed overnight on Tuesday at the Southern District of New York read.

It appears the prosecutio­n agreed to keeping the questionna­ires private.

Ms Maxwell, 59, who has pleaded not guilty to several charges relating to the sex traffickin­g of a minor, is currently being detained in a federal prison in Brooklyn.

Her trial is set to start on November 29, with jury selection beginning on November 15. Jurors are to be chosen from a pool of people who live in the wider Manhattan area due to the location of the court.

Adam Klasfield, managing editor of Law Crime News, who has covered New York courts for years, said “materials are regularly publicly disclosed and their sealing appears to be, at least in my experience, extremely rare.

“I can’t recall a sealed jury questionna­ire offhand.”

The British socialite’s lawyer will be looking for jurors who might be sympatheti­c to her case.

In American law, there is a “right of peremptory challenge”, meaning lawyers for both sides can reject a certain number of potential jurors without stating a reason.

Ms Maxwell has been held at the Metropolit­an Detention Center in Brooklyn since last July, when she was arrested at a New Hampshire estate. Judge Alison Nathan has denied bail three times.

Ms Maxwell has pleaded not guilty to charges that she recruited teenage girls from 1994 to 2004 for former boyfriend, Jeffrey Epstein, to sexually abuse during encounters that sometimes were described as sexualised massages.

Prosecutor­s say their case hinges primarily on the testimony of four women who were abused, including two who say they were recruited when they were 14 years old.

Defence lawyers have challenged the charges on numerous grounds, though Ms Nathan has rejected most of them.

They have succeeded in severing perjury charges from those alleging sex abuse.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom