Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Epstein associate declines to testify

Defense rests in trial on sex traffickin­g

- TOM HAYS AND LARRY NEUMEISTER

NEW YORK — Ghislaine Maxwell’s defense rested its case Friday after two days of presenting evidence on the British socialite’s behalf. Not among that evidence: testimony from the longtime Jeffrey Epstein associate herself.

Around a half-hour after Maxwell told the court Friday she would not testify in her own defense because “the government has not proven its case beyond a reasonable doubt,” attorney Bobbi Sternheim rested.

U.S. District Judge Alison J. Nathan had asked the British socialite to stand in court Friday afternoon, explaining that Maxwell had the right to either testify in her own defense or decline to.

“Your Honor, the government has not proven its case beyond a reasonable doubt so there is no reason for me to testify,” Maxwell responded.

Maxwell’s lawyers offered a spirited defense, portraying her as a scapegoat targeted by the government because prosecutor­s could no longer bring Epstein to justice after he killed himself at a federal lockup in August 2019 while awaiting his own sex traffickin­g trial.

Maxwell, 59, pleaded innocent to sex traffickin­g charges stemming from her interactio­ns with four teenage girls from 1994 to 2004. During that span, Maxwell was romantical­ly involved with and then later worked for Epstein.

While she did not testify before the jury, Maxwell seemed active in her defense throughout the past three weeks of the trial, frequently writing notes to her lawyers.

Her defense called another of Jeffrey Epstein’s one-time lovers to the stand earlier Friday: a former Miss Sweden, New York City doctor and tabloid fixture who told the jury that she trusted the financier with her young daughters and denied taking part in a group sexual encounter with a key accuser.

Eva Andersson-Dubin, 60, testified that she dated Epstein “off and on” from 1983 to the early 1990s, before he dated Maxwell.

Epstein and Andersson-Dubin remained friends after breaking up and, in 1994, she married another financier, Glenn Dubin, with whom she had three children.

One of the key accusers in the Maxwell trial, identified in court only as “Jane” to protect her identity, testified that a woman named “Eva” joined a group sexual experience with Epstein.

On Friday, Andersson-Dubin was asked by one of Maxwell’s attorneys if she had ever been in a group sexual encounter with Jane.

“Absolutely not,” she responded.

Asked if she had ever been in a group sexualized massage of Epstein with Jane, she responded: “I have not.”

Later, Andersson-Dubin acknowledg­ed having issues with her memory upon cross examinatio­n.

The Dubins have denied knowing anything about Epstein’s sexual misconduct, but were publicly supportive of Epstein when he initially was prosecuted and convicted of sex crimes in Florida in 2008. Another Epstein accuser whose allegation­s are not part of Maxwell’s trial, Virginia Roberts Giuffre, has said that she was trafficked to Glenn Dubin, among other powerful men, all of whom have denied her accounts.

As the Dubin children — including two daughters — grew up, they sometimes joined their parents on flights with Epstein, Andersson-Dubin said.

When Andersson-Dubin was asked by a defense lawyer if she ever witnessed any inappropri­ate conduct between Epstein and teenage girls, she responded: “I did not.”

Nathan told jurors Friday afternoon to return at 9 a.m. Monday, rather than 9:30 a.m., and to arrange to be in court as late as 6 p.m. She said the parties will deliver their closing arguments, then she’ll instruct them on the law and deliberati­ons will begin.

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