Miami Herald

At Ghislaine Maxwell trial, judge bars lurid photos from Epstein’s mansion

Ghislaine Maxwell, who is accused of sex traffickin­g, appeared elated at day’s end, smiling with her arm around one of her attorneys.

- BY JULIE K. BROWN jbrown@miamiheral­d.com

The prosecutio­n in the Ghislaine Maxwell sex-traffickin­g trial suffered a series of setbacks Friday as Maxwell’s lawyers successful­ly challenged a key witness’ testimony and persuaded the judge to exclude FBI photograph­s of Jeffrey Epstein’s New York mansion.

Maxwell, seated at the defense table with her bevy of lawyers, appeared elated at day’s end, smiling with her arm around one of her attorneys, Bobbi Sternheim.

It was the fifth day of testimony in what is expected to be a six-week trial in federal court in Manhattan. Maxwell, 59, is accused of recruiting minors to be sexually abused by Epstein at his homes in New York and Palm Beach and at his ranch in New Mexico between 1994 and 2002.

Epstein died in jail in August 2019 as he was awaiting trial on sex-traffickin­g charges. Authoritie­s ruled the death a suicide.

On Friday, the defense and prosecutor­s argued before the start of court over whether jurors should be permitted to see lurid photograph­s that were taken by police during a 2005 raid of Epstein’s Palm Beach mansion.

The police photograph­s were images of framed pictures that showed a partially clad prepubesce­nt girl.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Maurene

Comey said the photograph­s are relevant because they are “evidence of Jeffrey Epstein’s lifestyle” that “contradict­s the public persona presented by the defense.”

On the first day of trial, Sternheim

called Epstein a “21st century James Bond” who was charismati­c and generous.

Judge Alison Nathan ultimately allowed two of the framed Palm Beach photograph­s to be shown to the jury — one of them an image of the girl laying over Epstein’s lap, her bottom exposed and Epstein pretending to bite her.

But the prosecutio­n lost a round when Nathan excluded photograph­s taken by the FBI in a 2019 search of his New York mansion.

While the images mostly depict what an accuser in the case described as the “dark and creepy” decor that she saw in a visit to the house in 1994, prosecutor­s revealed Friday that the FBI also found a bag of “very small” schoolgirl costumes near Epstein’s massage room.

Nathan agreed with the defense that prosecutor­s failed to lay a proper foundation as to how photograph­s taken in 2019 were relevant to crimes committed 25 years earlier — nor did prosecutor­s explain what they had to do with Maxwell.

The photograph­s should have been shown to one of Maxwell’s accusers, who is known under the pseudonym “Jane,” to get her to testify whether the home depicted in the 2019 police photograph­s was roughly the same mansion that she visited in 1994 when she was 14.

“You could have and should have shown her the photograph­s after her testimony,” Nathan said.

The judge, however, left the door open for prosecutor­s to come up with

another way to get the photograph­s admitted as evidence.

Also on Friday, defense attorney Jeffrey Pagliuca seized upon several discrepanc­ies in the testimony of Epstein’s former Palm Beach house manager,

Juan Alessi. Alessi was called by prosecutor­s to set the stage for how Maxwell allegedly helped facilitate sex massages for Epstein. Alessi was a critical witness because he testified that

Maxwell recruited young women and at least one 16-year-old girl from luxury spas around Palm

Beach.

A day earlier, Alessi admitted on direct examinatio­n that he illegally entered Epstein’s Palm Beach mansion about a year after he resigned from his job. He said he stole $6,300 in one-hundreddol­lar bills from a bag in Epstein’s office.

“It was the worst thing I

ever did in my life,” Alessi testified, trying to explain. He claimed he was under financial strain, he apologized and repaid the money. Epstein never pressed charges.

But Pagliuca asked Alessi whether there was another time he stole money from Epstein.

“Never,” Alessi said firmly.

“Isn’t it true that you went to Epstein’s house to steal a gun, and you went

there twice to steal money?” Pagliuca said. Alessi paused.

“I don’t remember,” he said.

“Didn’t you tell police you stole the money to pay for a friend’s immigratio­n papers?” Pagliuca said, quoting from a sworn statement in which Alessi talked about stealing the money to pay for his girlfriend’s immigratio­n papers.

Alessi: “I was trying to

help her.”

It also turned out that at the time of the alleged thefts Alessi owned almost $1 million in real estate.

“All my life I worked very hard and saved my money,” Alessi said plaintivel­y.

“But you weren’t poor,” Pagliuca said.

 ?? ELIZABETH WILLIAMS AP ?? Former Palm Beach Police Officer Gregory Parkinson, right, takes the stand after examining Jeffrey Epstein’s massage table Friday in New York.
ELIZABETH WILLIAMS AP Former Palm Beach Police Officer Gregory Parkinson, right, takes the stand after examining Jeffrey Epstein’s massage table Friday in New York.

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