NY - Ghislaine Maxwell, Jeffrey Epstein confidante, arrested on Sex Abuse charges, Jul 2020 #5


‘They have you with no clothes, and they put you in a suicide smock, which has Velcro straps on it. So there’s nothing to protect your modesty,’

Maxwell said the food at the MDC was 'truly terrible' and she was once so hungry she ate Vaseline.
 

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Among those whose names are mentioned in the documents are Emmy Tayler, Ghislaine Maxwell's former personal assistant, who was accused of taking part in the sexual abuse of minors…

The judge did not set a timeline for when the material should be made public, but it will likely be weeks away.

Unlike with previous batches of documents, Maxwell did not oppose them and made no representation to the court.

 
  • Ghislaine Maxwell's estranged husband could be putting her appeal in jeopardy
  • Scott Borgerson, 46, has been accused of failing to pay $900,000 in legal bills
  • He has also been accused of failing to provide $1m to challenge her conviction
  • Maxwell's friends fear he could be delaying their divorce and accessing her cas

 

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Maxwell continued to maintain her innocence, blaming pre-trial publicity for unfairly making her appear as a “wicked witch.”
Wish that she'd dish on her other "special pal" Trump...
 
Like many of the most recent releases of unsealed documents from the suit — the last came out in May — the latest round of documents are short on new revelations, and still contain page-after-page of black ink, blotting out key names and entire conversations, keeping the secrets of Maxwell and her ex-boyfriend, serial pedophile Jeffrey Epstein, largely under lock and key.

Several documents from the latest round remain under seal as two additional people named in the documents — one identified as former Maxwell employee Emmy Tayler — continue to fight their release. The defamation suit between Giuffre and Maxwell was settled in 2017, but few documents related to the case were initially released. The Miami Herald has been fighting since April 2018 for documents from the case to be made public.

“Much of this information should never have been sealed in the first place,” said Christine Waltz, a partner at the law firm Holland & Knight, who has represented the Herald. “A right of access to judicial records means a right of timely access. Having to spend years fighting to unseal portions of documents line by line erodes the public’s right of access.”


 

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