Puppy prison: Inside Ghislaine Maxwell's new home
But the reality of Maxwell's life behind bars is very different.
Having been transferred to a minimum security prison in Texas from Florida, Epstein's ex-girlfriend can spend the rest of her 20-year sentence cuddling puppies and pampering herself with anti-ageing face creams.
Similar to the upmarket retreats she no doubt grew accustomed to during her former life of luxury, the Federal Prison Camp (FPC) Bryan in Texas offers yoga classes and a fully-stocked gym.
Described as a 'luxury' facility by her victims, Maxwell will be rubbing shoulders with other wealthy inmates and can spend the earnings from her prison jobs on cosmetics.
Bryan grants its female prisoners the freedom to roam the facility's expansive grounds with limited to no perimeter fencing to pen them in. There are gardening opportunities for the green-fingered criminals.
The 37-acre all-female facility, located 100 miles outside of Houston, is home to 635 inmates, according to the prison's website, most of whom are serving time for non-violent offences and white-collar crimes.
Inmates sleep in bunk beds with four people per room.
Julie Howell, 44, who self-surrendered in July to serve time at Bryan, said that the prison is 'nothing like you see on TV or in the movies because it's a camp, which only houses non-violent offenders'.
Since arriving, she has enroled in the 'puppy programme', which involves playing with a 12-week old labrador all day and even sleeping in the same room as each other, she wrote on Facebook.
The prison has a partnership with Canine Companions for Independence, which allows prisoners to train dogs to become service animals and is said to 'boost the inmates' morale, provide them with a sense of responsibility and improve overall behaviour', according to the programme's website.
'We do water and mud play and keep them busy from morning until night with some kennel rests in between,' Mrs Howell said.
'This is my 'job' while I'm here and it's literally 24/7 as the puppies stay in the room with us. It's me, my bunkie, and a puppy and we have to supervise the puppy at all times…I absolutely love it.'
Besides Maxwell, the prison's celebrity clientele includes Elizabeth Holmes, the founder of Theranos, who is serving an 11-year sentence for defrauding investors by falsely claiming her company's blood-testing technology was revolutionary.
Jen Shah, the Real Housewives of Salt Lake City star, is also doing a six-year stretch for conspiracy to commit wire fraud.
Other high-profile inmates include Michelle Janavs, the Hot Pockets heiress, who served five months in Bryan for bribing university officials to inflate her daughters' exam scores.
Lea Fastow, the wife of Enron chief executive and fellow convicted felon Andrew Fastow, also spent 11 months at the facility in 2005 for tax fraud after the Texas energy company collapsed.
Holmes and Shah have each been pictured exercising in the prison camp's grounds, with the latter's team sharing an image of her skipping in May while wearing grey workout gear.
'I am in great spirits and well,' she captioned the post. 'I wanted to share a personal image that I mailed to my team of one of my shah-mazing workouts.'
The facility is among the best in the country for convicts to serve time in, according to multiple lists compiled by inmates' rights groups.
According to the prison handbook, life at the prison is centred around work, with prisoners earning up to $1.15 an hour for their jobs – many of which involve food service and factory work. These can even be off-site opportunities, for the best behaved prisoners.
They can spend up to $360 a month of their earnings during assigned shopping days at a commissary, which sells beauty products including L'oreal Revita anti-ageing cream for $26.00, a Kerasal nailcare product for $20, and chest binders for trans prisoners for $26.
Beyond work, inmates may take classes on foreign languages, gardening and beautification. They can play sports, watch television and attend religious services. They are also granted freedoms not available in most low security prisons, including more relaxed visiting hours and more time outside, and lower guard-to-inmate ratios.
For inmates trying to trim down, the prison has a gym kitted out with treadmills, elliptical trainers, stairmasters and a range of weights.
Outside, convicts can take part in sports including football, table tennis, softball, volleyball, weightlifting, yoga, Pilates and the Jumpstart weight loss programme. There are also picnic tables, bleachers and televisions available for prisoners to wind down.
The Bryan prison camp also subscribes to rehabilitation programmes, such as one called 'assert yourself for female offenders', where 'women learn to be assertive without trampling the rights of others', according to a DoJ document from 2020.
As she embarks on life at the new facility, Maxwell will rise at 6am each day for a roll-call with the other female inmates and will have to dress in a prison-issue khaki shirt and fatigues, according to the handbook.
Inmates are permitted to have one approved radio or MP3 player and can wear minimal jewellery, such as a playing wedding band or a chain worth under $100.
Breakfast consists of a choice of a hot or continental-style breakfast, while the lunch and dinner menu offers standard federal prison fare consisting of chicken, hamburgers, hotdogs, macaroni and tacos.
Inmates are also allowed visitors during weekends and holidays, but along with other inmates, Maxwell would be allowed only limited physical contact with friends and family.
Maxwell's victims blasted the decision to allow her to move prisons, saying the move 'smacks of a cover up'.
'Ghislaine Maxwell is a sexual predator who physically assaulted minor children on multiple occasions, and she should never be shown any leniency. Yet, without any notification to the Maxwell victims, the government overnight has moved Maxwell to a minimum security luxury prison in Texas,' the statement said.
'The American public should be enraged by the preferential treatment being given to a pedophile and a criminally charged child sex offender.
'The Trump administration should not credit a word Maxwell says, as the government itself sought charges against Maxwell for being a serial liar. This move smacks of a cover up. The victims deserve better.'
The reason for her move to the less secure facility remains unclear, but comes a week after she was interviewed by Todd Blanche, Donald Trump's deputy attorney general, about information she holds on the Epstein Files.
Capitalising on the recent attention her case has drawn, Maxwell's legal team have said she is willing to testify before Congress in exchange for a presidential pardon or having her sentence commuted – a possibility Mr Trump has not ruled out.
Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
7 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Oregon murder suspect now charged in death of 4th woman: DA
An Oregon man previously charged in connection with the deaths of three women has been newly charged in the murder of a fourth, officials announced Tuesday. A Multnomah County grand jury indicted Jesse Lee Calhoun in the 2022 murder of 22-year-old Kristin Smith, the local prosecutor's office said. MORE: Oregon man charged with murder in suspicious deaths of 3 women in 'complex' case: DA He has been charged with second-degree murder and second-degree abuse of a corpse in connection with her death, according to Multnomah County District Attorney Nathan Vasquez. Calhoun faces the same charges in connection with the deaths of Charity Lynn Perry, 24, Bridget Leanne Webster, 31, and Joanna Speaks, 32. He pleaded not guilty to those charges last year. Smith's murder was initially believed to have been linked to those three killings at the time Calhoun was initially indicted in May 2024, though he hadn't been charged with her death until now. The bodies of three of the victims were found in 2023 in northwest Oregon, including the Portland area. Speaks' body was found in Washington that year, though police in Portland have said the homicide was believed to have happened in the Oregon city. The murders occurred over five months, with Smith's occurring first in November 2022, according to Vasquez. Smith was reported missing in December 2022, and her body was found in a wooded area in Portland two months later, police said. MORE: Suspect in Tennessee quadruple killing captured after week on the run The murders of the three other victims occurred between March and April of 2023, according to Vasquez. Their bodies were all discovered in April 2023, according to authorities. Multnomah County prosecutors have released few details about the case, including what led them to the suspect and how the women died, citing the ongoing investigation. "This remains a very active investigation, and unfortunately, we're not going to be discussing the evidence underlying the charges today," Vasquez said during a press briefing on Tuesday. The trial is expected to occur in 2027, the prosecutor's office said. Calhoun's defense attorneys told ABC News on Tuesday that they have no comment at this time. Kristin Smith's mother said she was "overwhelmed with emotion" following the new charges. "I stayed strong, doing all I could, trying to save my daughter. And it was just unbearable to find out when I was too late and needed help finding her," her mother, Melissa Smith, said during Tuesday's press briefing. "I did everything I could to try to get answers and fight and search." Wearing a shirt with the words "Justice for Kristin Smith," the mother said she experienced "agonizing pain" after Calhoun was not initially charged last year in her daughter's death -- and prayed every day that this day would come. "I've always stayed hopeful that I would get justice for Kristin," she said. "I never gave up." MORE: Manhunt intensifies for Montana bar shooting suspect, 38 agencies part of the 'unrelenting' search The death of a fifth woman -- 22-year-old Ashley Real -- initially believed to have been linked to the other killings, remains under investigation, Vasquez said, calling it an "extremely important case to us." Real's body was found in a wooded area in Clackamas County in Oregon in May 2023, a month after she was reported missing to Portland police, authorities said. Vasquez said they continue to work with authorities in Clackamas County on that investigation. The multiple deaths sparked online speculation about a possible serial killer in the Pacific Northwest, with prosecutors subsequently announcing in July 2023 that they had found links between four of the victims.
Yahoo
7 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Russian oligarch's superyacht to be auctioned in US
A luxurious superyacht seized by the US authorities from sanctioned Russian billionaire Suleiman Kerimov is headed to the auction block. The 348-foot (106-metre) Amadea has a helipad, pool, jacuzzi, gym, spa, beauty salon and eight staterooms that can accommodate 16 guests, according to The yacht, which has been valued at more than $300 million, was seized from the Russian oligarch in Fiji in April 2022 and is currently berthed in San Diego, California. The auction is being held by National Maritime Services, a Fort Lauderdale, Florida, company. Sealed bids are being accepted until September 10 and require a $10 million initial bid deposit. The yacht is headed to the auction block after a US judge in March dismissed a competing claim to ownership of the vessel. Another wealthy Russian, Eduard Khudainatov, the former head of Russian state oil and gas company Rosneft, claimed in a New York court to be the rightful owner of the Amadea but his claim was dismissed by District Judge Dale Ho. According to prosecutors, Khudainatov was a "straw owner" of the Amadea and the true owner was Kerimov, a close ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin who was sanctioned by the United States in 2018 and again in 2022 after the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Following the invasion, the Justice Department under then-president Joe Biden began seizing the assets of Russian oligarchs close to Putin, an operation known as Task Force KleptoCapture. President Donald Trump disbanded the task force after taking office. The US Congress passed legislation last year that allows for the sale of seized Russian assets, with the proceeds going to provide humanitarian assistance to Ukraine. cl/st

Yahoo
7 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Attorneys seek federal probe of Los Angeles County sexual abuse allegations
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Attorneys representing over 200 women said Tuesday they want the federal government to investigate allegations of rampant sexual abuse that occurred over decades at juvenile bootcamps run by the Los Angeles County probation department. The request comes months after Los Angeles County officials agreed to a $4 billion payout to settle 7,000 claims of sexual abuse in juvenile facilities since 1959, the largest sex abuse settlement in U.S. history. Attorneys whose clients were not a part of the deal said in a letter Monday to U.S. Attorney Bill Essayli that the settlement was not enough because there has been no information about who it happened or who was responsible. They are asking the Department of Justice to open a probe. A spokesperson for the U.S. Attorney's office declined to comment. The attorneys' clients were between the ages of 12 and 17 when they were sent to camps designated for 'at-risk youth' who had committed minor offenses, separate from the juvenile halls. Some parents were charged tuition for attendance, the attorneys said. John Manly, one of the attorneys, said during a news conference Tuesday that the camps were akin to the island owned by Jeffrey Epstein where he allegedly brought underage girls to be exploited. He said the most notorious was Camp Joseph Scott, located in Santa Clarita. It housed an all-girls population with a capacity of 125 residents and was shuttered during the COVID-19 pandemic, according to the city of Santa Clarita. 'The sad and unbelievable truth is these camps were dens of sexual predation where LA County probation officers in charge of helping these children get on track turned them into human sex toys,' the attorneys said. His colleague, Courtney Thom, said one former deputy probation officer, Thomas Jackson, had been accused by at least 30 women of sexual assault during their time in the custody of the probation department. A civil lawsuit involving these allegations against Jackson is scheduled to go to trial in August. "When our client was released back to her grandmother, this deputy probation officer went out to her home and would take her from her home to areas within the community to continue sexually abusing her and continued to contact her and torment her throughout her adult life as well,' Thom said. Jackson's attorney, Tom Yu, said his client is 'innocent of the allegations brought by those who received billions of dollars in taxpayers' money. As usual, the county abandoned their defense and blamed the employees.' Jackson's case was referred by the county to prosecutors for investigation in December 2023 but they declined to prosecute because the alleged incidents happened too long ago, according to an April 7 memo, the Los Angeles Times reported. Jackson resigned in 2023 after working for the county for decades and is now collecting a pension, according to Thom. 'Not one of those current or former LA County Probation Department officers has been prosecuted, not one has been arrested,' Thom said. 'Without a full investigation about what happened ... how can anyone assure this won't happen again?' The county's Office of County Counsel said in a statement that it is working with authorities to hold those who committed abuse accountable, but records are no longer available in many of the cases. 'The childhood sexual abuse claims in question span many decades,' the statement said. 'In addition, plaintiffs' attorneys have not produced evidence enabling the County to identify perpetrators in the vast majority of claims." Nonetheless, the statement said, the county "wholeheartedly supports efforts to ensure that those who have committed crimes against minors are prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.' The plaintiffs in the $4 billion settlement were able to sue because of a California law that took effect in 2020 and suspended the statute of limitations for childhood sex abuse victims to bring cases for three years. Manly and Thom have represented plaintiffs in several high-profile sexual abuse cases, including gymnasts in their lawsuit against USA Gymnastics and Michigan State University sports doctor Larry Nassar, who was accused by more than 300 women and girls of sexual assault and is serving three prison sentences that will likely keep him locked up for life. The letter also called for an investigation of whether the county concealed allegations of ongoing abuse at the juvenile facilities when the Justice Department investigated the facilities in 2006 and established a federal monitor in 2008. It found that the county had completed all of its required reforms by 2014.