
Ghislaine Maxwell to make 'mafia-like' deal with Trump amid fallout over Epstein files
A top Justice Department official confirmed he will personally meet with Maxwell as she serves her 20-year sentence at a federal prison in Florida for helping Jeffrey Epstein sexually abuse underage girls.
The 'mafia-style' negotiation could mean a reprieve for Maxwell as Trump looks to put an end to the torrent of speculation surrounding his history with the billionaire pedophile.
'She's going to make a deal,' attorney and Epstein associate Alan Dershowitz told The New York Post. 'That's the way things are done. They make deals with the mafia, so I'm certain they are going to try to make a deal with her.'
The onetime Epstein lawyer called Maxwell the 'Rosetta stone' of the Epstein saga, hinting that more secrets could be revealed.
'She knows everything - not just about the perpetrators but the victims,' he said. 'And she knows about the victims who became perpetrators.'
Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche confirmed on Tuesday that negotiations were already underway with Maxwell's attorneys.
'If Ghislaine Maxwell has information about anyone who has committed crimes against victims, the FBI and the DOJ will hear what she has to say,' Blanche said.
'I have communicated with counsel for Ms. Maxwell to determine whether she would be willing to speak with prosecutors from the Department. I anticipate meeting with Ms. Maxwell in the coming days.'
The meeting could mark the first time federal prosecutors hear Maxwell's full version of events, after years of silence and failed appeals.
'Ghislaine will always testify truthfully,' Maxwell's lawyer, David Oscar Markus, said. 'We are grateful to President Trump for his commitment to uncovering the truth in this case.'
It remains to be seen, however, whether the Justice Department will ask Maxwell to testify and whether new evidence will yield any prosecutions.
MAGA supporters have been demanding that Trump be more transparent about the Epstein files after he campaigned on making all the information public.
Legal experts, including Dershowitz, have cast doubt on the usefulness of grand jury transcripts, urging the DOJ instead to release FBI interview notes from Epstein's victims.
Court filings previously revealed that some of Epstein's more than 1,000 identified victims were groomed to recruit others - a chilling tactic that created a web of silence and complicity that prosecutors have struggled to untangle since Epstein's death in 2019.
Maxwell's reemergence comes at a critical moment.
Earlier this year, the Justice Department and FBI raided Epstein's former properties, collecting what they described as 'voluminous materials.'
But just weeks later, they released a joint memo dismissing long-running conspiracy theories, stating there was 'no incriminating client list' and no evidence of blackmail.
That walk-back sparked outrage among Trump's base, especially after Attorney General Pam Bondi had previously promised to release 'a lot of names' and 'a lot of flight logs.'
MAGA supporters were particularly enraged that no new material was produced in the Epstein files review and that Trump's DOJ found no existence of a so-called 'client list' of high profile co-conspirators.
The president even started calling the whole ordeal the 'Epstein hoax' and claimed Democrats were to blame for stoking conspiracies in an effort to divide Republicans.
Now, under pressure, the administration reversed course.
'President Trump has told us to release all credible evidence,' Blanche wrote on social media, before asking a federal court to unseal grand jury transcripts from both Epstein's and Maxwell's cases.
The judges in charge - Richard Berman and Paul Engelmayer - have ordered the DOJ to submit its arguments by July 29, and have given Maxwell, a representative of Epstein's estate, and the victims until August 5 to file their responses.
Speaking from the Oval Office on Tuesday, Trump said he supports the outreach.
'I think it would be something - sounds appropriate to do, yeah,' he told reporters.
The president has called parts of the Epstein scandal a 'hoax,' and has publicly criticized his own supporters who have become fixated on the idea of a government cover-up.
But he has also told Bondi and Blanche to pursue all legitimate evidence.
Just last week, the DOJ opposed Maxwell's request to have the Supreme Court review her case, with her lawyers claiming she should have never been charged because of a 2008 plea deal the courts struck with Epstein.
But Maxwell's team has now hinted she may be ready to cooperate now that most of her appeals have failed.
Maxwell's journey from international socialite to inmate has been as dramatic as it is disturbing.
Once a fixture of British high society and New York elite circles, she rubbed shoulders with royalty, billionaires, and political power players.
After her father, media tycoon Robert Maxwell, died in 1991 under suspicious circumstances, Ghislaine found herself under the wing of Epstein - eventually becoming his confidante, girlfriend, and accomplice.
In court, four women testified that Maxwell groomed them as teenagers for Epstein and, at times, participated in the abuse herself.
She was convicted in 2021 on charges of sex trafficking, conspiracy, and transporting a minor for illegal sexual activity.
She did not testify at her trial, but gave two depositions in earlier civil cases, in which she denied wrongdoing and accused Epstein's most vocal accusers of fabricating stories.
Her brother, Ian Maxwell, who has publicly defended her since her 2020 arrest, claimed this week that the infamous 'client list' is a myth.
'I don't think it constitutes a list of alleged people to whom young minor girls were trafficked,' he told Piers Morgan Uncensored. 'Ghislaine's position has been: she doesn't believe such a list existed.'
Ian also warned of the danger Maxwell faces behind bars. 'Prisons are very dangerous places,' he said.
'We know from Ghislaine that there are serious staff shortages and more dangerous higher-risk-category prisoners now being admitted.'
Maxwell's legal team has long argued that she should never have been prosecuted, citing the 2007 non-prosecution agreement Epstein signed in Florida, which extended immunity to his co-conspirators.
But federal prosecutors in New York successfully argued that the deal did not apply outside Florida, and moved forward with the case that ultimately led to her conviction.
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