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She's inmate No. 02879-509 in Florida. But once again, Ghislaine Maxwell is holding court

She's inmate No. 02879-509 in Florida. But once again, Ghislaine Maxwell is holding court

USA Today5 days ago
"The tofu has no seasoning, there's no seasoning allowed. No salt or pepper or anything. So, it's beyond tasteless.'
While Ghislaine Maxwell awaited trial for sex trafficking in a Brooklyn jail, PETA lobbied to ensure that she had vegan meals.
It's unclear when the heiress had given up meat. She was spotted scarfing down a burger, fries and shake at a Los Angeles In-N-Out Burger in 2019.
When the British socialite's family lost its fortune and she moved to New York in the 1990s, she found a friend to lend her a luxury apartment overlooking Central Park to start a new life.
Now, as inmate No. 02879-509 — serving 20 years for her role in conspiring to recruit, groom and sexually abuse underage girls — she wants her freedom. And the country waits to see if President Donald Trump, whose reputation hangs on what she says, will give her a pardon.
In many ways, Maxwell has always been in charge – becoming a confidante of financier Jeffrey Epstein and connecting the rich and famous to turning the tables on lawyers during a deposition. She does so with a hint of entitlement that comes from her privileged background, and a lot of moxie.
'I know where you are headed with this and it's nowhere appropriate and it's really unattractive,' she once told a lawyer during a deposition.
Maxwell met with the Department of Justice last week. She spent two days answering questions from Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche about Epstein and about 100 others possibly involved in the notorious sex-trafficking operation. While they didn't share what was asked or if Trump – a longtime friend of Epstein – was the focus of any questions, David Markus, an attorney representing Maxwell, said she answered all questions.
"She didn't hold anything back,' he said.
The Wall Street Journal and CNN reported that Attorney General Pam Bondi told Trump in May that he was named multiple times in the government's files on Epstein.
Maxwell, 63, now spends her days teaching yoga and etiquette classes at a federal corrections institute in Florida, waiting to see if she will get what she wants again.
'She was interested in power'
Maxwell wasn't used to being told no.
She grew up in a 51-room Italianate mansion in the United Kingdom.
She was born on Christmas Day, the ninth child of Elisabeth and Robert Maxwell in 1961. Two days later, the couple's oldest child Michael was injured in a car wreck on his way home from a dance and left in a coma. Elisabeth spent every morning of that next year at the hospital, talking to her son in hopes of bringing him back to consciousness.
The family fell apart, Maxwell's mother would write in her 1994 memoir, 'A Mind of My Own: My Life with Robert Maxwell.'
'The two little ones were seemingly unaware of the tragedy, but Ghislaine, who should have been the center of our love and attention, was hardly given a glance and became anorexic whilst still a toddler,' Elisabeth Maxwell wrote.
'She planted herself in front of me and said simply 'Mummy, I exist.' I was devastated,' she wrote. 'And we all made a great effort with her, fussing over her so much that she became spoiled.'
Michael spent seven years in a coma before he died. Maxwell went to boarding school at 8 and later to the University of Oxford.
"It was very clear to me even as an undergraduate that she was interested in power and money," Anna Pasternak, a writer who knew Maxwell from Oxford, told the BBC in 2022. "She was one of those people at parties who always looked over your shoulder to see if there was somebody more powerful or more interesting while she was air-kissing you."
Maxwell's father died in 1991. It is unknown whether he fell or jumped from his yacht, he named after his daughter, Lady Ghislaine. Shortly after, it was revealed that he had stolen $824 million from pension funds.
A relationship with mutual benefits
Maxwell and Epstein were inseparable for almost a decade.
She met Epstein, then a hedge fund manager, through a mutual friend when she moved to New York City in 1991. She was 30; he was 38.
The friendship made sense. She knew wealthy and connected people. She has been photographed with Prince Andrew, Naomi Campbell, Mick Jagger, Michael Bloomberg. Epstein needed them. She needed to maintain the lifestyle provided by her late father, who had owned the Mirror Group and the New York Daily News.
Maxwell and Epstein dated for a while, then they were friends. She began working for him, taking care of his homes, hiring staff, architects and contractors in 1992 and did so on and off through 2009.
Photos of them from society pages and those shown at her trial often look as if they come from a Ralph Lauren ad, moneyed plaid with a perfect looking golden retriever in a grassy area, tuxedos and gowns in dark wood paneled rooms.
She wears the uniform of old money: button ups, crewneck sweaters, minimal makeup and simple jewelry like diamond or pearl stud earrings.
They embrace in front of an ocean, on a yacht, in a helicopter or on a private jet. He often looks straight ahead; she looks at him. There are celebrities in some: Trump. Harvey Weinstein, Michael Bolton. Paris Hilton.
'We were very friendly,' she would say.
In 1995, Epstein named one of his companies the Ghislaine Corporation.
More than 1,000 victims
Maxwell had another job for Epstein.
At her 2021 trial, prosecutors portrayed her as a sophisticated predator who befriended young girls and lured them into sex with Epstein. She bought them gifts including cowboy boots and Prada purses, flattered them and promised to help support them through school.
'Years of sexual abuse, multiple victims, devastating psychological harm. None of this could have happened without Maxwell,' the prosecutors said of the more than 1,000 victims.
Four women shared stories at her trial, including one woman who was 17 when she met Maxwell in Paris.
'She seemed to be everything that I wanted to be. And she seemed to like me,' said the woman who was referred to as Kate. 'I left that feeling exhilarated, like somebody wanted me, like somebody wanted to be my friend.'
Later Maxwell would invite her to massage Epstein, who initiated sexual contact. This happened several times over the following years in London, New York, Palm Beach and Epstein's private island.
After the massages, Kate testified, Maxwell always complimented her: 'You're such a good girl. And I'm so happy you were able to come. This is really great. And he obviously likes you a lot.'
Annie Farmer testified with her real name at the trial. She had met Maxwell when she was a high school student in Arizona and her older sister worked for Epstein. She said Maxwell told her that Epstein wanted to help her pay for college.
She also said that Maxwell sexually abused her when she visited Epstein's New Mexico ranch.
'She pulled the sheet down and exposed my breasts and started rubbing on my chest and on my upper breasts,' Farmer said. 'I was surprised. I wanted so badly to get off of the table.'
During her trial, Maxwell remained 'expressing no frailty and certainly no regret,' The New Yorker reported. Maxwell tried to reverse the roles in court. While a courtroom sketch artist drew her, Maxwell began to sketch the artist back.
Maxwell has maintained she didn't know about Epstein's abuse. She said in a 2016 deposition that she learned about the allegations against him 'like everybody else, like the rest of the world, when it was announced in the papers.'
And she says she never hired anyone under 18.
'I hired assistants, architects, decorators, cooks, cleaners, gardeners, pool people, pilots. I hired all sorts of people," Maxwell said during a deposition for a civil suit in April 2016. 'A very small part of my job was to find adult professional massage therapists for Jeffrey. As far as I'm concerned, everyone who came to his house was an adult professional person.'
Perhaps you are not really familiar with what massage is
'Was it Jeffrey's preference to start a massage with sex?' a lawyer asked Maxwell during a 2016 deposition.
'Perhaps you are not really familiar with what massage is. Massage is for health benefits,' Maxwell replied, adding that Epstein received one massage each day.
A few years before Maxwell was arrested, a woman named Virginia Giuffre had alleged she was trafficked by Epstein and Maxwell to Prince Andrew when she was a teenager.
Maxwell denied it, and Giuffre filed a civil suit against her. During Maxwell's deposition, she calls Giuffre a liar 36 times, argues with attorneys and slaps the table in disgust.
When Giuffre says that Maxwell and Epstein bought her gifts, she doesn't just say no when shown a photo of Giuffre in a Burberry dress.
'I would never. The outfit doesn't work at all.'
Prince Andrew never acknowledged the abuse. He settled a civil lawsuit in 2022 brought by Giuffre. She killed herself in April of this year.
Loyalty, with a price
When Epstein pleaded guilty to state charges in 2008, he spent less than 13 months in a minimum-security jail and was allowed to leave for 12 hours a day for work.
He settled several civil lawsuits against him and paid restitution to victims.
Maxwell continued to work for him.
When asked why during the 2016 deposition, she said: 'I'm a very loyal person and Jeffrey was very good to me when my father passed away and I believe that you need to be a good friend in people's hour of need and I felt that it was a very thoughtful, nice thing for me to do to help in very limited fashion which was helping if he had any issue with his homes in terms of the staffing issues. It was very very minor, but I felt it was thoughtful in somebody's hour of need.'
Bank records shown at her trial reveal that Epstein paid Maxwell more than $30 million during the years they were together.
The waiting game
In prison, Maxwell is also allowed to spend up to $360 each month in the commissary, shopping once a week for vegetarian items such as $4.95 Fruity Dyno Bites or $2.55 vegan bags of Boom Chicka popcorn.
'You're supposed to have either hummus or cottage cheese or tofu, but most of the time, it's tofu if it's anything or beans. And then the tofu has no seasoning, there's no seasoning allowed. No salt or pepper or anything. So, it's beyond tasteless,' she told a British TV host in 2023 of the food served.
As Maxwell serves her time in Florida as one of the most powerful prisoners in American history, she is reportedly in an 'honors dorm,' which would likely offer her a private room, however prison officials won't confirm her accommodations.
Maxwell was in a detention center in Brooklyn before she was transferred to Federal Correctional Institution Tallahassee in 2022. Some of her crimes took place in Florida.
While at the Brooklyn center, the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals' president sent a letter on her behalf to get her access to more nonmeat meals.
It is believed that Maxwell is receiving vegan meals in Florida. The prison wouldn't comment, but a PETA spokeswoman confirmed, saying the group advocated for non-meat meals 'not only for vegans but for people who are convicted of violent crime as we believe they should not be permitted to engage in more violent acts by eating animals.'
On July 24 and 25, she was able to leave the prison for the first time to meet with Department of Justice lawyers at the federal courthouse in Tallahassee.
Maxwell has sought to overturn her conviction and has filed a petition with the Supreme Court, which the Justice Department has opposed.
When asked on Monday if he would consider pardoning Maxwell, Trump said he is 'allowed' to, but it would be 'inappropriate' to discuss it.
After her 2020 arrest, when asked if Maxwell might cut a deal with prosecutors, Trump said: "I just wish her well."
The one thing Maxwell could never have
Was Epstein the one thing Maxwell wanted but could never have?
She was asked in a deposition if she was Epstein's girlfriend in 2004.
'Define what you mean by girlfriend,' Maxwell said.
'Were you in a relationship with him where you would consider yourself his girlfriend? Did you ever consider yourself his girlfriend?' the lawyer asked.
'That's a tricky question,' Maxwell says.
'There were times when I would have liked to think of myself as his girlfriend,' she says.
When asked about their relationship again, she says: 'I don't know if I would have ever characterized myself as his girlfriend, but at that time (redacted) was with him as much if more than I was.'
Her job, 'was to take care of Jeffrey's needs,' Kate testified at trial.
With Epstein dead, Maxwell awaits for the second-best thing: her freedom.
Laura Trujillo is a national columnist focusing on health and wellness. She is the author of "Stepping Back from the Ledge: A Daughter's Search for Truth and Renewal," and can be reached at ltrujillo@usatoday.com.
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The first victim to testify in Ghislaine Maxwell's 2021 sex trafficking trial told the jury that she was a 13-year-old, eating ice cream with her friends, when a tall woman with a small dog approached three decades before. 'She was walking with a cute little Yorkie,' the victim, identified only as Jane, recalled of that first encounter at Interlochen summer arts camp in 1994. 'We asked if we could pet the dog. We started chitchatting, petted the dog. And the rest of my classmates had to go to class. And probably about a minute later, a man came and joined her.' The woman was Ghislaine Maxwell and her Yorkie was named Max. The man was Jeffrey Epstein. He and Maxwell were commencing a classic scheme to groom and sexually prey on an unsuspecting girl. One enduring question is how he came to acquire such a perfect target; a grieving child made vulnerable by the loss of a parent and her home. She also conveniently came from West Palm Beach, near Epstein's Florida home, 1,520 miles from this idyllic spot in Michigan. Epstein had gone to this camp as a teenage bassoonist and had since built a lodge and funded scholarships and was now using it as a hunting ground. His grooming scheme would include seeking to impress Jane with Epstein's fabulous wealth and social connections. He would drop the names of numerous celebrities and introduce her to Donald Trump. (In response to a Daily Beast inquiry, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt issued a statement: 'President Trump threw Jeffrey Epstein out of his club because he was a creep. The Daily Beast is a trash publication that spreads lies and gossip for clicks. It's truly disgusting.') At the start, it seemed to Jane to be just a chance encounter. 'I was there by myself. And I sat on the bench still eating my ice cream, and the man sat across from me,' Jane continued. 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She told Epstein and Maxwell her mother's name. 'He said, 'I think we know your mom. It's kind of a smaller town. We definitely know her,'' Jane remembered. 'And he had a newspaper under his arm. And then he put the newspaper on the picnic table.' Epstein wrote down the mother's name and phone number. Jane remembered this first encounter with Epstein saying, 'So nice to meet you…I'm going to call your mom.' The call came after Jane was back in Florida and starting the eighth grade at Palm Beach County School of the Arts. 'I just remember coming home from school one day, and my mom said, someone you met at summer camp, someone from their office called me,' Jane testified. 'I barely remember, because it seemed so long ago. It was maybe four or five or six weeks, but, you know, being that young, it seemed like an eternity.' The mother said the caller had invited her and Jane to tea. 'He sent somebody to come pick us up, like a chauffeur,' Jane testified. 'And we were driven to his house.' She remembered it as, 'This giant, like, beach-looking house with a big white fence around it. And these giant gates opened up, and the car pulled in. And it was just this, you know, big beautiful house.' Epstein was on the phone when Jane and her mother were escorted into his home office. 'He got off the phone, stood up, and introduced himself to me and my mother, and then sort of let us outside to the back patio, which had this great big dining table,' Jane recalled. 'And there was a big spread of, like, pastries and sandwiches and tea.' Epstein engaged in classic grooming as practiced by sexual predators, asking Jane about school and her interests and what she wanted to do with her life. 'He was very inquisitive,' Jane remembered. 'It didn't last very long, I would say maybe 30 minutes in total. But he proceeded to say, 'Well, I like to mentor young students who are artists. And I love music, and I love dance, and I give all kinds of scholarships.' She recalled Epstein saying, 'I'm very impressed with your daughter and, you know, would love to see her sing next time. ' Either Maxwell or somebody in Epstein's office began sending a car for Jane every week or so. 'When you would spend time with Jeffrey Epstein at his house in those first few months, who, if anyone, was there?' the prosecutor, Assistant. U.S. Attorney Alison Moe, asked. 'Ghislaine Maxwell,' Jane answered. 'Did your mother go with you for these meetings?' Moe asked. 'No,' Jane replied. 'Why not?' 'She wasn't invited.' Epstein and Maxwell would sometimes take her shopping, buying her a cashmere sweater, a 'preppy' button down shirt, pants and loafers. They also went to one of a huge chain of lingerie stores owned by billionaire Les Wexner, a primary source of Epstein's millions. 'We went to a Victoria's Secret and bought some underwear,' Jane testified. The prosecutor asked what kind of underwear. It was more in keeping with pedophile fantasy than the sexy adult stuff for which the chain is famous. 'It was sort of those, like, white cotton briefs,' Jane reported. 'Basic-looking ones that you would, sort of, wear when you're younger.' But the grooming by Epstein and Maxwell did not stop with the new clothes and feigned interest in her schooling with the possibility of scholarships and the chauffeur and the waterfront mansion and other manifestations of great wealth. 'During this time in the first few months when you were spending time with Maxwell and Epstein, did they ever tell you anything about their social circle?' Moe asked. 'From the very beginning there was a lot of bragging about how they were friends with essentially everyone, and they knew everyone,' Jane said. 'And they would sort of name-drop or sometimes put people on speakerphones whose voices I didn't know and then say, Oh, well, this was so-and-so and so-and-so; and just, you know, say that they were very well-connected and affluent.' Moe asked Jane how that made her feel. 'I guess it made me feel slightly intimidated,' she replied. 'It was overwhelming… I didn't know how I was supposed to feel about it.' 'What names do you recall them mentioning to you when they would tell you about their social circle?' Moe asked. The first name Jane mentioned was one that she would cite three times while on the stand, twice more than any other celebrity. 'Donald Trump, Bill Clinton, Mike Wallace,' she said. Under cross-examination, Jane testified that Epstein had subsequently introduced her to Trump in person at Mar-a-Lago in December of 1994. A 2020 civil suit that Jane would later file against the Epstein estate and its executors would later allege, 'Introducing 14-year-old [Jane] to Donald J. Trump, Epstein elbowed Trump playfully asking him, referring to [Jane], 'This is a good one, right?' Trump smiled and nodded in agreement. They both chuckled and [Jane} felt uncomfortable, but, at the time, was too young to understand why." Trump later told New York Magazine, 'I've known Jeff for 15 years. Terrific guy. He's a lot of fun to be with. It is even said that he likes beautiful women as much as I do, and many of them are on the younger side. No doubt about it—Jeffrey enjoys his social life.' That social life included dropping by Mar-a-Lago with a girl in her early teens whom Epstein's driver, Juan Alessi, recalled from the stand as a 'strikingly beautiful girl, beautiful eyes, long hair.' Jane mentioned Trump a third time in her testimony when she confirmed that she later competed in the Miss Teen USA contest. 'In the mid-1990s, you participated in a beauty pageant, correct?' Messenger asked. 'Embarrassingly enough, ' Jane replied. 'Yes.' 'And it was associated with Mr. Trump, right?' 'Yes.' she said. Trump had bought the Miss Universe Organization, the parent company of the Miss Universe, Miss USA, and Miss Teen USA pageants, in 1996. He subsequently bragged about going uninvited to the dressing room while the contestants were changing. 'I'll tell you the funniest is that I'll go backstage before a show and everyone's getting dressed,' Trump told Howard Stern in 2005. 'No men are anywhere, and I'm allowed to go in, because I'm the owner of the pageant and therefore I'm inspecting it. ... 'Is everyone OK?' You know, they're standing there with no clothes. 'Is everybody OK?' And you see these incredible looking women, and so I sort of get away with things like that.' As questions arose about his relationship with Epstein, Trump himself said they had a falling out over the former 'fantastic guy' poaching staff from Mar-a-Lago. On Tuesday, Trump confirmed to reporters that the people Epstein 'stole' included Virginia Giuffre, who worked at Mar-a-Lago as a $9 an hour locker room attendant in 2000. She testified in a subsequent civil case that she was 17 when she met Maxwell there. Giuffre further alleged that Maxwell and Epstein groomed her in much the way they did Jane. One difference was that Giuffre says the groomers turned to pimps, farming her out to Prince Andrew. After Jane and three other victims testified against Maxwell, she was convicted and sentenced to 20 years in prison. She still faced two counts of perjury for particularly egregious lies she allegedly told during a civil case arising from the civil case involving the sexual assault. The DOJ decided to drop those charges to save the victims from undergoing the trauma of further proceedings. But the renewed contention over the supposed Epstein files is doing exactly that. And it is accompanied by the possibility that Trump may grant clemency to a well-heeled, Oxford-educated socialite monster who teamed up with Epstein to ensnare Jane and Giuffre and other unsuspecting girls. Giuffre lost her life by suicide in April. Jane received a payment from the Epstein Victims Compensation Fund in a 2021 agreement that required her to drop the civil suit against the estate. It had not replied to her claims. She had already embarked on a long career as a working actor. Her attorney did not respond to requests to speak with her. But she no doubt still feels the effects of what followed after the tall woman with the little dog approached her at summer camp. 'Can you explain for the jury how what Maxwell and Epstein did to you affected your relationships as an adult?' Moe asked Jane during the trial about crimes that an early tip-off could have prevented and has resonated through decades. 'I didn't even understand what real love is supposed to look like. It ruined my self-esteem, my self-worth,' Jane replied. 'How do you navigate a healthy relationship with a broken compass?' And against whatever Maxwell may have to say, there is Jane's memory of meeting Trump at 14 and hearing Epstein tell the future president, "This is a good one, right?" Solve the daily Crossword

Epstein associate Maxwell quietly moved from Florida to Texas prison
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Ghislaine Maxwell, the longtime associate of Jeffrey Epstein, was quietly transferred from a federal prison in Florida to a federal prison in Texas, according to a Bureau of Prisons official. 'Ghislaine Maxwell is in the custody of the Bureau of Prisons (BOP) at the Federal Prison Camp (FPC) Bryan in Bryan, Texas,' BOP official Benjamin O'Cone confirmed Friday in an email to The Hill. The move to Texas comes as Maxwell, who was convicted of sex trafficking and is serving a 20-year prison sentence, and her legal team are appealing her case to the Supreme Court in hopes of having her conviction overturned. Last week, the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee subpoenaed Maxwell, asking for her testimony as the demand for President Trump's administration to release more documents related to Epstein's case continues. Maxwell's attorney, David Oscar Markus, said her client would only speak to the committee if granted immunity, something the panel rejected. Markus also asked for the questions directed to Maxwell to be submitted in advance and that any potential deposition be held after the nation's highest court weighs in on her petition. The Justice Department's (DOJ) No. 2 official, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, spoke with Maxwell in Florida last week for more than nine hours over the course of two days. The Trump administration has faced a backlash after an early-July joint memo from the DOJ and FBI said that Epstein, a convicted sex offender and disgraced financier, died by suicide in 2019 while awaiting trial in jail and that he did not keep a 'client list.' The news of Maxwell's transfer was first reported by The New York Sun. Federal Prison Camp Bryan is a minimum-security jail for female inmates and will likely offer better conditions for Maxwell. The facility is located around 95 miles northwest of Houston and can hold up to 635 inmates. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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