Tag Archives: Maxwell

Ghislaine Maxwell claims Prince Andrew photo with Virginia Giuffre is ‘fake’



CNN
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Convicted child sex trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell has said a decades-old photograph of Prince Andrew with his sexual abuse accuser Virginia Giuffre is “fake,” in a series of interviews from prison.

The disgraced British socialite is currently serving a 20-year sentence in US federal prison for carrying out a years-long scheme with her longtime confidante Jeffrey Epstein to groom and sexually abuse underage girls.

Speaking from a Florida jail to UK broadcaster TalkTV, which aired a special program on Monday night, the 61-year-old – who also appears in the photograph – said she doesn’t “believe it happened.”

“I don’t believe it is real for a second, in fact, I’m sure it’s not. There has never been an original. I don’t believe it happened and certainly, the way it’s described would have been impossible. I don’t have any memory of going to Tramp [nightclub],” Maxwell said.

Prince Andrew, who is one of King Charles III’s younger brothers, has strenuously denied Giuffre’s allegation that he was introduced to her at London’s Tramp nightclub in 2001 with Maxwell, before then-17-year-old Giuffre was allegedly forced to perform sex acts with the British royal.

Giuffre filed a civil lawsuit in a US court in 2021 against Andrew, who is also known as the Duke of York, alleging sexual abuses while she was a minor on multiple occasions. Andrew later settled out of court for an undisclosed figure without admitting any wrongdoing and the case was dismissed. Still, the allegations against the senior royal severely tarnished his reputation. He stepped back from royal duties in late 2019 and was stripped of his military titles and royal patronages last year.

Maxwell appeared to show little remorse to Epstein’s victims and offered no apology in the interviews broadcast Monday. Instead, she said the victims should “take their disappointment and upset out on the authorities who allowed” the billionaire pedophile to die in prison.

Maxwell also told TalkTV that she believes Epstein was murdered – a conspiracy theory for which she offered no evidence. Authorities ruled Epstein died by suicide in 2019 while he was awaiting trial on federal charges accusing him of sexually abusing underage girls.

Regarding the victims, Maxwell said, “I hope they have some closure via the judicial process that took place.”

Maxwell acknowledged during her sentencing hearing last year that she had been convicted in the sex trafficking scheme but stopped short of taking responsibility. She did not testify in her defense during the trial in late 2021, which ended with her conviction on five counts, including sex trafficking of a minor.

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Maxwell Frost, Gen Z’s congressman-elect, denied D.C. apartment over bad credit

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Rep.-elect Maxwell Frost (D-Fla.), the first member of the Gen Z generation elected to Congress, said Thursday that a company in Washington rejected his application to rent an apartment because of his bad credit score.

Frost declined to identify the building, the size of debt or credit score, but said the building where his application was rejected was in the Navy Yard neighborhood, which is just over a mile from the U.S. Capitol.

“I was excited because I had finally found a place that made sense for me, that was in my price range,” Frost said in an interview. Before applying, he said he disclosed “that my credit was bad. I told the guy my whole situation and he said ‘Apply, you’re going to be fine.’ ”

Frost said he paid a $50 application fee and submitted his information. After the rejection — and the loss of the fee — Frost said he was “told there really is nothing I can do. It’s just unfortunate. They said you can call and dispute the result, but I said I don’t know what I’d be disputing. I have a bad credit — I admit it.”

Frost, 25, famously drove an Uber to pay his bills while campaigning full time in his central Florida district. He has quickly become a potent force within the Democratic Party, hitting the campaign trail in neighboring Georgia this past week to help Sen. Raphael G. Warnock (D) win his runoff election on Tuesday.

In true Gen. Z fashion, Frost first aired his housing woes on social media.

“Honestly I just posted it because I was pretty angry about what had happened,” he told The Washington Post. His message on Twitter quickly generated thousands of responses, including some from Republican critics that Frost argued were hypocritical, considering former president Donald Trump’s multiple bankruptcies.

The median rent for a studio apartment in Washington is $2,600, compared with $1,646 in Orlando, which is in the district Frost will represent, according to Zillow.com.

Lawmakers struggling to find housing in the nation’s capital is a story as old as the congressman-elect.

In 2000, another young, newly elected House member from Florida was shocked to find a tight and expensive housing market in the nation’s capital. “It’s been a rather shocking experience, to see what the housing market is like,” Adam H. Putnam (R-Fla.) told The Post at the time. “It’s just a totally different ballgame from anything I’ve ever seen.”

Putnam, who was 26, said he and his wife visited more than a dozen places during freshman orientation, and understood why some lawmakers had chosen to sleep in their offices. Another new member of the House at the time, Rep. Betty McCollum (D-Minn.), said she found a large one-bedroom near the Library of Congress for around $1,500 a month. She said it was “a lot; my house payment in Minnesota is less than that.”

In 2018, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) voiced similar concerns. She had worked as a bartender before leaving that job to campaign full time. In November, at age 29, she was the youngest woman elected to the House, but she would not start collecting a salary until the following January.

“I have three months without a salary before I’m a member of Congress,” she told the New York Times. “So, how do I get an apartment? Those little things are very real.”

Frost said he had spoken with Ocasio-Cortez about the housing challenges they experienced, which a number of their colleagues in elected office might not have gone though.

“A lot of the members who come into the Congress don’t have these issues when they move, because they already have money,” Frost said.

One real estate agent contacted by The Post said December is typically very slow for real estate transactions, which can make finding available units challenging.

As of Thursday, there were 30 one-bedroom and studio apartments available for rent in the 20003 Zip code that generally covers the Navy Yard neighborhood, according to this agent, citing information from the Multiple Listing Service, a database that feeds popular housing sites like Redfin, though some apartments may be advertised publicly without being listed there.

The median rent in those units was $2,373; the only unit rented in the past 30 days went into contract just after Thanksgiving and had been available for more than a month, this agent said. The rent on that apartment was $1,700.

For now, Frost said, “I’m probably going to have to look at individual landlords, and mom-and-pop kind of shops as far as apartments are concerned. But also, I just might need to do some couch surfing or staying with somebody a little while I figure it out, or AIRBNB.”



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Who is Maxwell Frost, the Gen Z Democratic nominee in Florida?

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Maxwell Frost sounds a lot like others of the Gen Z generation — he’s 25, drives an Uber for extra cash and recently quit his job to pursue a more promising opportunity.

His latest gig? Winning a crowded primary in Florida’s heavily Democratic 10th Congressional District on Tuesday night, giving him a strong chance of becoming a member of the U.S. House of Representatives.

Frost prevailed over more experienced Democrats, including former members of Congress Corrine Brown and Alan Grayson, and state Sen. Randolph Bracy, to secure the nomination. He will be the favorite in November in the reconfigured Orlando-area district.

Four takeaways from the New York and Florida primaries

“I knew going into this thing that we’d be counted out because of my age,” Frost told The Washington Post in an interview Tuesday. “And I’ve been counted out a lot of my life because of my age. But I knew that if we stuck to our message, and if we kept doing the work, and we built the movement, we would win.”

He is among the new class of mold-breaking Democratic candidates this year with working-class roots. On his campaign website, he highlights the difficulties faced by his biological mother who gave him up for adoption amid what he describes as “a cycle of drugs, crime, and violence.”

Full Washington Post Elections Coverage

Frost campaigned on support for Medicare-for-all, demilitarizing the police, legalizing prostitution and recreational marijuana, expunging all marijuana convictions, and restoring voting rights to the incarcerated.

He was backed by Sens. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.).

Polls leading up to the primary showed Frost with the lead in the 10-candidate race, but he said his campaign team was working as hard on Election Day as it has all summer, hitting the streets at 4 a.m. to drop off campaign literature at voters’ houses.

Maxwell Frost (D-Fla.), who is the first Gen Z candidate to win a congressional primary, discusses his plan to engage young people in the upcoming election. (Video: The Washington Post, Photo: Maxwell Alejandro Frost for Congress/The Washington Post)

The minimum age to hold a seat in Congress is 25. Frost has never run for public office, but he doesn’t consider himself a political newcomer. He started working in politics when he was 15, protesting gun violence after the deadly mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Connecticut in 2012.

He went on to become the national organizing director for March for Our Lives, the group organized by students who survived the deadly mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., in 2018. He also worked for the ACLU in Florida, supporting voting rights for formerly incarcerated citizens.

Frost refers to his as the “mass shootings generation.”

He gained national attention four months ago when he confronted Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) at an event in Orlando, shortly after the school shootings in Uvalde, Tex. In a video that circulated widely on social media, Frost is seen telling DeSantis he needs to do something about gun violence. DeSantis answered, “Nobody wants to hear from you,” and Frost is being seen escorted out.

Frost said he thinks voters angry at DeSantis will help propel him to Congress.

“Our positive message about the world we deserve to live in is what really resonates with folks, despite what’s coming out of the governor’s mansion in Tallahassee,” Frost said.

He argued that DeSantis’s policies have motivated voters.

“Our message has resonated at this time in spite of what the governor’s doing to queer folks being scapegoated, in spite of Black people and their rights to vote being taken away by the governor, in spite of our LGBTQ plus community and Latinos and Black folks and disabled folks being scapegoated by this governor for every issue under the sun,” he said.

Frost was the top fundraiser in the race for the open seat currently held by Rep. Val Demings (D), who won the nomination for Senate on Tuesday night and will challenge Sen. Marco Rubio (R).

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Ghislaine Maxwell to Be Sentenced for Sex Trafficking: Live News Updates

Almost exactly two years after Ghislaine Maxwell was arrested in New Hampshire and brought to New York to face charges that she conspired with Jeffrey Epstein to recruit, groom and abuse underage girls, she is to be sentenced on Tuesday in Manhattan federal court.

If Judge Alison J. Nathan agrees with the government’s request for a sentence of at least 30 years, Ms. Maxwell could spend much of the rest of her life in prison.

Ms. Maxwell, 60, the daughter of the British media magnate Robert Maxwell, was convicted on Dec. 29 and will face sentencing on three counts: sex trafficking, conspiracy and transportation of a minor with the intent to engage in illegal sexual activity.

The defense has asked the judge to impose a sentence less than the 20 years recommended by the court’s probation office. There is no minimum sentence for Ms. Maxwell, who has been jailed ever since she was denied bail after her arrest on July 2, 2020.

Ms. Maxwell’s sentencing hearing could last more than an hour. Several of her accusers, including some who testified at her trial, have asked to address the judge, and Ms. Maxwell also will be given the opportunity to speak. Her lawyers have said she is planning to appeal, and it is possible that Ms. Maxwell, who did not testify at her trial, will choose to remain silent in court on Tuesday as well.

Her trial was widely seen as the reckoning that Mr. Epstein, 66, her longtime companion, never had. The disgraced financier hanged himself in a Manhattan jail cell one month after his July 2019 arrest as he awaited his own trial on sex trafficking charges.

Still, Mr. Epstein loomed over the trial — his name surfaced repeatedly, and Ms. Maxwell’s lawyers took every opportunity to separate their client from him.

Ms. Maxwell’s lawyers, in a sentencing letter to the judge, cited trial testimony about Ms. Maxwell’s “facilitation of Epstein’s abuse,” but argued that “Epstein was the mastermind, Epstein was the principal abuser and Epstein orchestrated the crimes for his personal gratification.”

The lawyers claimed the government turned its attention to Ms. Maxwell only after the public uproar following Mr. Epstein’s death while in the Justice Department and the Bureau of Prisons’ custody. They said the authorities urgently wanted to “appease the renewed distress of Epstein’s accusers and to repair the tarnished reputations of the D.O.J. and B.O.P.”

“There would be no trial for Epstein and no public vindication and justice for his accusers,” the lawyers wrote. “The government now had a huge hole to fill: Epstein’s empty chair.”

The office of Damian Williams, the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, said in its submission to the judge that Ms. Maxwell had both failed to address her criminal conduct and showed an “utter lack of remorse.”

Ms. Maxwell’s attempt “to cast aspersions on the government for prosecuting her, and her claim that she is being held responsible for Epstein’s crimes, are both absurd and offensive,” prosecutors wrote.

“Instead of showing even a hint of acceptance of responsibility, the defendant makes a desperate attempt to cast blame wherever else she can,” they said.

The prosecution offered its evidence through 24 witnesses over 10 days in a case that centered on four accusers, now adults. Two of the women said Mr. Epstein engaged in sex acts with them starting when they were 14 years old. One said Ms. Maxwell was sometimes present in the encounters, and the other said Ms. Maxwell directly molested her by touching her breasts.

“Maxwell was a sophisticated predator who knew exactly what she was doing,” Alison Moe, a federal prosecutor, told the jury in her summation. “She manipulated her victims, and she groomed them for sexual abuse.”

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Celtics great Cedric Maxwell to Warriors’ Draymond Green in physicality dispute: ‘Ask your daddy who I was’

Physicality has been a major discussion topic in the NBA Finals series between the Golden State Warriors and the Boston Celtics. Celtics great Cedric Maxwell and Golden State forward Draymond Green have started an entertaining beef as they go back and forth about what the game was like in the ’80s and ’90s. 

Maxwell did not believe in Golden State’s toughness before the series even began. He referred to the Warriors as “tuxedo players,” not wanting to be touched. While the first game saw a dominant performance by the Celtics, Game 2 saw a lot more physicality from the Warriors, with Green taking it upon himself to elevate the physicality. 

Boston started the series in dominating fashion after a massive fourth quarter gave them a 120-108 win in Game 1. Golden State shook it off to tie the series with a 107-88 blowout in Game 2, but Maxwell was not impressed with the way Green chose to play. (video clip NSFW)

“I’m gonna be as clear as I can,” Maxwell told Gary Payton on Sunday. “That shit Draymond Green was doing, during the ’80s he would have got knocked the f— out.”

Maxwell played for Boston from 1977 to 1985 and was part of the Celtics’ 1981 and 1984 championship teams, earning the Finals MVP honor in 1981. Green, who is known for speaking his mind, replied during Tuesday’s media availability by questioning Maxwell’s role as a tough guy in the ’80s.

“Some of the guys that be talking weren’t the guys that was punching people,” Green said. “There were a few guys back then that would lay you out, that would knock you out, that would foul you and get thrown out the game: Bill Laimbeer, Rick Mahorn. But everyone running around acting like they were that. Y’all were getting bullied.”

Green said not everyone who played in those decades were as tough as they make it sound. He implied that players like Maxwell would likely not have been the ones to knock him out if he had been around during those times. Needless to say, Maxwell was not a fan of this response.

“You keep saying nobody punched nobody. You ask Charles Barkley what happened when he and I got in a fight when I was in L.A. with the Clippers,” Maxwell said on NBC Sports Boston. 

“Draymond wasn’t even born when I was playing. … Draymond, ask your daddy who I was.”

As the physicality discussion continues, Celtics guard Marcus Smart likely put it best when he said his team will have to fight “fire with fire.” Game 3 is set for Wednesday at 9 p.m. ET at TD Garden.

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Jessica Simpson says her daughter Maxwell is ‘best friends’ with Kim Kardashian’s daughter North

Jessica Simpson says her daughter Maxwell, nine, is ‘best friends’ with Kim Kardashian’s daughter North, eight

Jessica Simpson said that her daughter Maxwell is ‘best friends’ with Kim Kardashian’s daughter North.

The 41-year-old, speaking with US Weekly Thursday, said that one of her nine-year-old daughter’s ‘best friends is North.’

‘She is amazing,’ The Dukes Of Hazzard actress said of North, eight. ‘She is a great kid, and she will be a part of a change in this world.’

The latest: Jessica Simpson, 41, said that her daughter Maxwell, nine, is ‘best friends’ with Kim Kardashian’s daughter North, eight 

The Abilene, Texas native, who is also mom to son Ace, eight, and daughter Birdie, three, with husband Eric Johnson, 42, who she said ‘just recently’ served as coach to a basketball team both North and Maxwell were on.

Simpson said that it’s ‘fun’ to reside in the same neighborhood as Kardashian, 41, and her children North, Saint, six, Chicago, four, and Psalm, two, with ex Kanye West, 44.

She said that the local proximity ‘makes it easy’ for North and Maxwell to be good friends, and that the Kardashian family have remained ‘the same’ amid their massive fame from reality TV.

‘I’m like, “I don’t know how y’all could do this all the time,”‘ said Simpson, who noted she ‘could only last three seasons’ on her former MTV reality show Newlyweds: Nick and Jessica with ex-husband Nick Lachey, 48.

The Abilene, Texas native, is also mom to son Ace, eight, and daughter Birdie, three, with husband Eric Johnson, 42. The family was pictured on a recent vacation 

Kim was snapped at The Kardashians premiere last week in LA 

Simpson said the Kardashians are ‘so open and they’ve always remained the same,’ adding, ‘That’s really hard to do, and they’re powerhouses.’

The Love Guru actress told the outlet that she thinks the reality show format has gotten progressively ‘easier’ for stars over the years since her stint on Newlyweds between 2003 and 2005.

‘It was one of the first, and so it was [cameras] following me all day long from the moment I woke up to the moment I went to sleep unless I kicked them out, but I always felt bad,’ Simpson said. ‘I don’t think that reality shows are set up like that nowadays.

‘I think they have shooting days and that type of thing.’

Simpson spoke with the outlet in support of her new deal with the allergy relief product Flonase, which she said helps her kids enjoy an active lifestyle outdoors.

‘We used the product … living out in Los Angeles with the wildfires, climate change, all that stuff,’ Simpson said. ‘It’s insane. A lot of people think that they’re sick, but it’s actually allergies. So I wanted to be able to bring awareness to that and that it’s OK for kids.

‘What’s awesome about Flonase is that they made it for children and that way they can play outside and be happy. And they’re not just on video games all day long. They’re such troupers.’

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Juror’s Error Did Not Affect Ghislaine Maxwell Verdict, Judge Rules

Judge Nathan added that Juror 50’s “lack of attention and care in responding accurately to every question on the questionnaire is regrettable, but the court is confident that the failure to disclose was not deliberate.”

Bobbi C. Sternheim, a lawyer for Ms. Maxwell, said Friday night, “We strongly object to the court’s denial of Ms. Maxwell’s motion for a new trial.”

“The defense was denied the opportunity to question Juror 50 during the recent hearing,” Ms. Sternheim added. “This strong issue, among many other issues, will be presented to the Court of Appeals and we are optimistic about Ms. Maxwell’s success on appeal.”

Nicholas Biase, a spokesman for the U.S. attorney’s office in Manhattan, declined to comment.

Todd A. Spodek, the juror’s lawyer, said in a statement: “Juror 50 does not consider himself a victim and does not let his past define him. He listened to the evidence and was fair and impartial. This is what justice requires, not more.”

Ms. Maxwell’s conviction was the culmination of a convoluted, yearslong case that entangled celebrities and politicians and spawned conspiracy theories centered around Mr. Epstein, who died by suicide while in custody awaiting his own trial. But the odyssey continued even after the jury reached its verdict.

Hours before Judge Nathan’s ruling, Ms. Maxwell’s lawyers wrote to the judge, asking that she delay her decision in light of what they called new information — yet another media interview with Juror 50, which was to be released on a streaming service. Prosecutors objected to the request, and the judge denied it.

The judge’s ruling followed an unusual hearing on March 8, in which she ordered Juror 50 to return to court and testify under oath about his responses on the questionnaire and whether they had affected his impartiality.

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Ghislaine Maxwell Juror Admits He Messed Up His Questionnaire in ‘Biggest Mistake’

A juror in Ghislaine Maxwell’s sex-trafficking trial was questioned under oath on Tuesday about why he didn’t reveal his history of childhood sexual abuse on a jury questionnaire—and about whether it impacted his ability to be impartial in the case.

Manhattan federal judge Alison Nathan also asked Juror 50 about his handful of media interviews shortly after the British socialite’s guilty verdict.

“I figured a little article about a juror giving their experience wouldn’t be record-breaking or really in the news at all,” said the juror, who went by his first and middle name Scotty David in the press.

Now Maxwell is fighting for a retrial in wake of Scotty’s January media tour, arguing he never would have made it to the panel had he truthfully answered the 50-question juror form used to weed out potential bias.

The juror was contrite on the stand, saying he never intended to mislead anyone and didn’t lie to get on the jury for the notorious sex-trafficking case. He also testified that his prior experience didn’t impact his ability to fairly evaluate the charges against Maxwell.

“This was one of the biggest mistakes I’ve ever made in my life,” the juror testified.

“If I lied deliberately, I wouldn’t have told a soul,” he later added, and apologized for wasting people’s time and money.

Scotty claimed that he didn’t realize he made an error on the jury form until a Daily Mail reporter peppered him with questions about it in a video interview.

“Did I just mess something up entirely?” the juror recalled thinking. He said he was “shocked” and didn’t know he’d missed a question asking if he was the victim of sexual abuse.

I don’t think about my abuse anymore. It doesn’t define me.

Nathan ordered the prosecution and defense to file briefings on the juror’s testimony as it relates to Maxwell’s request for a new trial by March 15.

Last week, Scotty’s counsel indicated he would invoke his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination at the hearing, and prosecutors indicated they were making an application to grant him immunity for his testimony. By Tuesday, the Department of Justice granted that request.

The juror made headlines soon after Maxwell was found guilty.

In late December, Maxwell was convicted of aiding her ex-boyfriend Jeffrey Epstein’s underage sex ring in the 1990s and early 2000s. Four victims took the stand at the high-profile criminal trial and claimed Maxwell groomed them for the multimillionaire predator and sometimes participated in the sexual abuse herself. Jurors deliberated for six days before finding Maxwell guilty on five of six charges related to child sex trafficking.

Days after the verdict, lawyers for the 60-year-old British socialite argued the verdict was in jeopardy because of Scotty’s statements in the press.

The Independent, the first to publish a feature on Scotty, revealed the 35-year-old Manhattanite was himself a survivor of childhood sexual abuse—a fact unknown to the court because he didn’t disclose it on his jury questionnaire. “This verdict is for all the victims,” Scotty told the U.K.-based outlet. “For those who testified, for those who came forward and for those who haven’t come forward. I’m glad that Maxwell has been held accountable.” The publication added that Scotty’s fellow jurors “went dead silent” when he shared he was a victim of sexual abuse and argued that survivors can misremember small details about a traumatic event, but not the whole of a traumatic memory.

“I know what happened when I was sexually abused. I remember the color of the carpet, the walls. Some of it can be replayed like a video,” Scotty told The Independent. “But I can’t remember all the details, there are some things that run together.”

Scotty also granted interviews to the Daily Mail and Reuters, saying he did not recall whether the pre-trial jury questionnaire asked prospective panelists whether they had been victims of sexual assault and that he “flew through” the list of queries. He said that when fellow jurors questioned the accuracy of the accusers’ memories, he swayed some of them by talking about his own experience with sexual abuse.

In court on Tuesday, Nathan warned the juror: “You need to answer my questions today. You need to answer truthfully. If you don’t answer truthfully, you could be prosecuted for perjury.”

She also instructed Scotty not to share anything about what jurors discussed in the deliberation room.

After he swore to tell the truth, the juror reviewed Question 48 on the jury questionnaire, which asked if he had been the victim of sexual harassment, abuse or assault. Asked if his answer was accurate, he answered, “No, it is not.” The response should have been yes, he said.

The juror said he was abused when he was 9 and 10 years old but didn’t disclose what happened until high school. He testified that his mother reported the alleged crime to police but no one was charged.

Scotty also addressed Question 25, which asked whether he had ever been the victim of a crime. He had answered no. “Looking back at it now… it’s an incorrect answer,” the juror said. He said that at the time, he imagined the question referred to being robbed or mugged. “I wasn’t thinking of my sexual abuse,” he added.

The juror later said, “I don’t really think about my abuse much anymore because it doesn’t define me.”

The juror then repeated something he told news reporters weeks ago: “I flew through the questionnaire.”

Indeed, Scotty said he never thought he’d be selected for the 12-member jury out of nearly 700 prospective panelists.

When he filled out the questionnaire, he said, he was seated at a table where people dropped off their forms. He said the environment was noisy and “super-distracting” and he “skimmed” the document to get it over with, having waited three hours for an instructional video. A breakup with an ex was also occupying his mind and focus, he said.

“I did not hope to serve on this jury,” he testified. “But if you’re going to serve jury duty it might as well be something that’s interesting. But I did not set out to get on this jury.”

The juror clarified later on in the questioning, “This is something interesting. It’s not like… a fraud case [that] might be boring. I just felt like this might be something interesting that keeps my attention.”

He said he felt pressure to complete the jury questionnaire quickly and compared it to taking a test in school; he said he didn’t want to be the last one to finish.

Did I just mess something up entirely?

When Nathan asked whether the juror approached filling out the form “with diligence,” he answered no.

Nathan also leveled follow-up questions after Scotty said he didn’t tell friends and family about his past abuse, asking why he told the international news media.

“I only used it in order to talk to a reporter about jury deliberations … why I believe a certain way based on all the evidence that was provided during trial,” he said.

He also said that he was inspired by the victims who testified at trial and were “brave enough to give their story.”

“I felt like if they can do it, then so can I.”

On Jan. 5, the prosecution and defense each filed letters with the court about Scotty’s talks with reporters, which raised questions as to whether he was impartial at trial. “While the Court instructed jurors that they were free to discuss their jury service with anyone of their choosing, some of the statements, as related in the media, merit attention by the Court,” wrote the government, which suggested the judge investigate.

Maxwell’s lawyers argued that Scotty’s comments warranted a new trial. “Ms. Maxwell also suggests that all the deliberating jurors will need to be examined, not to impeach the verdict, but to evaluate the Juror’s conduct,” the defense wrote.

On Jan. 19, Maxwell’s team filed a motion for a new trial which argued that Scotty’s false answers on the questionnaire “resulted in a jury that was not fair and impartial, and deprived Ms. Maxwell of her constitutional right to trial by jury.” Had he truthfully filled out the form, they argued, he would have been excluded from the panel.

But Juror 50 may not have been alone in allegedly glossing over certain questions.

The New York Times interviewed a second juror, who said that they’d experienced childhood sexual abuse but didn’t say so on the questionnaire. “This juror, who requested anonymity, said that they, too, had discussed the experience during deliberations and that the revelation had appeared to help shape the jury’s discussions,” the Times reported.

“To date, this juror has not publicly revealed their identity, and Ms. Maxwell does not know who it is,” the heiress’ attorneys wrote in their motion.

“For its part, this Court expressed ‘confidence’ that its voir dire process would ‘smoke out’ a juror who was dishonest,” they added. “Ms. Maxwell relied on the Court’s process. And the Court and the parties relied on the presumption to which everyone is entitled: that potential jurors would carefully and honestly engage in voir dire.

“Unfortunately, we now know that Juror No. 50 (and at least one other juror) did not honor their obligations to give ‘only truthful answers.’”

While Nathan denied Maxwell’s initial request for a retrial and to question the other jurors, she did agree to question Scotty at a special hearing.

“To be clear, the potential impropriety is not that someone with a history of sexual abuse may have served on the jury,” Nathan wrote in her ruling. “Rather, it is the potential failure to respond truthfully to questions during the jury selection process that asked for that material information so that any potential bias could be explored.”

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Ghislaine Maxwell Juror May Be Made to Testify About His Conduct

One member of the jury that convicted Ghislaine Maxwell last year may be forced to testify about whether he intentionally misled the court during the jury selection process — a key question in Ms. Maxwell’s effort to get a new trial.

The juror, a Manhattan man known as Juror 50, told news outlets after the trial that during deliberations he had described being a victim of sexual abuse. The revelation has clouded the verdict because the juror failed to disclose that history during jury screening before the trial, leading Ms. Maxwell to argue she was deprived of a fair and impartial jury.

Ms. Maxwell, 60, the former companion of the disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein, was convicted on Dec. 29 of sex-trafficking and four of the five other counts against her. At the trial, the jurors heard three weeks of testimony showing Ms. Maxwell had helped Mr. Epstein recruit, groom and sexually abuse underage girls over the course of a decade.

In a letter made public on Wednesday, federal prosecutors in Manhattan told a judge that they were seeking Justice Department approval for an order compelling the juror’s testimony at a hearing next week, in which he would answer questions under oath about his actions.

The government acted after Juror 50’s lawyer, Todd A. Spodek, informed the judge, Alison J. Nathan of Federal District Court, that his client would “invoke his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination at the hearing.” Mr. Spodek’s letter was also made public on Wednesday.

If the juror is required to testify, he would also be granted immunity from prosecution under the order being sought by the office of Damian Williams, the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York.

Juror 50 revealed in news interviews after the trial that he had told fellow jurors during deliberations that he was sexually abused as a child and did not tell anyone about that abuse for years. Juror 50 said in an interview with DailyMail.com that as he told his story, the jury room “went silent.”

The article also cited him as saying he had helped the other jurors understand things from a victim’s point of view.

In an interview with Reuters, Juror 50 said some jurors had questioned the recollections of two of Ms. Maxwell’s accusers who had testified at the trial, but after he recounted his story, he said, “they were able to come around on the memory aspect of the sexual abuse.”

But in a confidential questionnaire that was administered to prospective jurors before the trial, Juror 50 had checked a box responding “no” when asked whether he had ever been the victim of sexual harassment, sexual abuse or sexual assault.

Ms. Maxwell’s lawyers, in a brief seeking a new trial, said Juror No. 50 “did not truthfully respond to perhaps the most important question put to potential jurors about their personal experiences — a question that pertained directly to the core allegations against Ms. Maxwell: whether they had been a victim of sexual assault or abuse.”

“Had Juror No. 50 told the truth,” the lawyers wrote, “he would have been challenged, and excluded, for cause.”

The defense and prosecution may use the responses in the questionnaires as they weigh whether to exclude prospective jurors on grounds like bias.

The government, in opposing Ms. Maxwell’s motion, wrote that a defendant seeking a new trial based on a juror’s statements during the jury selection process “faces the heavy burden of establishing both that the juror deliberately lied, and that the juror otherwise would have been struck for cause.”

“On the present record, the defendant has not come close to establishing that the extraordinary remedy of a new trial is warranted,” the government said.

The government argued for a limited hearing focused on determining whether the juror deliberately lied on the questionnaire about being a victim of sexual abuse, and, if so, whether the judge “would have struck Juror 50 for cause if he had accurately responded to that question, i.e., based on a finding that he could not be fair and impartial.”

Judges, in attempting to evaluate the impact of jury room disclosures, may not question jurors about what occurred during their deliberations, but they are allowed to examine statements jurors made during the selection process.

Judge Nathan, in an opinion last week, wrote that after the trial, “Juror 50 made several direct, unambiguous statements to multiple media outlets about his own experience that do not pertain to jury deliberations and that cast doubt on the accuracy of his responses” during jury selection.

The juror’s statements were “clear, strong, substantial and incontrovertible evidence” that an impropriety had occurred — “namely, a false statement during jury selection,” the judge wrote.

“To be clear,” Judge Nathan added, “the potential impropriety is not that someone with a history of sexual abuse may have served on the jury.”

“Rather,” she said, “it is the potential failure to respond truthfully to questions during the jury selection process that asked for that material information so that any potential bias could be explored.”

Judge Nathan ordered Juror 50 to appear at the hearing next Tuesday and respond to her questions under oath. Ms. Maxwell’s lawyers and the government have been allowed to submit proposed questions in advance.

Mr. Spodek, the juror’s lawyer, and Nicholas Biase, a spokesman for the U.S. attorney’s office, each declined to comment.

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Ghislaine Maxwell to seek new trial after juror’s sexual abuse claim -lawyer

NEW YORK, Jan 5 (Reuters) – Ghislaine Maxwell, who was convicted last week of aiding Jeffrey Epstein’s sexual abuses, deserves a new trial, her lawyer said on Wednesday after a juror told media including Reuters that he had been a victim of sexual abuse.

In a letter to U.S. District Judge Alison Nathan in Manhattan, who presided over Maxwell’s trial, the lawyer, Christian Everdell, said there were “incontrovertible grounds” for Maxwell to get a new trial, to serve the interest of justice.

He called the matter “an issue of pressing importance,” saying disclosures by the juror “influenced the deliberations and convinced other members of the jury to convict Ms. Maxwell.”

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Everdell filed the letter shortly after asking Nathan to open an inquiry into the juror’s statements.

Nathan’s decision on whether a new trial is warranted could hinge on how the juror responded to questions during jury selection about his experiences with sexual abuse, which legal experts said was a key question that defense lawyers were looking at to weed out potentially biased jurors.

The office of U.S. Attorney Damian Williams, which prosecuted Maxwell, declined to comment.

Maxwell, 60, was convicted on Dec. 29 of sex trafficking and other charges for recruiting and grooming underage girls for Epstein to abuse between 1994 and 2004.

Epstein, a financier and convicted sex offender, killed himself in August 2019 in a Manhattan jail while awaiting his own sex trafficking trial.

The juror, who asked to be identified by his first and middle names, Scotty David, told Reuters on Tuesday evening that during deliberations, after some jurors expressed skepticism about the accounts of two of Maxwell’s accusers, he shared his experience of having been sexually abused as a child.

“When I shared that, they were able to sort of come around on, they were able to come around on the memory aspect of the sexual abuse,” Scotty David, a 35-year-old Manhattan resident, said, referring to other jurors.

Scotty David did not immediately reply to a request for comment on Wednesday.

JUROR QUESTIONNAIRES

Following the request for a new trial, attorney Todd Spodek made an appearance in the case and said in a court filing that he was representing Juror No. 50. Spodek did not give the juror’s name and did not immediately reply to a request for comment.

Juror No. 50 was one of the 18 jurors selected on Nov. 29 to serve as a juror or an alternate.

Hundreds of prospective jurors filled out questionnaires that asked them, among other things, if they or their family members had experienced sexual abuse or assault.

Jeffrey Epstein associate Ghislaine Maxwell sits as the guilty verdict in her sex abuse trial is read in a courtroom sketch in New York City, U.S., December 29, 2021. REUTERS/Jane Rosenberg/File Photo

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During follow-up questioning, Nathan asked those who answered “yes” if they would still be able to be fair and impartial.

Scotty David told Reuters he did not recall a question about personal experiences with sexual abuse on the questionnaire, but that he would have answered honestly. He said he “flew through” the questionnaire.

He said Nathan did not ask about his personal experience with sexual abuse during follow-up questioning.

During follow-up questioning on Nov. 16, Juror No. 50 told Nathan that he had read a news article and seen a CNN broadcast about Epstein’s death. The juror said he heard that Epstein had a girlfriend, but that he otherwise knew nothing about Maxwell.

When Nathan asked Juror No. 50 if he could put aside anything he read or heard to reach an impartial verdict, he replied, “Yes, absolutely.”

Prosecutors said the juror’s statements to the media “merit attention” by the court and asked for a hearing to be scheduled in about a month.

Media cited by prosecutors include Reuters, the Daily Mail and The Independent.

Later on Tuesday, The New York Times reported that a second juror described having been sexually abused as a child during deliberations. That juror, who requested anonymity to speak to the Times, said this revelation appeared to help shape the jury’s discussion.

MISTAKE OR OMISSION

Moira Penza, a partner at the Wilkinson Stekloff law firm and a former federal prosecutor, said any inquiry into Scotty David would likely focus on whether the juror made a mistake or omission in answering questions on an initial screening questionnaire for prospective jurors or follow-up questions from the judge.

“Defense lawyers will argue that this question was so part and parcel to figuring out that juror’s bias or any juror’s bias,” she said.

Penza said there have been instances where courts granted new trials based on “purposeful lies or omissions” during the process of screening jurors, known as voir dire, which she said “is not what we’re hearing so far.”

Maxwell faces up to 65 years in prison for her conviction.

Nathan gave Maxwell’s lawyers until Jan. 19 to formally request a new trial and explain whether an inquiry is needed, with a response from prosecutors due by Feb. 2.

Maxwell separately faces trial on two perjury counts for allegedly lying about her knowledge of Epstein’s behavior during a deposition for a civil case. The date of the perjury trial has not yet been set.

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Reporting by Luc Cohen and Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Noeleen Walder, Lisa Shumaker and Rosalba O’Brien

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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