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Ghislaine Maxwell cites new evidence in appeal

Ghislaine Maxwell was convicted of helping Jeffrey Epstein sexually abuse teenage girls.

Ghislaine Maxwell was convicted of helping Jeffrey Epstein sexually abuse teenage girls. Photo: Getty

Ghislaine Maxwell has argued in a new court filing that ‌Jeffrey Epstein documents released this year contained evidence her rights were violated before she was jailed for 20 years for helping him sexually abuse ‌teenage girls.

Maxwell, 64, has challenged her December 2021 conviction and sentence in Manhattan federal court.

She is seeking a writ of habeas corpus declaring her punishment unlawful.

Prosecutors said her ‌latest claims were baseless or filed too late.

In her amended petition made public on Wednesday (US time), Maxwell said many documents disclosed through the Epstein Files Transparency Act show that her due process rights were violated because lawyers representing Epstein’s accusers served as “De Facto Prosecutors and agents of the government”.

The former British socialite and Epstein girlfriend cited among other things a letter from a former federal prosecutor who said, “I did what I could” to help the women’s lawyers, in an alleged attempt to set aside Epstein’s controversial 2007 non-prosecution agreement with federal ‌prosecutors in Florida.

Maxwell has ‌repeatedly argued unsuccessfully that ⁠Epstein’s agreement shielded her from criminal prosecution.

Her habeas petition represents her broadest effort to overturn her conviction, the most ​significant successful prosecution to emerge from the Epstein scandal. She drew on some of the millions of pages of documents released under the Epstein files law, which US President Donald Trump signed in November following near-unanimous congressional approval.

US District Judge Paul Engelmayer oversees Maxwell’s case, and will review her petition.

US Attorney Jay Clayton in Manhattan, whose office prosecuted Maxwell, said she filed most of her claims too late. Those filed on time were speculative at best, misstated the record or the law, or failed to show ⁠her trial was unfair.

A spokesperson for some lawyers representing Epstein accusers had no immediate comment.

Maxwell ​is representing herself ‌in seeking to overturn her conviction on five charges for recruiting and grooming underage girls for Epstein to abuse between 1994 and 2004.

An earlier appeal focused on ​Epstein’s non-prosecution agreement, which led to his 2008 guilty plea on a Florida state prostitution charge. He was sentenced to 13 months in jail, a punishment now widely considered too lenient. The US Supreme Court rejected that appeal in October.

In her amended petition, Maxwell also objected to prosecutors’ ​alleged “failure ​to follow witnesses and the evidence”.

She cited among other things their failure ​to interview Leslie Wexner, the retail billionaire behind Victoria’s Secret who hired Epstein to manage ‌his personal finances.

Wexner, 88, told US Congress in February he severed ties with Epstein in 2007 and had no knowledge of Epstein’s criminal activity. Maxwell said the newly released materials showed that prosecutors failed to do “any real investigation of their own,” leading to “misrepresentations to judges and the jury resulting in an unsafe conviction”.

The petition also alleged other grounds to overturn Maxwell’s conviction, including gaps in witness testimony and government suppression of evidence.

A federal judge delayed the release of Maxwell’s amended petition so prosecutors could make redactions to preserve the anonymity of Epstein’s ​victims.

Epstein died at age 66 in a Manhattan jail cell in August 2019, five weeks after being arrested on sex trafficking charges. New York City’s medical examiner ​called the death a suicide.

Maxwell is housed at ⁠a minimum security federal prison camp in Bryan, Texas. She is eligible for release in July 2037, when she will be ​75.

1800 RESPECT 1800 737 732

National Sexual Abuse and Redress Support Service 1800 211 028

Lifeline 131 114

Kids Helpline 1800 55 1800 (for people aged 5 to 25)

-AAP

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