Ghislaine Maxwell denies knowing scope of Epstein's sexual activities

Ghislaine Maxwell denies knowing scope of Epstein's sexual activities

NEW YORK--Ghislaine Maxwell, the longtime associate of Jeffrey Epstein, testified she never saw him receive massages from anyone other than herself at his home in New York, where prosecutors are pursuing criminal charges that she helped the late financier procure underage girls for sex.


Maxwell also repeatedly insisted she was unaware about the scope of Epstein's sexual activities during her years with him, saying she learned about it "like everybody else, like the rest of the world, when it was announced in the papers."
The denials came in a July 2016 deposition that Maxwell, 59, gave in a long-settled civil defamation lawsuit against her by Virginia Giuffre, one of dozens of women who have accused Epstein of sexual misconduct. More than 100 documents from that lawsuit were made public late on Wednesday night in the U.S. District Court in Manhattan.
Lawyers for Maxwell did not immediately respond on Thursday to requests for comment. Maxwell gave the deposition after Giuffre's lawyers deemed the British socialite uncooperative in earlier testimony, where she rejected suggestions she saw Epstein have sex with girls or helped arrange illegal sexual encounters.
In response to questions from Giuffre's lawyer David Boies, Maxwell said she had seen people give Epstein massages at his homes in Palm Beach, Florida and the U.S. Virgin Islands. She said she believed all were professional masseuses, and that Epstein "never had clothes on" when being massaged.
Maxwell said it had been a "very long time" since she had communicated with Epstein. "I ceased to be happy in the job and I ceased to be happy spending time with Mr. Epstein," Maxwell said. Epstein had become "more difficult to work with," she added.
In a previously released email from January 2015, Epstein told Maxwell: "You have done nothing wrong and i would urge you to start acting like it."
Portions of Maxwell's testimony were redacted after U.S. District Judge Loretta Preska said the more "prurient" details about Maxwell's sex life could be kept secret. The redactions included 20 lines of testimony that Maxwell's lawyers have said are the basis for a perjury charge in her criminal case, and which if disclosed could undermine her constitutional right to a fair trial.

The Daily Herald

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