Ghislaine Maxwell's attorneys argue against unsealing grand jury testimony

Ghislaine Maxwell's attorneys argue against unsealing grand jury testimony

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Attorneys for Ghislaine Maxwell are arguing against the Justice Department's attempt to unseal grand jury testimony against her, writing in a court filing Tuesday that their client "has no choice but to respectfully oppose" the potential release.

"Jeffrey Epstein is dead. Ghislaine Maxwell is not," Maxwell's attorney David Markus wrote in a . "Whatever interest the public may have in Epstein, that interest cannot justify a broad intrusion into grand jury secrecy in a case where the defendant is alive, her legal options are viable, and her due process rights remain."

In her interview with the Justice Department, Maxwell did not implicate President Trump in Jeffrey Epstein's misdeeds and said nothing that would harm the president, according to a source familiar with the contents of the interview. This was first reported by ABC News.

An administration official also confirmed there is an audio recording and transcript of Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche's conversation with Maxwell, a standard practice for legal interviews.

Maxwell — who is serving a prison sentence for recruiting, grooming and sexually abusing minors — is , arguing she should've been covered by a non-prosecution deal that federal prosecutors in Florida offered to Epstein and any co-conspirators almost two decades ago. The Supreme Court indicated it will consider whether to hear Maxwell's case in September. 

Her attorneys also wrote that Maxwell has not been given the opportunity to review the grand jury material to assess the documents.

"When Epstein died, prosecutors from the Southern District of New York pivoted and made Maxwell the face of his crimes. She became the scapegoat and the only person the government could put on trial. She was convicted in a media firestorm of false reporting and mischaracterization of evidence," Markus wrote. "Now, with her case pending before the Supreme Court, the government seeks to unseal untested, hearsay-laden grand jury transcripts, which contain statements presented in secret and never challenged by the adversarial process.  Maxwell has never been allowed to review those transcripts even though the government did not oppose her recent request to do so."

In a court filing last week, the Justice Department admitted that the grand jury transcripts that it is attempting to unseal from the investigations into the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein and his former associate Ghislaine Maxwell .

The grand juries that indicted Epstein and Maxwell did not hear direct testimony from any alleged victims, Attorney General Bondi and Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche told a judge in the Southern District of New York in their attempts to unseal the testimony. 

In a , the Justice Department said that the grand jury transcripts it is hoping are unsealed were mostly already made public during Epstein and Maxwell's court proceedings. 

"The enclosed, annotated transcripts show that much of the information provided during the course of the grand jury testimony—with the exception of the identities of certain victims and witnesses—was made publicly available at trial or has otherwise been publicly reported through the public statements of victims and witnesses," the Justice Department wrote.

The government also has asked for until Aug. 8 to decide whether or not they are going to ask for the grand jury exhibits to be unsealed as well, as those "substantive" exhibits that are not currently in the public record. 

Before a different judge in New York, lawyers for Epstein accuser Annie Farmer asked for the transcripts to be unsealed Tuesday, arguing a public release could help remedy a "lack of full accountability for Epstein, Maxwell, and their co-conspirators."

"Given the magnitude and abhorrence of Epstein and Maxwell's crimes, unsealing the grand jury transcripts is not just appropriate, it is necessary to understand the full scope of the abuse and those who enabled it," they .

The attorneys said victims' names and identifying information should be redacted, but the court shouldn't "rubber stamp" redactions about others who might be mentioned in the transcripts.

Earlier this week, two other unnamed Epstein victims also asked for restrictions to be put in place to protect Epstein and Maxwell's victims, but were unopposed to the transcripts being unsealed.

One victim asked for the judge to "show us all the files with only the necessary redactions!" and "be done with it and allow me/us to heal." 

They asked that their attorney be able to review the suggested redactions "as they are the ones who also know the victims, their names, their truths and their stories unlike the United States Government who did not and does not even care to know our truth. They would rather ask a convicted imprisoned sex trafficker/ abuser for information," referring to the Justice Department's two-day interview last month with Maxwell.

Another victim asked for a third-party review of the files before their release, to "ensure that NO victims names or likenesses are revealed through this release. It is imperative with the scrutiny over this media frenzy that the victims are completely and entirely protected."

Meanwhile, are taking no position on the Justice Department's motion to unseal transcripts, they said in a court filing Tuesday.

Last month, a federal judge in Florida the Justice Department's request to unseal grand jury material stemming from investigations in 2005 and 2007 into Epstein in the state. That ruling only applied to transcripts of proceedings by federal grand juries that were convened in Florida, and did not apply to the transcripts in New York.

Late last month, Blanche over the course of two days. There are now ongoing discussions among Trump administration officials about whether to make some of those conversations public, sources familiar with the matter told TheNews on Tuesday.

Blanche last month the Justice Department will "share additional information about what we learned at the appropriate time." It's not clear what topics they covered: Markus has  Maxwell was asked about "100 different people" and answered "every single question," but on the substance of their conversation.

An administration official confirmed there is audio and a transcript of Blanche's discussions with Maxwell, a standard practice for legal interviews.

CNN was first to report on discussions about releasing the Blanche-Maxwell conversations.

Asked for comment, White House spokesman Stephen Cheung said, "This is nothing more than CNN trying desperately to create news out of old news."

Mr. Trump told Newsmax a few days ago that "we'd like to release everything, but we don't want people to get hurt that shouldn't be hurt."