Jeffrey Epstein, Ghislaine Maxwell
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The Trump administration records releases on Jeffrey Epstein are finished, but transparency lawsuits may reveal what else the government has kept hidden.
Mail report sparked rumors that Maxwell offered to testify before Congress about Jeffrey Epstein's activities and so-called "client list."
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OK Magazine on MSNGhislaine Maxwell's Family Declares Jeffrey Epstein's Co-Conspirator Didn't 'Receive a Fair Trial' as Disgraced Financier's Files Remain UnreleasedGhislaine Maxwell’s family finally broke their silence about her involvement with Jeffrey Epstein after the DOJ urged the court on Monday, July 14, to prohibit her case from being reviewed during her 20-year prison sentence.
The heiress was found guilty in 2021 of helping the deceased jet-setting financier — her boss and off-and-on lover — run a sex-trafficking ring of underage girls.
The leather-bound book was compiled by Ghislaine Maxwell. The president says the letter ‘is a fake thing.’
If Maxwell refuses to testify, a subpoena must follow. If the DOJ resists, Congress must assert its constitutional authority. The stakes are too high for half measures. The victims deserve answers. The public deserves transparency. And the truth, however uncomfortable, must come to light.
Online users shared a video allegedly showing the future U.S. president eyeing a young girl with Maxwell, a convicted sex trafficker, watching nearby.
Republican Sen. Josh Hawley of Missouri has directly called for Jeffrey Epstein's convicted associate, Ghislaine Maxwell, to testify before the Senate Judiciary Committee.