Maxwell, Trump and Ghislain
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The U.S. Supreme Court should hear Ghislaine Maxwell's appeal of her 2021 sex trafficking conviction, her lawyers argued in a brief to the Supreme Court Monday.
Former prosecutors and lawyers for victims question what occurred and who was present during two days of interviews with the Jeffrey Epstein accomplice and convicted sex trafficker.
Convicted sex trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell reportedly provided information on more than 100 people connected to Jeffrey Epstein during closed-door meetings with the Justice Department this week, a move that has fueled speculation she could be seeking clemency from President Donald Trump.
The Epstein accomplice met with a top Justice Department official and answered "every single question," her lawyer said.
U.S. officials interviewed convicted sex trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell while her legal team awaits a Supreme Court decision on her 20-year prison sentence appeal.
Ghislaine Maxwell was offered a limited form of immunity before agreeing to field questions from the Department of Justice, ABC News reports.
The disgraced British socialite, wearing all brown, was handcuffed in the front and led through a barbed-wire-laced fenced-in area in front of the prison.
Experts say they're bewildered by Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche's decision to interview Ghislaine Maxwell.
House Oversight Chair James Comer has subpoenaed Jeffrey Epstein’s former associate Ghislaine Maxwell for a deposition.