Ghislaine Maxwell told the DOJ about “100 different people” linked to Jeffrey Epstein, according to her lawyer David Oscar Markus.
Maxwell never pleaded the Fifth.
The comments start at 5:53 in the video:
I think Ghislaine did a wonderful job. She literally answered every question. She didn’t say, “You know what, don’t ask me that, I’m not gonna talk about this person.” She was asked maybe about 100 different people, she answered questions about everybody and she didn’t hold anything back.
Maxwell is serving a 20-year prison sentence after a jury convicted her of sex trafficking of a minor, transporting a minor with the intent to engage in criminal sexual activity, and conspiracy.
Maxwell has already said “she’s willing to testify before Congress on Epstein’s apparent full client list.”
Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche and his team questioned Maxwell for two days after Attorney General Pam Bondi reached out to Markus.
Markus went all sappy on Blanche and his team with constant praise. I wouldn’t be shocked if he did that to convince President Donald Trump to pardon Maxwell.
Trump told reporters today he hadn’t even entertained the thought of pardoning Maxwell.
I don’t like how he added, “I’m allowed to do it.” Yes, you are, and it’s something you should not do ever.
I mean, Markus latched onto that line:
“The president said this morning he had the right to do so,” Markus echoed before calling Trump “the ultimate dealmaker” and claiming his client had “been treated unfairly for the past five years” and “didn’t get a fair trial.”“We hope he exercises that power in a right and just way,” he added.
Ugh, no. Your client is disgusting.
Maxwell is appealing her conviction based on a 2007 agreement. This is from July 14:
Maxwell, 63, had urged the court earlier this year to review her case, arguing that an unusual co-conspirator’s clause in Epstein’s 2007 non-prosecution agreement with federal prosecutors in Florida barred her subsequent prosecution in New York. A district court and a federal appeals court previously rejected that argument, and the DOJ today urged the high court to do the same.”That contention is incorrect, and petitioner does not show that it would succeed in any court of appeals,” wrote U.S. Solicitor General D. John Sauer.
Today, Markus told reporters he doesn’t think “Trump knows that the Justice Department took the position that that promise should not be upheld.”
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