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Judge Denies DOJ Request to Unseal Ghislaine Maxwell Grand Jury Documents

Judge Denies DOJ Request to Unseal Ghislaine Maxwell Grand Jury Documents

In short, Englemayer chose not to release the information because the documents show nothing new and Maxwell is appealing her conviction.

Judge Paul Engelmayer of the Southern District of New York denied the DOJ’s request to unseal Ghislaine Maxwell, an associate of Jeffrey Epstein’s, grand jury documents.

Engelmayer previously told the DOJ to address the following factors before he made his final decision:

  • the identity of the party seeking disclosure
  • whether the defendant to the grand jury proceeding or the Government opposes the disclosure
  • why disclosure is being sought in the particular case
  • what specific information is being sought for disclosure
  • how long ago the grand jury proceedings took place
  • the current status of the principals of the grand jury proceedings and that of their families
  • the extent to which the desired material-either permissibly or impermissibly-has been previously made public
  • whether witnesses to the grand jury proceedings who might be affected by disclosure are still alive; and
  • [whether there is an] additional need for maintaining secrecy in the particular case in question.

In short, Englemayer chose not to release the information because the documents show nothing new and Maxwell is appealing her conviction.

Englemayer decided that releasing the documents would not show the public any new information, therefore not meeting the “special circumstances” requirement:

The Court therefore denies the Government’s motion to unseal at the threshold. Contrary to the Government’s depiction, the Maxwell grand jury testimony is not a matter of significant historical or public interest. Far from it. It consists of garden-variety summary testimony by two law enforcement agents. And the information it contains is already almost entirely a matter of longstanding public record, principally as a result of live testimony by percipient witnesses at the 2021 Maxwell trial.

Englemayer also did not see the release a matter of “significant hostorical or public interest” for the same reason.

“Because the secondhand testimony at issue here is redundant of the public-record trial testimony of firsthand witnesses, and thus is not of significant historical or public interest, there is arguably no charter for even undertaking the In re Craig inquiry,” wrote Englemayer.

In re Craig stems from a case where a doctoral candidate requested the grand jury documents from Harry Dexter White, a former Assistant Secretary of Treasury accused of being a communist spy in 1948.

It also did not help that Maxwell opposed releasing the grand jury documents, mainly because “her case remains on direct appeal.”

The DOJ also did not specify what information it sought for disclosure.

In other words, the DOJ submitted a vague request:

Here, the Government does not seek tailored disclosure of discrete items within a grand jury record. Nor does it seek leave to disseminate grand jury materials to a specified audience. It seeks disclosure to the public at large of the entire proceedings before the Maxwell grand jury, subject only to redactions aimed at protecting privacy.

This factor weighs against unsealing. The Government has identified no information of consequence within the grand jury record that is not already public. And, under In re Craig, the blanket quality of the motion to unseal weighs against unsealing.

Then there’s the time factor. In 1997, the doctoral student asked for grand jury testimony that took place in 1948.

Englemayer pointed out that a grand jury indicted Maxwell five years ago, her trial took place fours ago, and she’s appealing her conviction. Plus, many of Epstein and Maxwell’s victims are still alive.

Then Englemayer examined the letters from Maxwell’s victims. They mostly agree with the release of the testimonies along with anything related to Epstein and Maxwell as long as they all redact information “to protect identities and privacy.”

Englemayer admitted the factor regarding the victims “favors unsealing” because they think unsealing the documents would lead to new information.

But as we know, Englemayer said the testimonies would not reveal new information.

“Had the Government’s motion made clear that these records are redundant of the evidence at Maxwell’s public trial, the victims’ responses to the motion to unseal might well have been different,” Englemayer concluded.

Um, why don’t you ask them before you assume what they *might* feel or think?

The only factor I agree on is the timing and appeal. Maxwell, despite her actions, deserves a fair appeal. Plus, most everyone is still alive, including those on the grand jury and law enforcement.

The government would redact names but it has become easy to identify people.

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Comments

That ruling sounds correct – unsealing grandjury docs is rare.

The judge was appointed by Obama. Clearly this is a coverup because Obama was molesting boys on pedo island. There is no other rational explanation.

    CaptTee in reply to Paul. | August 12, 2025 at 1:55 pm

    If that information was there, it would have leaked from other sources by now.
    The videos from the island would be more revealing.

A conspiracy like Fauci funding gain of function research in a Chinese Military lab that would be illegal in the United States has evidence for it such as the items from the budget, and thank you acknowledgement in Chinese papers written in that virology institute specifically about gain of function research that is illegal in the United States (those pieces of evidence would hold up in every court room).

A conspiracy theory like the Epstein list, and claiming Dan Bongino, Kash Patel, and Pam Bondi are covering for pedophiles, or that Epstein was a pimp for the worlds elite instead of just a pedo who was caught and facing decades behind bars has no evidence behind it and yet another judge finding nothing.

The only person who abused underage people involved with Epstein is serving her 20 year sentence right now and is appealing the conviction.

The victims ARE still alive, bhey might as well be frozen in carbonite for all that they are saying.

No tell all book deals, no tabloid spills. Wow. I know why they aren’t talking non stop to the media… they killed Jimmy Hoffa and are now shacked up with DB Cooper.

Why is this woman still in prison? She was convicted of child sex trafficking. But, by all accounts, she trafficked to no one because I have it on good authority there is no Epstein list of customers – until there was a list, but it’s a scam made up by JoeBama world or something. IE: She child sex trafficked to no one? Herself? Epstein??

Why is this woman still in prison?

    Sanddog in reply to LB1901. | August 11, 2025 at 4:46 pm

    She was found guilty of: conspiracy to transport minors with intent to engage in criminal sexual activity, transportation of a minor with intent to engage in criminal sexual activity, and sex trafficking of a minor. It seems the prosecution probably got the most credible witness and based the charges off their testimony. And you don’t need a written list of supposed clients in order to be charged with trafficking. Taking an underage girl across state lines in order to engage in sex with Epstein is all it takes. FYI, an attorney for several of the victims said Epstein was Epstein’s biggest client.

    Danny in reply to LB1901. | August 11, 2025 at 8:27 pm

    She was involved in trafficking young girls to Jeffrey Epstein so she and Jeffrey Epstein could molest them together which they did and which she was convicted for.

    Stop being an asshole. If you for one nanosecond believe that Dan Bongino would cover for Pedos say it. If you for one second think Kash Patel would cover for Pedos say it. If you for one second think Pam Bondi covers for Pedos say it. If you for one second think Donald Trump would cover for Pedos say it.

    How would you like it if someone you knew and respected turned out to be a pedophile, was caught and the world wanted to who you are so they could punish you for knowing him?

    Unless you could provide proof Donald Trump lost the 2024 election and the last months have been my imagination the United States Government that said there is no list is that of Donald J Trump, and the FBI that confirmed it is run by Kash Patel and Dan Bongino.

      Pepsi_Freak in reply to Danny. | August 12, 2025 at 10:57 am

      There may not be a “list” of clients as such, but if memory serves I seem to recall reports of a notebook or address book being offered at her trial (not to the grand jury) that the judge sealed. My memory may be faulty, though. Perhaps that is what the plaintiffs should have been asking for if it exists. I’m not sure how much probative value it would have, though.

Actually, her case still being viable at the appellate level should have a lot toi do with it…..if her conviction is overturned, she could possibly be subject to being retried on the charges–so release of the grand jury transcripts has the potential to pollute the pool of jurors.

    DaveGinOly in reply to persecutor. | August 11, 2025 at 2:26 pm

    When was the last time an Obama-appointed judge was worried about polluting a jury pool?

      persecutor in reply to DaveGinOly. | August 11, 2025 at 4:02 pm

      Would you rather she go free becauase they couldn’t retry her? If there was anything interesting against Trump, do you think Merrick Garland or one of his flying monkeys at Main Justice wouldn’t have found a way to release it to hurt 45/47?
      Patience….

        Danny in reply to persecutor. | August 11, 2025 at 8:29 pm

        More importantly if you think there is any chance Trump is the kind of guy who would cover for Epstein in any way shape or form you had no business being a Trump supporter.

        I would not have even considered voting for him if I thought that was the man he is.

        There is a difference between conspiracy and conspiracy theory and the Epstein stuff is conspiracy theory.

      Paula in reply to DaveGinOly. | August 11, 2025 at 6:54 pm

      In bygone days, before records were kept, there was an anecdotal story that an Obama judge that was worried, but it turned out to be a rumor.

“Englemayer decided that releasing the documents would not show the public any new information, therefore not meeting the “special circumstances” requirement…”

This is counter-intuitive. If the docs didn’t have anything not already in the public domain that this would make the docs’ release useless (as a source of new information) but incapable of doing any damage to anyone in any way (personally or legally). This seems to not be a good reason to not release documents. The converse is that harm is only possible through the release of information that isn’t already in the public domain, a reasonable purpose for withholding documents.

    Milhouse in reply to DaveGinOly. | August 12, 2025 at 12:18 am

    You don’t need a reason not to release grand jury testimony. It’s secret by law. You need a damn good reason, special circumstances, to release it, and the judge says those circumstances don’t exist.

    Releasing such testimony for no better reason than that it seems harmless would damage the confidentiality of all grand juries.

For nothing to see or hide they sure are hiding something