Jury in Ghislaine Maxwell trial to see photos depicting her relationship
with Epstein
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[December 07, 2021]
By Luc Cohen
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Ghislaine Maxwell's sex abuse trial was set to
enter its seventh day on Tuesday, with prosecutors expected to show
jurors photographs depicting the British socialite's relationship with
the late financier Jeffrey Epstein.
U.S. District Judge Alison Nathan denied a request by Maxwell's attorney
on Monday to bar the photos, which FBI agents found on compact disks
seized from Epstein's Manhattan home during a July 2019 search. Epstein
was arrested on sex abuse charges that month, and died by suicide in
jail weeks later.
The cache of digital photographs also includes images of two women who
have accused Maxwell of serving them up to Epstein while they were
teenagers. They are depicted in various states of undress, prosecutors
indicated on Monday.
Maxwell, 59, faces eight counts of sex trafficking and other charges for
allegedly recruiting and grooming teenage girls for Epstein to abuse
between 1994 and 2004. She has pleaded not guilty, and her lawyers argue
she is being scapegoated for Epstein's alleged crimes because he is
dead.
Nathan agreed with prosecutors' argument on Monday that the photographs
were relevant because they showed the relationship between Maxwell and
Epstein, who were a couple during the 1990s. Maxwell worked for Epstein
at the time, managing his various personal properties, and retained that
role after their romantic partnership fizzled.
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Ghislaine Maxwell, the Jeffrey Epstein associate accused of sex
trafficking, attends her trial near an image of Epstein on a screen
in a courtroom sketch in New York City, U.S., December 2, 2021.
REUTERS/Jane Rosenberg
Nathan admitted one of the photos of an accuser, which depicts a
woman whose case is not included in the indictment, as evidence. She
said she would consider whether to admit the other, which is of a
woman who testified earlier on Monday under the pseudonym Kate.
In her testimony, Kate said Maxwell introduced her to Epstein in
London when she was 17 and that she then had several sexual
encounters with him. Nathan has instructed the jury that those were
not "illegal sex acts" because Kate was above the age of consent in
Britain.
Maxwell's defense attorney, Laura Menninger, who said some of the
photographs could have been altered, argued that prosecutors should
have shown the photograph while Kate was on the stand to give her
the opportunity to authenticate it.
(Reporting by Luc Cohen in New York; Editing by Noeleen Walder and
Sandra Maler)
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