Epstein's shadow looms over jury selection in Maxwell sex crimes trial
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[November 04, 2021]
By Luc Cohen
NEW YORK (Reuters) - It has been two years
since Jeffrey Epstein hanged himself in a Manhattan jail cell, but the
publicity surrounding the deceased financier will make it tough to find
an unbiased jury for former girlfriend Ghislaine Maxwell's upcoming sex
abuse trial, according to legal experts.
Prospective jurors on Thursday will begin filling out a 24-page
questionnaire in federal court in Manhattan to assess whether they can
fairly judge Maxwell, a British socialite who U.S. prosecutors say
recruited and groomed underage girls for Epstein to abuse.
Epstein, a well-connected money manager who once counted Britain's
Prince Andrew and billionaire Leon Black among his associates, died by
suicide in a Manhattan jail in 2019 following his arrest on sex
trafficking charges.
Maxwell's lawyers have said "intense negative media coverage" of Maxwell
and Epstein, including podcasts and documentaries on Netflix and other
platforms, have tainted the jury pool for her trial, which is expected
to start on Nov. 29.
"Epstein is going to be such a huge figure in this trial, and there are
so many preconceived notions about Epstein, that it's going to be
difficult for the defense to get people who can come in as a blank
slate," said Roy Futterman, a director at trial consulting firm DOAR in
New York.
Prosecutors say that Maxwell, 59, recruited and groomed four underage
girls for Epstein to abuse from 1994 to 2004.
Maxwell, who has pleaded not guilty to the charges, is the
highest-profile woman to be tried on sexual abuse charges since the
start of the #MeToo movement.
Her lawyers have said this has fueled the "vitriolic" coverage about
Maxwell since her July 2020 arrest.
"The fact that a woman now stands trial for charges almost exclusively
alleged against men heightens the interest and intrigue of this case,"
they wrote in a court filing.
The questionnaire that around 600 prospective jurors will complete asks
what they have read or heard about Epstein and Maxwell, and about their
own experiences with sexual abuse or assault.
Some individuals will be called back beginning Nov. 16 for individual
follow-up questioning by U.S. District Judge Alison Nathan, who is
presiding over the trial.
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Ghislaine Maxwell, the Jeffrey Epstein associate accused of sex
trafficking, is led into court in shackles for a pre-trial hearing
ahead of jury selection, expected to begin later in the week, in a
courtroom sketch in New York City, U.S., November 1, 2021.
REUTERS/Jane Rosenberg/File Photo
Jury consultants said that should make prospective
jurors more comfortable discussing sensitive personal topics, and
help lawyers weed out people who have preconceived notions about
Maxwell's guilt. When the process is complete, there will be a jury
of 12 plus six alternates.
SOCIAL MEDIA POSTS
While many potential jurors will be familiar with the case, those
who learned about it from news sources rather than entertainment
offerings might be seen as less biased, said Christina Marinakis,
director for jury research at Litigation Insights in Baltimore.
The questionnaire asks whether potential jurors have discussed the
case on social media. Marinakis said both the prosecution and the
defense will likely review their online posts to be sure.
For the defense, one challenge is that jurors familiar with Epstein
may hold Maxwell to a higher standard because she is a woman, and
because many of Epstein's alleged victims were underage, said
Melissa Gomez, president of MMG Jury Consulting in Philadelphia.
Jurors with a negative view of Epstein may believe Maxwell had a
special obligation to protect girls from him.
"It's not solely going to be whether she actively participated, but,
as a woman, did she fail to protect these other women?" Gomez said.
The defense might seek to seat men who view Maxwell's accusers as
willing participants in sexual activity with Epstein, rather than as
victims, said Paul Applebaum, a criminal defense attorney in St.
Paul, Minnesota.
"You want men on the jury who are still cavemen," he said.
(Reporting by Luc Cohen; Editing by Noeleen Walder and Jonathan
Oatis)
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