Key dates leading up to Ghislaine Maxwell's sex abuse trial
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[November 29, 2021]
By Luc Cohen
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Opening statements are
expected to begin on Monday in the sex abuse trial of Ghislaine Maxwell,
the British socialite charged by U.S. prosecutors with helping recruit
and groom underage girls for her longtime associate and former
boyfriend, Jeffrey Epstein.
Below is a timeline of significant events leading up to Maxwell's trial.
November 2018
The Miami Herald publishes a report detailing a previously-secret deal
that Epstein, a math teacher-turned-money manager, reached in 2007 with
Miami federal prosecutors probing allegations that he sexually abused
minors at his Palm Beach, Florida mansion. He pleaded guilty to lesser
state prostitution charges.
The report brings widespread attention to the decades-old allegations
against Epstein and Maxwell in the context of the #MeToo movement, which
has encouraged women to speak out about abuse by powerful men.
July 2019
Epstein is arrested on charges of luring dozens of girls as young as 14
to his homes in New York City and Florida and paying them for sex acts.
He pleads not guilty in Manhattan federal court. Epstein is placed on
suicide watch after being found unconscious in his jail cell with neck
injuries. He claims he was attacked by his cell mate and is taken off
suicide watch less than a week after the incident.
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August 2019
Epstein's cell mate is transferred on Aug. 9. The following morning on
Aug. 10 Epstein is found hanged in a Manhattan jail while awaiting trial
on federal sex trafficking charges. Medical examiners on Aug. 16 rule
his death a suicide .
July 2020
Maxwell is arrested by the FBI in Bradford, New Hampshire on July 2.
Manhattan federal prosecutors charge her with four criminal counts of
procuring and transporting three minor victims for illegal sex acts, and
two perjury counts.
Maxwell pleads not guilty , saying in a filing she "vigorously denies
the charges." U.S. District Judge Alison Nathan denies Maxwell's bid for
bail, saying she posed a flight risk.
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Ghislaine Maxwell, the Jeffrey Epstein associate accused of sex
trafficking, stands before U.S. District Judge Alison J. Nathan with
her defense team of Bobbi Sternheim, Christian Everdell, Laura
Menninger, Jeffrey Pagliuca during a pre-trial hearing ahead of jury
selection, in a courtroom sketch in New York City, U.S., November
15, 2021. REUTERS/Jane Rosenberg
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October 2020
A 2016 deposition Maxwell gave in a now-settled civil defamation
lawsuit filed against her by Epstein accuser Virginia Giuffre is
made public . In the deposition, Maxwell forcefully denied seeing
Epstein have sex with underage girls or helping him arrange illicit
sexual encounters.
March 29, 2021
Prosecutors expand their case against Maxwell, filing a new
indictment that charges her with sex trafficking involving a fourth
victim. Maxwell recruited the victim in 2001, when she was 14 years
old, to engage in sex acts with Epstein, according to the
indictment.
April 23, 2021
Maxwell pleads not guilty to the new charges.
April 27, 2021
A U.S. appeals court rejects Maxwell's latest request for bail.
August 13, 2021
Nathan rejects Maxwell's bid to dismiss her indictment on the
grounds that she was immune to prosecution under a 2007 agreement
Epstein's made with federal prosecutors in Florida. Maxwell had
argued that deal, which was later widely criticized as too lenient,
also covered accused co-conspirators like herself.
November 16, 2021
Nathan begins questioning more than 200 potential jurors for the
case, asking about their own experiences with sexual abuse and their
opinions about people with luxurious lifestyles, in an effort to
weed out biased individuals.
November 29, 2021
Opening statements in the trial are scheduled to begin.
(Reporting by Luc Cohen; Editing by Noeleen Walder and Diane Craft)
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