Brickshitters: Who’s Afraid of Ghislaine Maxwell?
Epstein's partner in crime has the skinny on some of the most powerful men in the world.
WHEN JEFFREY EPSTEIN signed his notoriously lax plea deal in 2007, one of the stipulations to the agreement was that his co-conspirators, especially including his premier partner in sex crime, Ghislaine Maxwell, be granted immunity from prosecution. In an interview with Narativ’s Zev Shalev last month, Maxwell family associate Laura Goldman explained that her friend Ghislaine was not concerned about prosecution, because of that plea deal. The erstwhile socialite thought the feds couldn’t touch her.
She thought wrong.
Yesterday, in a shocking development, the FBI arrested Ghislaine Maxwell. She’d been “roughing it” in her skytop redoubt in the pristine New Hampshire town of Bradford—a property she purchased via a shell company after Epstein’s arrest, called, appropriately, “Tuckedaway.” The locals had no idea. “You wouldn't believe they’d be up here, of all places,” Bradford resident Angela Murphy told NBC Boston. “We are in the middle of nowhere.”
The indictment charges her with
enticing a minor to travel to engage in criminal sexual activity, transporting a minor with the intent to engage in criminal sexual activity, conspiracy to commit both of those offenses, and perjury in connection with a sworn deposition. The Indictment unsealed today alleges that between at least in or about 1994 through 1997, MAXWELL and co-conspirator Jeffrey Epstein exploited girls as young as 14, including by enticing them to travel and transporting them for the purpose of engaging in illegal sex acts. As alleged, knowing that Epstein had a preference for young girls, MAXWELL played a critical role in the grooming and abuse of minor victims that took place in locations including New York, Florida, and New Mexico. In addition, as alleged, MAXWELL made several false statements in sworn depositions in 2016.
At a high-noon press conference, Audrey Strauss, the freshly-minted Acting US Attorney for the Southern District of New York—who appears to have taken the “Acting” part of her title literally—said, “As alleged, Ghislaine Maxwell facilitated, aided, and participated in acts of sexual abuse of minors. Maxwell enticed minor girls, got them to trust her, and then delivered them into the trap that she and Jeffrey Epstein had set. She pretended to be a woman they could trust. All the while, she was setting them up to be abused sexually by Epstein and, in some cases, Maxwell herself. Today, after many years, Ghislaine Maxwell finally stands charged for her role in these crimes.” Maxwell was remanded to custody, and it is unlikely the judge will grant bail.
So: Jizz Lane’s going down. And she has the power to take a lot of wealthy and powerful individuals down with her. Not only was she Epstein’s chief accomplice, involved in years of unspeakably odious activity, but as the daughter of the superspy Robert Maxwell, she is the keeper of the kind of secrets that could upend governments, to say nothing of individual lives. The ripple effects of her arrest extend to the ends of the earth.
Here is a smattering of famous and not-so-famous people who should be shitting a brick this morning:
Bill Clinton
It was Ghislaine, best as I can tell, who brought Clinton into Epstein’s orbit. As I wrote last week, I have not seen any charges that the former president availed himself of the young women in Epstein’s entourage—the “Filthy Rich” documentary makes no such allegations; to the contrary. On the other hand, Clinton is certainly lying about how chummy he really was with Epstein. He wasn’t just on the “Lolita Express” for the big humanitarian trip to Africa—he flew on Epstein’s private jet a lot. And he claims never to have visited Little St. James, but the telecom worker interviewed in the documentary insists that he saw Clinton on Epstein’s island. What else might 42 be lying about?
Donald John Trump
Eric Trump, the president’s dimmest son, posted a photo of Ghislaine Maxwell at the wedding of Chelsea Clinton. He took the post down, after he was deluged with pictures of his father in the company of Ghislaine and her beau, Jeffrey Epstein. There are allegations that Trump partook of Epstein’s rape parties. Are the allegations true, and if so, will Maxwell confirm them?
Prince Andrew
If Queen Elizabeth’s son manages to avoid prosecution, it is only because he is Queen Elizabeth’s son. He has been friends with Ghislaine for a long time; best as I can tell, they have known each other since they were children. She has the power to destroy him once and for all. Will she?
Les Wexner
The exact nature of his involvement with Jeffrey Epstein is not just Victoria’s Secret; it’s Ghislaine’s.
Alan Dershowitz
The criminal defense attorney to the stars has been in meltdown on Twitter all week, making allegations against the Miami Herald’s Julie K. Brown that, to be honest, I don’t fully understand. One of Epstein’s victims, Virginia Roberts Guiffre, alleges that Epstein coerced her to have sex with Dershowitz. He has vociferously proclaimed his innocence, on every platform available to him. Doth he protest too much? Ghislaine knows.
Alex Acosta
Trump’s former Secretary of Labor was the US Attorney who covertly negotiated, and signed off on, Epstein’s sweetheart plea deal. At last, we may get to know why.
Bill Barr
Last week, the corrupt Attorney General tried to replace Geoffrey Berman, the US Attorney for SDNY, with one of his own loyalists, presumably to quash a big case in the Southern District. The gambit failed. Might this have been the indictment he was trying to torpedo? Barr certainly has connections to Epstein: his pervy father hired him at Dalton, and he himself was in charge when the sex trafficker and arms dealer “committed suicide.” Ghislaine likely has dirt on the Barr family, too.
And these are just the people we know about. There are sure to be others.
Ghislaine Maxwell grew up as a spoiled socialite who worshipped her father—the media magnate and spy who, when he died in 1991, was in the middle of a Ponzi scheme in which he stole money from his company’s pension. From what I’ve been told, and what I’ve heard others report, she is painfully insecure, constantly name-dropping and talking about how great her dad was. She allowed Epstein to manipulate her for decades. Laura Goldman insists she’s “nice.” The point is: I don’t get the sense that she’s the mentally toughest person around. She ain’t Paul Manafort. Odds are, she will cooperate. Which must be disturbing the restful slumber of everyone on the above list.
Ghislaine Maxwell was dangerous when she was out and about. Now that she’s in federal custody, looking at decades in the slammer? Rich and powerful men would rest easier if she were dead. Which means that making the case against her is the easy part; the hard part will be keeping her alive through the trial.
Fortunately, Audrey Strauss seems up to the task.
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I love how this backfired on Barr.
Excellent news, Gregg. There must be hundreds of super-rich perverts buying and selling children around the world, all interconnected. Let's home Maxwell testifies for years, in safety.