In a new interview with the British show "TalkTV" airing Monday, convicted sex trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell claims the photo showing victim Virginia Giuffre with her and the prince "looks like it has been Photoshopped."
The Denver-based law firm Haddon, Morgan and Foreman, P.C. has alleged in a lawsuit filed against Ghislaine Maxwell, her brother and her husband that they are owed more than $878,000 in unpaid legal fees that have accumulated since her 2020 arrest.
“She doesn’t think what she did was wrong. She is not sorry. She would do it again,” one woman who testified during Ghislaine Maxwell’s trial under the name Kate said.
Ghislaine Maxwell has been sentenced to two decades behind bars for her role in longtime friend Jeffrey Epstein's years-long pattern of sexually victimizing young girls.
Seven women who say Ghislaine Maxwell aided Jeffrey Epstein in his sex trafficking crimes have written to the sentencing judge, asking her to consider their pain as she decides on a sentence.
Ghislaine Maxwell's attorney argued in a letter to federal court Saturday that her client is not suicidal and had been placed on suicide watch “without having conducted a psychological evaluation and without justification."
In newly filed court documents, prosecutors refuted Ghislaine Maxwell's claims that she is being scapegoated, noting that the socialite "was an adult who made her own choices" when she engaged in the sex trafficking for which she was convicted.
In a legal brief intended to secure Ghislaine Maxwell a lighter sentence, her attorneys claim that a female inmate has said someone paid her to strangle Maxwell in her sleep.
In response to a set of appeals from Ghislaine Maxwell's legal team, U.S. District Judge Alison J. Nathan upheld her conviction a second time but concluded that three of the charges on which she was convicted should be consolidated into one charge.
Federal Judge Alison J. Nathan refused to order a new trial for Ghislaine Maxwell, convicting of child sex trafficking charges, despite the presence of a juror who told reporters after the trial that he had been a victim of child sexual abuse.
Ghislaine Maxwell's legal team argues that her verdict should be thrown out over the juror's failure to disclose his history of being a victim of sexual abuse.
The Maxwell case judge will hear evidence as to whether the juror was improperly seated after he didn't tell the court that he was the victim of child sexual abuse.
Ghislaine Maxwell's attorneys have requested a new trial after a jury in her original case came forward to say that he had been a victim of sexual abuse in the past and that he shared that experience with other jurors during the deliberation process.
Ghislaine Maxwell was convicted last month on sex trafficking charges related to her time serving as sex offender Jeffrey Epstein's close friend and confidante.
Juror Scotty David told multiple media outlets after Ghislaine Maxwell's guilty verdict that sharing his own experience with sexual abuse helped other jurors "come around on the memory aspect" regarding her accuser's testimony.