loading . . . Supreme Court wonât hear Ghislaine Maxwell sex-trafficking conviction appeal The Supreme Court on Monday declined to consider throwing out the 2021 sex-trafficking conviction of Ghislaine Maxwell, the longtime associate of convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
Maxwell is serving a 20-year prison sentence after she was found guilty of conspiring with and aiding Epstein in his sexual abuse of underage girls. She was thrust back into the spotlight this summer as the Trump administration faced intense pressure to release new information about the decadelong scheme.
âWeâre, of course, deeply disappointed that the Supreme Court declined to hear Ghislaine Maxwellâs case. But this fight isnât over,â David Oscar Markus, Maxwellâs lawyer, said in a statement. âSerious legal and factual issues remain, and we will continue to pursue every avenue available to ensure that justice is done.â
Her appeal to the justices turned on a 2007 nonprosecution agreement Epstein signed with federal prosecutors, which she claimed her conviction violated.
The deal let Epstein avoid federal charges for pleading guilty to state-level sex crimes in Florida and serving 18 months in prison. It also included an unusual co-conspiratorsâ clause, which she argued binds every U.S. attorney in the country from pursuing certain charges against her.
Lower courts found that the deal only covers the Southern District of Florida, where the agreement was signed, and does not apply to the federal prosecutors in New York who secured Maxwellâs conviction.
âIn this case, the government made a written promise that Epsteinâs co-conspirators would not be prosecuted by the United States, and Maxwell was in fact prosecuted as a co-conspirator of Epstein by the United States,â Maxwellâs attorney, David Oscar Markus, wrote in her April petition to the justices.
âThe only question is whether the governmentâs promise that the âUnited Statesâ would not prosecute her was enforceable against the U.S. Attorneyâs office in New York, or only against the Southern District of Florida,â he continued, urging the courtâs review.
The Justice Department opposed Maxwellâs appeal, rejecting her contention that the nonprosecution agreement applies to every judicial district in the country.
âWhile âthe United Statesâ could conceivably refer to the entire federal government, as petitioner urges, the entirety and context of the NPA here make clear that the term is used â as it often is â as one alternative way to refer to the USAO executing the agreement,â Solicitor General D. John Sauer told the court in July.
As Maxwellâs petition awaited review at the Supreme Court, she simultaneously made overtures to President Trump, who has faced sharp criticism over his administrationâs handling of the so-called Epstein files.
Trumpâs political base exploded with frustration after the Justice Department in July stated Epstein did not have a âclient listâ and confirmed his 2019 death was a suicide, two flash points for skeptics who have long claimed the government covered up the truth.
Amid growing tensions, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche met with Maxwell over the course of two days, during which she said she ânever sawâ Trump in âany inappropriate setting.â The presidentâs critics have accused him of withholding information about Epsteinâs case because he is named in the files.
After the meeting, Maxwell was transferred from a correctional facility in Florida to a lower-security prison camp in Texas. Democrats on the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform asked DOJâs inspector generalâs office to investigate the move.
Trump said in July that heâs âallowed to give her a pardon,â but that ânobodyâs approached me with it.â
Updated at 11:30 a.m. EDT
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