Medical Records
The judge in a civil lawsuit against Ghislaine Maxwell has decided to unseal a majority of the documents in the dispute, including a 2015 deposition from Jeffrey Epstein's former cohort that could provide insight into their extraordinary life of wealth, power and privilege.
The
decision is part of a 2015 defamation lawsuit brought by Epstein accuser
Virginia Giuffre. The lawsuit was settled three years ago.
Giuffre
has been fighting to get a batch of sealed court documents made public. The
documents purportedly contain the names of hundreds of people, some famous and
powerful, who socialized, traveled or worked with Epstein and Maxwell over the
span of a decade.
Epstein,
a convicted pedophile, had been previously linked to high-profile business and
political players, including Presidents Trump and Bill Clinton as well as
Prince Andrew.
Last
month, Maxwell's attorney, Jeffrey Pagliuca, had asked the court to keep the
records under seal, arguing that public interest in the documents is outweighed
by privacy considerations. He also said the sealed documents could
"inappropriately influence potential witnesses or alleged victims."
GHISLAINE
MAXWELL FEARS FOR HER LIFE, BELIEVES SHE MIGHT MEET THE SAME FATE AS JEFFREY
EPSTEIN: REPORT
U.S.
District Judge Loretta Preska rejected Maxwell's push and added that the court
"finds any minor embarrassment or annoyance resulting from disclosure of
Ms. Maxwell's testimony, which has already been widely reported in the press,
so far outweighed" by the right to public access.
Some
of the material, however, like medical
records, would remain sealed.
Preska
is also giving Maxwell's legal team one week to appeal her decision but ordered
the court to have the documents ready to be posted within a week.
Maxwell
was arrested on criminal charges on July 2. She's accused of sexually abusing
and exploiting young girls alongside Epstein. She was denied bail and will
remain at a Brooklyn federal detention center until her trial in 2021.

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