Nearly 200 names linked to Jeffrey Epstein
expected to be made public
List could be released as soon as Tuesday after
deadline for objections to unsealing of names passes midnight Monday
Edward
Helmore in New York
Mon 1 Jan
2024 15.59 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2024/jan/01/jeffrey-epstein-ghislaine-maxwell-associates-list
Nearly 200
names connected to the Jeffrey Epstein-Ghislaine Maxwell sex trafficking
conspiracy could be released by a New York judge as soon as Tuesday, exposing
or confirming the identities of dozens of associates of the disgraced financier
that until now have only been known as John and Jane Does in court papers.
A deadline
for objections to the unsealing of name passes at midnight on Monday, nearly
nine years after victim Virginia Giuffre filed a single defamation claim
against Maxwell, daughter of the late British press baron Robert Maxwell, in
2015, that in turn produced the names in legal depositions.
A year
later, in 2016, US district court judge Robert Sweet rejected Maxwell’s motion
to dismiss the case, finding that “the veracity of a contextual world of facts
more broad than the allegedly defamatory statements” and that Guiffre “was a
victim of sustained underage sexual abuse between 1999 and 2002”. The parties
settled out of court in 2017.
From that
wellspring came not only the names now set to be released, but a series of
civil lawsuits including Guiffre’s action against Britain’s Prince Andrew for
“sexual assault and intentional infliction of emotional distress” that was
settled out of court without admission of liability for a reported $12m. The
prince has always strenuously denied any wrongdoing.
The
defamation suit also set the stage for a federal sex trafficking case against
Maxwell, who was found guilty on five of six charges, and sentenced to a
20-year prison sentence in December 2021.
But
expectations that the release of the names from the ageing defamation suit
could transfer to criminal charges are likely overblown. Epstein killed himself
while awaiting trial in 2019, and after Maxwell’s conviction federal
prosecutors made it clear that they considered their work done.
Still, US
district judge Loretta Preska’s 51-page order explaining her reasoning on
whether to unseal or continue to redact the names of about 180 John and Jane
Does offers will probably be a serious embarrassment to many high-profile
figures .
Many on the
list will already be publicly known as associates, employees of Epstein and
Maxwell, or people who had flown on his planes. It may also name Epstein’s
alleged victims who had been taken to homes, including a mansion in New York, a
Palm Beach villa, a private island in the US Virgin Islands and a ranch outside
Santa Fe.
Its the
names of the John Does that will be mostly scrutinized, and is almost certain
to include a former US president, actors, academics and, notoriously, the now
reclusive British prince.
According
to ABC News on Monday, “Jane Doe 162” is a witness who testified she was 17
when she was with Andrew, Maxwell and Giuffre at Epstein’s home in New York
mansion.
Former US
president Bill Clinton was identified by ANC News as “Doe 36” and is mentioned
in more than 50 of the redacted filings, according to court records. Giuffre
made no allegations of wrongdoing by Clinton, but maintains she met him on the
island – which Clinton has said he never visited.
But
personal flight logs kept by one of Epstein’s pilots showed that Clinton flew
extensively on Epstein’s plane, including on trips to Paris, Bangkok and Brunei
in the years after he left office in 2001.
According
to ABC, Giuffre’s lawyers contacted Clinton’s legal representatives about a
deposition but they responded that his testimony would not be helpful.
Maxwell’s lawyers also rejected the idea, calling it a “transparent ploy by
Guiffre to increase media exposure for her sensational stories through
deposition side-show”.
But
Clinton’s name repeatedly came up in connection with Epstein, including in a
New York magazine article in 2002 in which he said through a spokesman that
Epstein was “both a highly successful financier and a committed philanthropist
with a keen sense of global markets and an in-depth knowledge of 21st-century
science”.
Clinton has
said he cut with Epstein in 2005 after Epstein was accused of bringing underage
girls to his Palm Beach home for sexualized massages. A federal investigation
was dropped, and Epstein pleaded guilty to state charges of procurement of a
minor and solicitation of prostitution, given a light sentence and required to
register as a sex offender.
After
Epstein was arrested in 2019, Clinton again issued a statement, saying he’d not
spoken to Epstein “in well over a decade” and “has never been to Little St
James Island, Epstein’s ranch in New Mexico, or his residence in Florida” and
“knows nothing” about Epstein’s crimes.
While the
depositions may offer a closer reading of Epstein and Maxwell’s interactions
prior to Epstein’s solicitation conviction, much of the focus is now on the
financier’s behavior after he was released from detention in Florida and
returned to New York to rebuild his reputation.
Epstein’s
scheduling diaries that found their way to the Wall Street Journal this year
during Epstein-related lawsuits between the US Virgin Islands and two US banks,
revealed the extent that the financier continued to build his network.
The
boldface names that emerged included the director of CIA, Williams Burns, and
Kathryn Ruemmler, White House counsel under Barack Obama, alongside lesser
figures including the leftwing professor and activist Noam Chomsky, billionaire
venture capitalist Reid Hoffman and Lawrence Summers, former Harvard president
and director of the National Economic Council under Obama.
Others
included Woody Allen, Bill Gates, Thorbjørn Jagland, a former Norwegian prime
minister, former Israeli prime minister Ehud Barak and former Barclays chairman
Jes Staley.
An
acquaintance of Maxwell and Epstein told the Guardian last year that Epstein’s
patterns of behavior were not significantly different pre-and-post convictions.
“He was not a changed man,” they said. “But you need to understand that in his
mind he thought he’d done nothing wrong and he was entitled to behave anyway he
wanted to if he had the money to pull it off.”
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