Ghislaine
Maxwell asks US supreme court to overturn conviction
Maxwell,
sentenced to 20 years for sex trafficking, says 2007 plea deal negotiated by
Epstein should have protected her
José
Olivares
Mon 28
Jul 2025 22.13 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jul/28/ghislaine-maxwell-supreme-court
Ghislaine
Maxwell, the convicted sex trafficker and associate of Jeffrey Epstein, has
requested that the US supreme court overturn her conviction, saying she was
unjustly prosecuted.
In 2022,
Maxwell was sentenced in Manhattan to 20 years in prison for sex trafficking
and other related crimes. Her legal team, however, submitted a request to the
supreme court on Monday, seeking to overturn the lower court’s decision,
arguing that a prior plea deal that Epstein took protected Maxwell from
prosecution.
Maxwell’s
submission to the supreme court comes days after she met justice department
officials, as discussions began to see whether she would turn into a US
government cooperator. Observers have suggested Maxwell may be able to expose
new information about Epstein’s sex trafficking and the wealthy individuals who
may have also been involved. It is not clear if Maxwell will become a US
government cooperator and what she may receive in return.
Maxwell’s
supreme court filing argues that Epstein’s 2007 plea deal with federal
prosecutors in Florida should have barred her prosecution.
The
controversial 2007 plea agreement between Epstein and the justice department
said that if Epstein followed the terms of the plea agreement, the US
government would not charge “any potential co-conspirators of Epstein”,
including “but not limited to” four co-conspirators. Maxwell is not one of the
four co-conspirators named in the agreement, but her attorneys say she did not
need to be named to receive the protection from that deal.
Maxwell’s
legal team is asking the supreme court to review the case, arguing that the
federal plea deal signed in Florida should have been respected in New York.
The
justice department, for its part, previously argued that the Florida plea deal
did not extend to other federal districts, including the southern district of
New York, where Maxwell was eventually tried and sentenced.
Most
federal cases in the US are settled through plea agreements.
The US
attorney in Florida who negotiated Epstein’s plea deal at the time, Alexander
Acosta, came under significant scrutiny during the first Trump administration
after being appointed US secretary of labor. He resigned from that position
after facing significant criticism following Epstein’s 2019 arrest.
The
justice department has faced scrutiny from Democrats and Trump supporters in
recent weeks, after it released a memo saying it did not uncover evidence to
charge “third parties”. In the memo, the justice department and the FBI said
there was “no incriminating ‘client list’.”
Trump has
faced renewed criticism over the Epstein case, due to his past ties to the
wealthy financier. In mid-July, the Wall Street Journal reported that Trump
wrote a “bawdy” birthday note to Epstein in 2003. In response to that story,
Trump filed a $10bn defamation lawsuit against the Journal and its owners,
including the rightwing billionaire Rupert Murdoch. The paper was banned last
week from participating in the press pool during Trump’s upcoming trip to
Scotland.
On
Monday, Trump asked a federal court in Florida to quickly depose Murdoch in the
defamation case. Reuters reported a court filing submitted by Trump’s attorneys
describing an interaction between Trump and Murdoch. The filing said Trump had
told Murdoch before the Journal article was published that the “bawdy” note was
“fake” and that Murdoch said he would “take care of it”. A federal judge
ordered Murdoch to respond by 4 August.
This
week, the Wall Street Journal also reported that, as the justice department
reviewed Epstein-related documents, Trump’s name appeared in the files multiple
times.

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