Ghislaine Maxwell jury begins deliberations after closing arguments
A jury has begun its deliberations over whether Ghislaine Maxwell is a dangerous predator who recruited teenagers to be sexually abused by financier Jeffrey Epstein, as prosecutors claim.
The jury received the case just before 5pm after two prosecutors and a defence lawyer delivered their closing arguments over a six-hour period.
Maxwell, 59, had been composed, if not cheerful, as she interacted with her lawyers and family members for the first three weeks of the trial.
But she seemed emotional as Assistant US Attorney Maurene Comey rebutted defence arguments and asserted the British socialite believed her four trial accusers were beneath her.
âIn her eyes, they were just trash,â Ms Comey said as Maxwell shook her head slightly and then drooped her eyes.
Earlier, she had wiped her eyes twice as Ms Comey attacked defence portrayals of the women who testified about abuse. The prosecutor said Maxwell played a pivotal role in Epsteinâs quest to sexually abuse teenage girls.
Defence lawyer Laura Menninger had argued that the womenâs recollections of abuse by Epstein and Maxwell were flawed memories manipulated two decades or more later by civil lawyers seeking payouts or US government investigators seeking a scapegoat after Epstein killed himself in a federal jail in 2019 while he awaited his own sex trafficking trial.
Ms Comey called a defence claim that Maxwell did not know about abuse that occurred for more than a decade a âlaughable argumentâ.
âThose four witnesses gave you the most damaging testimony in this trial,â she said. âThese women put themselves through the hell of testifying at this trial even though they have nothing to gain.â
Ms Comey added: âThey did it for justice.â
The prosecutor started her remarks by disputing a claim by the defence that nearly all the evidence pertained to Epstein, and Maxwell did not deserve to be blamed as an conspirator in his crimes.
âThis case is about that woman,â Ms Comey said, pointing at Maxwell, who sat at the defence table in a white sweater as four of her siblings watched from the first bench of spectators in a courtroom where everyone followed spacing rules dictated by the coronavirus.
Earlier, Assistant US Attorney Alison Moe called Maxwell the âlady of the houseâ when Epstein abused girls at a New York mansion, a Florida estate and a New Mexico ranch.
âGhislaine Maxwell was dangerous,â Ms Moe said. She cited over 30 million dollars that Maxwell received from Epstein over the years. âMaxwell and Epstein committed horrifying crimes.â
Ms Menninger, though, said prosecutors had failed to prove any charges beyond a reasonable doubt: âGhislaine Maxwell is an innocent woman, wrongfully accused of crimes she did not commit.â
âGhislaine Maxwell is not Jeffrey Epstein,â Ms Menninger stated plainly.
The summations came at the start of the fourth week of a trial that was originally projected to last six weeks.
With a coronavirus outbreak in New York worsening by the day and a holiday weekend ahead, Judge Alison J Nathan urged lawyers to keep their closings tight so the jury could begin deliberating as early as Monday.
Maxwell has been jailed since her arrest in July 2020. The judge has denied her bail repeatedly, despite her lawyerâs arguments that the pledge of her 22.5 million dollars estate and a willingness to be watched 24 hours a day by armed guards would guarantee her appearance in court.
The closings came after two dozen prosecution witnesses testified, including the four women who say they were abused by Epstein with the help of Maxwell when they were teenagers.
Ms Moe told jurors that Maxwell was a âposh, smiling age-appropriate womanâ who provided cover for Epsteinâs âcreepyâ behaviour.
She asked them to ignore the testimony of a psychology professor who testified for the defence, saying the testimony that memories can fade over time and be influenced by what people hear, see or read was a âtotal distractionâ.
âThese women know what happened to their own bodies,â she said. âYour common sense tells you that being molested is something you never forget, ever.â
But Ms Menninger defended the testimony of the memory expert, citing instances in which Maxwellâs accusers never mentioned the defendantâs name when they first spoke of the abuse they endured from Epstein.
She said the testimony from accusers was manipulated by civil lawyers representing them as they pursued millions of dollars in payouts from a special fund set up after Epsteinâs suicide to compensate his victims.
Ms Menninger said the women suddenly ârecovered memories that Ghislaine was thereâ.





