This was published 11 months ago
Maxwell took Epstein to England ‘to meet royalty’ including Prince Andrew
By Jonathan Stempel
Ghislaine Maxwell took Jeffrey Epstein to Britain to introduce him to Prince Andrew and other royalty, court documents have claimed.
The claim, made by Alfredo Rodriguez, the manager of Epstein’s mansion in Palm Beach, Florida, casts doubt on Maxwell’s denial that she introduced the paedophile to Prince Andrew.
“What is your understanding as to how Prince Andrew is associated with Jeffrey Epstein?” Rodriguez was asked.
Rodriguez answered: “Because there were pictures with him together.”
“Were these pictures that looked, that appeared to be at social events, at Mr Epstein’s house or where?”
“Mrs Maxwell took him to England to introduce him to the royalty.”
“Is it your understanding that Ghislaine Maxwell knew Prince Andrew and introduced ... ”
“Yes.”
Maxwell testified in 2016 she never introduced Andrew to Jeffrey Epstein.
Several documents discussed the alleged activities of Andrew, whom Virginia Giuffre sued and accused of abusing her more than two decades ago when she was 17.
Andrew has denied Giuffre’s accusations, but settled her case for a reported £12 million ($22 million) in 2022.
Among other revelations, the court documents showed Epstein invoked his constitutional right against incriminating himself about 600 times in testimony for a lawsuit brought by Giuffre.
Epstein’s refusal to answer questions in Giuffre’s lawsuit against his long-time associate Maxwell was disclosed in a filing in Manhattan Federal Court on Friday, as part of a trove of documents being unsealed this month from the civil defamation case, which settled in 2017.
The Fifth Amendment of the US Constitution gives people the right not to incriminate themselves.
In the September 2016 filing, Giuffre’s lawyers said Epstein routinely answered “Fifth” in a deposition that month to about 500 substantive questions they posed, and 100 substantive questions that Maxwell’s lawyers posed.
Giuffre’s lawyers said Epstein’s refusal to answer extended to questions that posed no real risk of incriminating him, including whether he knew Maxwell. Epstein had in 2008 pleaded guilty in open court to a prostitution charge and was healthy enough to testify.
The questions also included at least three about Epstein’s relationship with former US president Bill Clinton.
Lawyers for Epstein said in a subsequent filing, also released on Friday, that their client would have invoked the Fifth Amendment if called upon to testify at trial.
They cited among other reasons the “burdens” he would face, and the expected “media circus generated by Mr Epstein’s personal appearance”.
Epstein took his own life in a Manhattan jail cell in August 2019 at the age of 66 while awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges.
Several other people accused of aiding in his sexual abuses also invoked their rights against self-incrimination in various litigation related to him, Friday’s unsealed filings show.
More than 180 documents including depositions, legal briefs and email chains from Giuffre’s lawsuit have been released since Wednesday, under an order last month from US District Judge Loretta Preska in Manhattan, who oversaw the case.
The documents name many of Epstein’s victims, who were paid to give him and others massages in exchange for money.
Others named included people who worked with him, and a handful of celebrities and politicians linked to him.
In addition to Clinton, prominent people named in the documents include actor Kevin Spacey, magician David Copperfield and business executive Leslie Wexner. None was accused in the documents of wrongdoing.
Maxwell is appealing against her December 2021 conviction and 20-year prison sentence for aiding in Epstein’s sexual abuses. A federal appeals court in Manhattan may review her case as soon as March.
Reuters
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