Ghislaine Maxwell's Tinfoil Scheme: Epstein Files Unravel Socialite's Sordid Saga
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Ghislaine Maxwell, the disgraced British socialite serving a 20-year sentence for sex trafficking minors alongside Jeffrey Epstein, has dominated headlines this week with explosive releases from the newly unsealed Epstein files under the federal Epstein Files Transparency Act signed by President Trump last month. WMUR-TV reports that fresh documents reveal Maxwell bought her multimillion-dollar hideout in Bradford, New Hampshire, back in 2019 using the alias Janet Marshall through an LLC, posing as a privacy-obsessed journalist with a British accent alongside a male companion named Scott Marshall. InDepthNH.org details how federal agents busted into the 156-acre mountaintop estate on July 2, 2020, after she ignored the door, fleeing to an inner room where they found her, with her cell phone suspiciously wrapped in tin foil to dodge tracking. That same property, a timber-framed privacy palace with stunning views, epic fireplaces, and even ex-British secret service guards who handled her errands, is back on the market for $2.365 million after a price drop, per real estate listings cited in the reports.
Fortune reveals Maxwell was transferred to a minimum-security prison due to numerous life threats, as confirmed by Deputy AG Todd Blanche on NBCs Meet the Press, amid ongoing file reviews to shield victims identities. ABC News uncovers steamy emails believed to be between Maxwell and Prince Andrew, signed as A, where he eagerly leaves girl arrangements entirely to her during a Peruvian getaway plotting water-skiing and horseback rides. A federal judge chided Maxwell, per The Columbian, for carelessly naming victims in her pro se habeas petition filed two weeks ago, claiming substantial new evidence of trial flaws like withheld info and lying witnesses should free her, though the dropping files have only spotlighted her crimes further, with victims like Danielle Bensky rallying against pardon fears. No public appearances, business moves, or fresh social media buzz on Maxwell herself, but the files tie her to photos with New Hampshire inventor Dean Kamen on a Segway at a 2002 TED event, which he calls innocuous. These revelations, timed just before Christmas, fuel endless speculation on her elite network, but all stem from verified DOJ docs, with zero unconfirmed gossip.
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