Lawyers for Ghislaine Maxwell, the one time girlfriend of sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein, have asked a U.S. district court in New York for a sentence that is “well lower” than the 20 years recommended by the Probation Department.
Now, in court papers filed in Manhattan on June 15, attorneys for Maxwell claimed she deserved leniency because, while she facilitated Epstein’s abuse, it was the late financier who was “the mastermind” and “principle abuser.”
“But this Court cannot sentence Ms. Maxwell as if she were a proxy for Epstein simply because Epstein is no longer here. Ms. Maxwell cannot and should not bear all the punishment for which Epstein should have been held responsible.”
The attorneys also want the judge to consider the conditions Maxwell is said to have endured while being detained pre-trial in solitary confinement and during the pandemic, which they say have been more “onerous and punitive” than usual.
For these and other reasons, they argued that a sentence of less than 20 years would be “sufficient, but not greater than necessary.”
To support their claims, the attorneys provided letters from family and friends, a former employee, and a forensic psychiatrist who evaluated her in prison in a bid to dispute Maxwell being characterized as “a villain, rich heiress, and vapid socialite.”
In making their case for a lighter sentence, Maxwell’s attorneys said she had a “traumatic childhood with an overbearing, narcissistic, and demanding father” which they say made her vulnerable to Epstein, who she is said to have met right after her father’s death. This, they say, was the “biggest mistake she made in her life.”
They also asked the judge to consider the 60-year-old sex trafficker’s age, that she is being sentenced for so-called “non-violent offenses” that happened decades ago, and other factors such as the conditions of her pre-trial detention.
Booyens said that none of the people who were on the “demand” side of the crime, whose names are allegedly listed in a 97-page “little black book,” are behind bars. That book is sealed under an agreement between Maxwell’s attorney and prosecutors.
“The law failed to identify those who buy sex from children. Those who are the demand side of the industry need to be apprehended and need to be made an example of—again, that did not happen. We see a book sealed, we see names sealed, we see none of the buyers go into the witness stand. None of the buyers see jail time,” he said.
Maxwell is scheduled to be sentenced on June 28 by U.S. Circuit Judge Alison Nathan.