
A federal judge in New York has authorized the Justice Department to release the grand jury transcripts and other sealed evidence from the prosecution of Ghislaine Maxwell, ruling that Congressā newly enacted Epstein Files Transparency Act requires the material to be made public.
U.S. District Judge Paul Engelmayer issued the order Tuesday, concluding in a 24-page decision that the law passed last month āunambiguously appliesā to the discovery prosecutors turned over to Maxwellās defense before her 2021 trial. The measure, signed by President Donald Trump, directs the Justice Department to disclose all Epstein-related investigative filesāsubject to limited exemptionsāwithin 30 days of its passage.
The decision allows the department to seek modifications to the longstanding protective order in Maxwellās case so it can post previously sealed records, including grand jury testimony, search warrant files, financial records, travel logs, photos, and interview reports. However, Engelmayer emphasized that victim information must remain protected and that any identifying details must be removed before release. He added specific safeguards, including a requirement that the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York āpersonally certify in a sworn declarationā that the department has thoroughly reviewed the files and protected victimsā identities. The additional scrutiny, he wrote, is necessary because the Justice Department, while claiming to consider victimsā privacy, has ānot treated them with the solicitude they deserveā and has provided ālip serviceā to their concernsāespecially given its earlier efforts to unseal materials without notifying the victims.
While Engelmayer authorized the release, he also stressed that the grand jury evidence in the Maxwell matter is unlikely to reveal significant new details. The panels heard only āsummary testimony from two law enforcement officials,ā he wrote, and nearly all of the material was already introduced at Maxwellās 2021 trial.
Epstein, a wealthy financier accused of running a years-long sex-trafficking operation, died in a Manhattan jail in 2019 while awaiting trial. Maxwell was convicted two years later on federal charges including conspiracy and sex trafficking of a minor, and is serving a 20-year federal sentence. She told the court she would not formally oppose the Justice Departmentās request. But her lawyers argued that releasing grand jury transcripts containing āuntested and unproven allegationsā could influence public opinion to the extent that a fair retrialāshould she prevail on her forthcoming habeas petitionāwould be impossible. The Supreme Court rejected Maxwellās earlier attempt to overturn her conviction, but her attorney has signaled she intends to file another petition challenging the verdict.
The Justice Department has not yet announced a timetable for releasing the files, though the law requires publication by mid-December.
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