Maxwell May Testify, DOJ Rejects Epstein Client List
Maxwell May Testify, DOJ Rejects Epstein Client List

Maxwell May Testify, DOJ Rejects Epstein Client List

News summary

Ghislaine Maxwell, serving a 20-year sentence for her connection to Jeffrey Epstein's sex trafficking operations, has expressed willingness to testify before Congress and claims she was never offered a plea deal or asked to share her knowledge by authorities. Her legal team is appealing her conviction to the U.S. Supreme Court, arguing she was protected under a prior non-prosecution agreement. A Department of Justice memo from the Trump administration stated there is no 'Epstein client list' and no further prosecutions are expected, sparking public backlash and conspiracy theories about Epstein's 2019 death, which the DOJ maintains was a suicide. Prominent figures such as Donald Trump, Bill Clinton, and Prince Andrew have been linked to Epstein but not charged. Sources indicate there are no major revelations about Trump in the files, and political ally Roger Stone claims Maxwell's testimony would not implicate Trump. Ongoing questions about Epstein's death and missing evidence continue to fuel demands for transparency.

Story Coverage
Bias Distribution
83% Right
Information Sources
27aa3b97-dde4-4264-bee6-0c66d3641e743faf55e0-d733-4e1c-95a1-3f2ac979f7cd063d8d8a-1815-4b44-afcc-496fa18e9e2b605a98c4-d25e-430b-86c1-9232b14faa6b
+2
C
Right 83%
Coverage Details
Total News Sources
8
Left
0
Center
1
Right
5
Unrated
2
Last Updated
1 hour ago
Bias Distribution
83% Right
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