A judge dealt a blow to Ghislaine Maxwell's defense Monday during a pretrial hearing in Manhattan federal court, ruling that her alleged victims can testify anonymously at her upcoming trial.
U.S. District Judge Alison Nathan granted prosecutors' request to let witnesses testify under pseudonyms.
The jurist cited the sex-trafficking cases of Nxivm leader Keith Raniere and R&B singer R. Kelly in which victims were permitted to testify anonymously at their federal trials.
"Given the sensitive and inflammatory nature of the conduct alleged, such publicity may cause further harassment and embarrassment, and other alleged victims of sex crimes may be deterred from coming forward," Nathan said.
The judge also shot down the defense's request to bar prosecutors from using the word "victim" in front of the jury.
Maxwell, 59, appeared in person in the courtroom Monday wearing a white T-shirt, blue prison scrubs and a white mask. Due to the coronavirus pandemic, it was only the second time Maxwell had appeared in person in court since she was locked up. She watched as Nathan repeatedly ruled against her in a multitude of pretrial motions.
The beleaguered defendant spoke in court only once after her lawyer Bobbi Sternheim informed the judge that the defense team had not requested a plea offer. "I have not committed any crime," Maxwell declared.
After the four-hour proceeding wrapped up, Maxwell blew kisses to her sister Isabel Maxwell, who was seated in the gallery.
The British socialite has been behind bars since her July 2020 arrest on charges she recruited and groomed teen girls for financier Jeffrey Epstein and her to sexually abuse in the 1990s and early 2000s.
Jury selection is slated to begin later this week and opening arguments on Nov. 29. Nathan will conduct the jury questioning in open court as is standard in federal trials.
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Epstein, a convicted pedophile, hanged himself in 2019 in a Manhattan jail cell while awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges. Maxwell has denied the accusations against her and claimed that Epstein's suicide has made her the scapegoat for his crimes.
Her legal team has argued in court papers that she has been subjected to "jaw-droppingly appalling conditions" in jail and that biased press coverage has left her "tried, convicted and condemned in the court of public opinion."
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In December, a judge refused to release Maxwell on a $28.5 million bail package, saying she posed a flight risk.
Before the feds closed in, Maxwell had been living a quiet life with her tech-entrepreneur husband, Scott Borgerson, in Manchester-by-the-Sea outside Boston.