The Daily - The Next Chapter of the Epstein Story
Episode Date: July 26, 2019Maxwell’s yearslong relationship with Jeffrey Epstein has raised questions about what she may have known about the allegations of sex trafficking against him. Now, thousands of pages of sealed docum...ents stemming from their relationship are about to be made public. Guest: Megan Twohey, an investigative reporter for The New York Times. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily.Background reading:With Mr. Epstein under federal indictment on charges of sexually trafficking and abusing young girls, there are growing questions about his relationship with Ms. Maxwell. For more than a decade she helped manage Mr. Epstein’s homes, facilitate his social relationships and recruit masseuses, according to his former employees.
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From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro.
This is The Daily.
Today, Ghislaine Maxwell's years-long relationship
with Jeffrey Epstein has raised questions
about what she may have known
about allegations of sex trafficking against him.
Now, thousands of pages of sealed documents
stemming from their relationship
are about to be made public.
It's Friday, July 26th.
Megan Toohey, tell us about Ghislaine Maxwell.
So she is the daughter, she's one of nine children
born to a British media mogul named Robert Maxwell. So she is the daughter. She's one of nine children born to a British media
mogul named Robert Maxwell. She grew up in like a 50-room mansion in England. Her father sailed a
boat called the Lady Galene, presumably an indication that she was maybe one of his favorites.
And so she came up rubbing shoulders with kind of aristocrats and royalty
and really led a rich and charmed life in England.
And then in the early 90s came to New York, and the timing was remarkable.
That same year in 1991, her father tumbled off that boat to his death amidst mounting debt.
And later that year, it was revealed that he had also basically pillaged the pensions of his employees.
So she was basically getting a start in New York as her family fortune was disappearing and her family's name was in ruins.
And right around that time, she meets Jeffrey Epstein.
It's not clear exactly when their relationship maybe shifted from being romantic to not being romantic.
But what happened is as the allegations against Epstein started to surface in the mid-2000s,
there were also allegations that emerged against Maxwell.
2000s, there were also allegations that emerged against Maxwell.
The reporting on her that I did with my colleague, Jacob Bernstein, we found that one of the friends who socialized, who attended their dinner parties, said that Maxwell seemed to
be half ex-girlfriend, half employee, half best friend and fixer.
But you also have a couple of Epstein's accusers use much different language to describe her role.
One of them has described her as his madam.
Which is a way of saying that she was in charge of arranging sexual interactions.
Correct.
of arranging sexual interactions.
Correct.
So in Epstein's homes,
there were massage tables everywhere.
And he had what has been described as an insatiable appetite for massages.
One of the former employees
in the Palm Beach mansion described
as many as 200 masseuses being recruited
into the home over a several-year
period and said that Maxwell was oftentimes in charge of that recruitment and very active.
Those massages were, in some cases, cover for or a vehicle for the sexual abuse and exploitation
of underage girls. And so you've also had a couple of Epstein's accusers
say that they were
actually solicited by Maxwell
and that in a couple cases
she participated
in the sexual abuse herself.
So to the degree that
there was a kind of trafficking going on,
she was deeply involved.
According to several
of Epstein's accusers, yeah, they say that she was
in some ways central to the sexual trafficking of girls and young women. So what happens to
this relationship over time? So this relationship, as we understand it, carries on for years and
years until 2008, which is a very significant year in the Epstein story because that's the year at which he pleads guilty to soliciting a prostuted for the alleged crimes that they had committed against these many women, these many girls who were surf suits in which the young women were given assigned attorneys who then represented them in civil cases that were quickly struck in which Epstein made financial payments to them. And the names were shielded. They were called Jane Doe. The names were shielded. In many cases, there's minimal records from these cases now. But these
were the cases in which some of these additional allegations started to come out. So as early as
2009, one of the Epstein accusers who sued Epstein in one of these Jane Doe cases made her allegations
against Maxwell and said that she had been recruited by Maxwell and that, you know, she had basically forced her into sexual activity with Epstein. So as early as 2009, Maxwell becomes part of the public record of allegations. And Maxwell and Epstein go separate ways. And so they're not visibly attached anymore.
And so they're not visibly attached anymore.
But once Epstein finishes serving his 15-month jail sentence in Florida, you know, he comes back to New York, continues to be very visible here in New York society. And Maxwell continues to be very visible kind of in high society.
She's being photographed on the party circuit.
She's, you know, forming other kind of high-profile alliances and affiliations.
She had been friendly with the Clintons.
She attends Chelsea Clinton's wedding.
She attends Clinton Global Initiative events.
When I was a little girl, I grew up watching Jacques Cousteau on TV,
and I was mesmerized by the beauty of the ocean
and the colorful and magnetic fish that I saw on TV.
She has taken up the environmental cause,
presenting herself as a friend of the ocean.
The ocean is absolutely vital to all planetary life systems.
I call it the blue heart of the planet.
She gives a talk at a TED event,
and so she and Epstein, they are both continuing to,
by many measures, kind of carry on, in many ways unscathed by what's happened.
That starts to change a little bit for her after 2015.
We'll be right back.
What happened in 2015?
So 2015 is a significant turning point because that's the year that she actually gets directly sued by one of Epstein's accusers.
This woman who, as early as 2009, had been making these public allegations that Maxwell had been part of Epstein's predation and had recruited her into sexual exploitation.
You know, Maxwell had been denying that. She'd publicly said, this isn't true, those are lies.
And in 2015, that accuser says, actually, you know what,
Maxwell, when you called me a liar, you defamed me. So I'm now taking you to court. I'm suing you
for defamation. And so Maxwell becomes a direct defendant in that case. And that's the year that
she starts to kind of disappear from public view. She's now disappearing from those party photos.
The townhouse that she had been living
in here in New York ends up being sold in 2016. But what we know is that while she was kind of
dropping out of public view, in some ways, she was also having to deal with this case. And
ultimately, in 2017, she settled that case. Maxwell struck a confidential settlement
with her accuser. And as part of
the settlement, that case file was sealed. And when a case is sealed, that means no one can view it.
That's right. You can see some of the, like, I've got the original complaint here, and I've got
Maxwell's initial efforts to dismiss the complaint that was filed against her. But when it comes to
all of the supporting records that were submitted as her. But when it comes to all of the
supporting records that were submitted as part of the case as it moved forward over the course of
those two years, as these two people did battle, those records, those thousands and thousands and
thousands of pages of records were sealed and removed from public view.
And Megan, why is that relevant now?
Those records are about to be unsealed here in New York.
And when this case resulted in a confidential settlement in 2017, it was not surprising that those records were sealed.
That's what happens all the time in these civil cases, especially when there are very serious, intimate allegations that are made.
Oftentimes, that is a condition of
the settlements that are struck, that everything remains secret moving forward. But in this case,
you know, as of July 2019, this three-judge panel at the appeals court here in New York
determined that the public interest in seeing these records outweighed the private rights of
individuals seeking to keep them
confidential. I think that there is, however many years into this, a sense that the public deserves
an avenue to start to learn more about what's really happened and how it was covered up.
So in the two years since those documents were sealed, the balance of protecting Maxwell versus the public interest, that seems to
have tipped. That's right. And it's tipped quite substantially because this case involves thousands
and thousands and thousands of records that are going to be released in sort of two batches. But
at least as we understand it, in the first batch,
there's going to be as many as 2,000 records released. And these are records in which there
are allegations made not just against Maxwell, but also against other powerful, well-known people,
against Prince Andrew, against Harvard law professor Alan Dershowitz, who represented Epstein in his criminal case in 2008,
as well as unnamed, quote, numerous American politicians, powerful business executives,
foreign presidents, a well-known prime minister, and other world leaders.
Now, we can't be sure if the allegations are going to be that these people actually
participated in the sexual exploitation and predation, were witness to it.
But we know that there's going to be a lot of other allegations that are going to come
to light against many other figures outside of Maxwell and Epstein.
And these are not going to be allegations that have been vetted that have
resulted in criminal charges. These aren't figures who are defendants in this case who have had the
opportunity to respond in this particular case. And so things have tipped substantially,
and it's certain that it's going to be very explosive when they head.
Right. And of course, what some may see as a correction,
a necessary correction,
will be seen as others
as an overcorrection,
perhaps.
Everybody seems to have
a different perspective
on what the release
of these records
is going to mean
and for whom.
You know, for example,
Alan Dershowitz,
he says that he has been
wrongly and falsely accused
by the plaintiff
in this case,
that she lied
when she said that she had, you know,
was required to have sex with him as part of Epstein's network. And he's been in his own
separate legal battles with her. I was on the phone with him earlier today, and he's just saying,
I want all these records out. They're going to prove that I've been wrongly accused and that
the plaintiff in this case is not a reliable narrator. So a public figure who welcomes the release.
Who welcomes this, who says yes, yeah. It's interesting. You've got Helen Dershowitz saying
that these records need to release, and then you've got, you know, the attorney for the plaintiff in
this case, like David Boies, has also been counting down the days until these records
are released, saying that these are actually going to just shed more light on all of the terrible predation that
Epstein and Maxwell and others engaged in over the years. And that, you know, all these powerful
people should be basically running for cover because they're really going to be genuinely
implicated in this. And so you're getting a lot of different messages from a lot of different parties
about what these records are going to mean when they're released. Megan, I have no doubt from working with you for years
that you will proceed very cautiously and carefully
when these documents are ultimately released and you start to go through them.
But as you're going through them, what are you going to be looking for?
Well, I'm going to be looking for more of what we've already seen
in the past couple of weeks since Epstein was criminally charged here in New York, what we're seeing more and more of, and I'm sure that these records are going to also allow us to continue on this path, is to just see an expanding cast of characters who were in each other's orbits in like the 90s and 2000s here in New York and who either allegedly participated in the sexual exploitation
of women and girls or who witnessed it. And so I just have been struck with the reporting
that I've participated in going back to 2016. Michael, you and I investigated Trump's treatment
of women and, you know, pieced together some of the allegations of sexual misconduct, sexual assault that were made against him. You know, Jodi and I did the reporting on Harvey Weinstein,
in which we were piecing together, you know, decades of allegations of sexual harassment
and assault against him. And now there's the Epstein case that we're diving into. And what
you see is that these people moved within the same orbit in the same scenes. And so
even last week, people were trying to figure out the connections between Epstein and Trump
and placing them at these two parties that happened at Mar-a-Lago in the 90s with, you know,
young, beautiful women. And there was a moment where I realized, oh, my goodness, one of those
parties was actually the scene of an alleged
sexual assault by Trump, that in late 92 or early 93, Trump was doing business with two people who
worked in the beauty pageant business. You'll recall this. We did the reporting together,
Michael, like Jill Harth and George Harini. And so they actually had a party at Mar-a-Lago with the beauty contestants.
And I'd forgot this, but that Epstein was at that party that night.
And one of the business partners, Jill Hearth, claims that that night Trump tried to sexually assault her.
And last week when people were making the connections between Trump and Epstein in that particular party, I called Jill up and was like, wait a second, Jill, was this the same party where you claim that Trump tried to sexually assault you? And she said, yes.
And in fact, I remember in 2016, when we were doing this reporting and I talked to her for
the first time, she made the point then like, oh, you'll never guess who else was at that party that
night, Jeffrey Epstein. But that didn't mean much to you. I was like, oh, right. I think I sort of
know who Jeffrey Epstein is. So it's this moment last week where I was like, wait a second, that's But that didn't mean much to you. relationship that they had. And so I guess as a reporter who feels like I've kind of been a little
bit of a detective on, you know, the Trump story and then the Weinstein story and now Epstein,
you kind of feel like a detective who's been like working separate cases and you're starting to
wonder like, what are the connections between these? Are there any connections that go beyond
what meets the eye right now? And it sounds like these documents might show that there are even more connections.
I think that these documents at the very least are going to place more high profile figures into the orbit of interest in this story.
And that it just feels like step by step, month by month, we are starting to see the curtain pulled back.
We are starting to see the curtain pulled back and that there have been kind of rich, powerful men who have been able to engage in alleged predatory behavior for years and have been able to conceal the allegations that have surfaced over time. But that we are starting to see more of the allegations and the methods brought to light.
I'm struck that it's through this case against a woman who seems to have been part of the system
herself, allegedly, that we may learn about that.
Right. Well, you know, this was also the case with Weinstein, that when you go beyond the
individual alleged predator and you start to look at the circle of those around him, that what comes into focus are kind of a variety of alleged enablers that include women as well as men.
Thanks, Megan.
Thank you.
On Thursday night, the Times reported on Jeffrey Epstein's unusually close friendship with another wealthy and powerful man, Leslie Wexner,
whose clothing empire has included the limited Abercrombie & Fitch and Victoria's Secret.
Employees of Wexner's company complained that Epstein, using his friendship with Wexner,
had posed as a recruiter for Victoria's Secret and, in the 1990s, allegedly assaulted a young
woman trying to become a model for the company after asking her to meet him in a hotel room
for an audition. Wexner was alerted about the allegations.
Nevertheless, Epstein remained his financial advisor,
overseeing Wexner's fortune,
real estate holdings, and philanthropy.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
The Senate Intelligence Committee has concluded that in 2016,
Russia targeted election systems in all 50 states
in attacks that went undetected at the time.
While no votes were changed,
the committee found that Russian hackers were nonetheless
in a position
to alter or delete voter data. It's very important that we maintain the integrity
and the security of our elections in our country. Any Washington involvement in that task needs to
be undertaken with extreme care and on a thoroughly bipartisan basis. Obviously, this legislation is not that.
The finding was disclosed hours after Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell blocked consideration
of a series of bills that would strengthen the security of the U.S. election system,
drawing a rebuke from Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer.
If we lose faith in our electoral process, democracy begins to walk away from us and
we'll be a different country than the glorious country we've been since 1789.
And yet, our Republican colleagues put their heads in the sand.
And yet, our Republican colleagues put their heads in the sand. And after weeks of secret negotiations, four of the world's biggest automakers have struck a deal with the state of California to produce more fuel-efficient cars for the U.S.
in a rejection of the Trump administration's effort to roll back pollution standards.
effort to roll back pollution standards. The Trump administration has promised to make it easier for car companies to make less efficient cars than President Obama, but California vowed
to still require Obama's stricter standards, complicating carmakers' production process.
In the end, the four companies, Ford, Volkswagen, Honda, and BMW, chose California over the Trump administration.
Claire Tennesketter, Paige Cowett, Michael Simon-Johnson, Brad Fisher, Larissa Anderson,
Wendy Dorr, Chris Wood, Jessica Chung, Alexandra Lee Young, Jonathan Wolfe, Lisa Chow, Eric Krupke,
Mark George, Luke Vanderplug, Adiza Egan, Kelly Prime, Julia Longoria, Sindhu Jnanasambandam, and Jasmine Aguilera.
Our theme music is by Jim Brunberg and Ben Landsberg of Wonderly.
Special thanks to Sam Dolnick, Michaela Bouchard, Stella Tan, and Julia Simon.
That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Barbaro.
See you on Monday.