Thursday, December 2, 2021

JOE BIDEN - I'VE BEEN AT IT FOR 50 YEARS! NEVER GOING TO PRISON AND NEITHER IS HUNTER OR JIM! BUT MAYBE JILL WILL SEE SOME TIME.

 

'Laptop from Hell' lays out explosive Hunter Biden scandals




Miranda Devine: 'Real corruption' going on with Biden family l Brian Kilmeade Show



“Protect and enrich.” This is a perfect encapsulation of the Clinton Foundation and the Obama book and television deals. Then there is the Biden family corruption, followed closely behind by similar abuses of power and office by the Warren and Sanders families, as Peter Schweizer described in his recent book “Profiles in Corruption.” These names just scratch the surface of government corruption.                              BRIAN C JOONDEPH


IS JOE BIDEN THE MOST CORRUPT POLITICIAN IN AMERICAN HISTORY?

50 YEARS OF INFLUENCE PEDDLING AND BRIBES SUCKING BY THE BIDEN CRIME FAMILY.

 AND HIS LIES JUST KEPT POURING OUT!

Biden lied when he denied knowledge of Hunter’s businesses deals: Devine

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=680-KEfZuT8

Joe Concha blasts media over Hunter Biden diamond scandal: 'He is untouchable'

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L80nVRtiUoc

New details further link Hunter Biden to China’s payroll

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XgVOirLNWpw

I'm Going To Highlight A New Hunter Biden Record...': Grassley Goes After POTUS Son On Senate Floor

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uY_UrM8TvGE

This is Biden's biggest problem: Steve Moore

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FqP7hPQACFA

HUNTER AND JOE BIDEN: CHINA'S RENT BOYS!

Hunter Biden will be a top priority for Republicans: Rep. Comer

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8AumMMgIGNs'

'The Five' knock Biden for reassuring Dems he's running for reelection

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V0zYoaV9VOs

America sees two weak leaders in the White House: Mercedes Schlapp

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iVL-8P82_20

 Naïve American people had no idea what they were getting with Biden: A senile, corrupt, debauched old man with a son who was a conduit for his dirty dealings and who has a personal life so disgusting it’s hard to write about it. That’s what the American media and the tech tyrants have done to America. ANDREA WIDBURG


New Hunter Biden revelation undermines president's comments: Turley

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GCk4RlPkFSQ

Bidens of all sorts are under federal investigation for tax evasion, money-laundering, and unregistered agent foreign ties, as this Politico report citing Hunter notes.

THE BIDEN KLEPTOCRACY

 

RIDING THE DRAGON: The Bidens' Chinese Secrets (Full Documentary)

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JRmlcEBAiIs

 

Chris Hedges: How Republicans, Democrats, and the Media Have Weakened US Democracy


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B2jyzp09_g8

 

Schweizer: ‘It’s Going to Be Business as Usual’ for Hunter’s Dealings

https://www.breitbart.com/clips/2021/01/20/schweizer-its-going-to-be-business-as-usual-for-hunters-dealings/

 

IAN HANCHETT

20 Jan 20212,342

0:52

On Wednesday’s broadcast of the Fox News Channel’s “Hannity,” Breitbart News senior contributor Peter Schweizer said he reads President Biden’s statements about his son Hunter’s deals as a declaration that “it’s going to be business as usual in the Biden administration as far as these deals are concerned.”

Schweizer said, “Joe Biden has said there are going to be no sketchy overseas deals during his second term. Here’s the problem: He does not believe that the early deals that Hunter was involved in, the China deal, Burisma, he’s never described those as sketchy. So, I read that as saying, it’s going to be business as usual in the Biden administration as far as these deals are concerned.”

Corrupti-looza: Biden family wastes no time profiting from public office

By Monica Showalter

In one-party states such as the old PRI-ruled Mexico, the stealing tended to start late. Before a Mexican president was escorted out for the next, he and his would sweep the presidential palace for everything not nailed down -- the lightbulbs, the toilet seats, the doorknobs and more. There were exceptions, but it was generally the known narrative. In more than one Latin American country, the last-minute asset grab on the way out actually had a name -- "La Pinata." After all, as former PRI mayor of Mexico City, Carlos Hank Gonzalez, used to say: "A politician who's poor is a poor politician." 

Which brings us to Joe Biden, and his family's unusually fast scramble to profit from his public office right out the gate.

Son Hunter still has his 10% China equity fund stake, contrary to what had been reported, and a new art gig just perfect for bringing in money from non-transparent sources, as the New York Post, in this excellent report notes, all because his blow-pipe 'art' done as his personal art therapy is somehow so very valuable. 

Brother Frank, meanwhile, is advertising his connections to old Joe for Florida law firm he's connected with, using Joe's name in a bid to drum up business. As New York Post columnist Michael Goodwin reported:

The latest sordid example involves one of Joe’s younger brothers, Frank Biden, appearing in a Florida law firm’s ad — on Inauguration Day no less. The ad used the president’s name to draw attention to the Berman Law Group’s class-action suit against sugar cane growers.

“The two Biden brothers have long held a commitment to pushing environmental issues to the forefront,” says the ad. “The president-elect has vowed to rejoin the Paris Agreement and wants to set ambitious greenhouse gas reduction targets.”

The ad, first reported by CNBC, appeared in the Daily Business Review and carried a picture of Frank Biden and quotes him saying, “My brother is a model for how to go about doing this work.”

How touching. And shameless. 

Brother James hasn't changed any, still under federal investigation for a hospital company that feds say isn't being run properly. 

Bidens of all sorts are under federal investigation for tax evasion, money-laundering, and unregistered agent foreign ties, as this Politico report citing Hunter notes.

And it seems to be having a knock-on effect as Vice President Kamala Harris's stepdaughter, Ella Emhoff, an art student (which generally isn't the most employable of professions), has suddenly gotten a fancy modeling contract, to be a 'style icon,' which hadn't been her forte until the establishment noticed she was close to power. Now they're gushing about her, selling her as stylish as emperor's new clothes. Kamala Harris, meanwhile, might just owe someone a favor. 

It's happening, Goodwin observes, because the Bidens have been doing it for decades, and never with any consequences. Now that Joe's 'the big guy' and not a mere vice president, for them it's all the better.

Which is true enough as far as it goes, but still doesn't entirely explain the speed of the influence-peddling and pocket-lining -- why, contrary to the Mexican and Latin American model -- did the rush to grab money start on day one? 

With these questionable acts starting early -- despite Joe's call to brother Frank to 'watch yourself,' what seems a distinct possibility is that the family members think the gig is not going to last so the time to act is now.

Maybe they're betting Joe isn't going to last for one reason or another. That might explain why they are rushing to scarf up all they can without covering their tracks. They're like fund managers divesting a stock  --- quickly, and all at once. Fund managers buy stocks quietly and gradually on expectations the price will go up, but when they think it's heading down, they don't play around, they dump it all at once and don't care who's watching.

That kind of desperation seems to be evident in House Biden's quick bid to cash in all at once, too. Do they know something we don't? Do they expect their window of opportunity will be short? How is it they can jump up so fast to cash in, even against warnings from Joe, who after all, assured the voters last fall with this malarkey:  

“My son, my family will not be involved in any business, any enterprise that is in conflict with or appears to be in conflict, with inappropriate distance from the presidency and government,” he said.

Even with the spotlight on, for them, it's as if the walls are closing in and Gotterdammerung is beckoning. If that's not a vote of low confidence in the durability of Joe and his presidency, what really is?

Image: Screen shot from a camera aimed at a television set, processed with FotoSketcher.

BIDEN AND KAMALA HAVE LONG WATCHED BILLARY AND HILLARY AND THE OLD WHORE FEINSTEIN SUCK OFF THE BRIBES AND DEALS THAT MADE THEM FILTHY RICH TRAITORS


THERE IS NO GREATER PARASITIC CLASS FEEDING ON AMERICA THAN THE LAWYER CLASS! JUST ASK LAWYER JOE  BIDEN, LAWYER HUNTER BIDEN LAWYER FRANK BIDEN AND LAWYER KAMALA HARRIS AND HER LAWYER PARASITE HUSBAND.

Frank Biden’s law firm, The Berman Law Group, promoted his relationship to President Biden in an advertisement on Inauguration Day.

Report– Joe Biden Warned Brother Frank: ‘For Christ’s Sake, Watch Yourself’

AP Photo/Evan Vucci

CHARLIE SPIERING

28 Jan 2021109

1:45

President Joe Biden cautioned his brother Frank about potential business dealings during his campaign for president, according to a report.

“For Christ’s sake, watch yourself,” Biden said according to a report in Politico. “Don’t get sucked into something that would, first of all, hurt you.”

Politico cited a “person with knowledge of the conversation” in its report and said that Biden was “jocular and serious” in his comment to his brother.

Biden’s intention, Politico reports, was to protect his brother from “being hurt and vilified” because of his connections to the president.

Since Biden’s inauguration, questions about members of his family have been raised regarding their business dealings, especially after Republicans questioned his son Hunter Biden’s business deals with foreign countries during the campaign.

Frank Biden’s law firm, The Berman Law Group, promoted his relationship to President Biden in an advertisement on Inauguration Day.

“The two Biden brothers have long held a commitment to pushing environmental issues to the forefront; the president-elect has vowed to rejoin the Paris Agreement and wants to set ambitious greenhouse gas reduction targets, for example,” the ad read.

A White House official responded to the story by warning that Joe Biden’s name should not be used in any commercial advertisement.

“It is this White House’s policy that the President’s name should not be used in connection with any commercial activities to suggest, or in any way that could reasonably understood to imply, his endorsement or support,” the official told CNBC in January.

 

 

 

 

Emails Reveal Hunter Biden’s Relationship With Shadowy Chinese Tycoon

Wednesday, October 13th, 2021

Biden acknowledged the businessman's interest 'has everything to do with my last name'

 

 

Hunter Biden Requested More Than $2 Million To Unfreeze Libyan Assets When Dad Was VP

Thursday, September 23rd, 2021

 

 

New York Times Deletes ‘Unsubstantiated’ Claim on Hunter Biden Laptop Story

Tuesday, September 14th, 2021

Hunter Biden laptop report is extensively substantiated

 

 

Hunter Biden Art Dealer Served Jail Time and Allegedly Defrauded Investor

Thursday, August 26th, 2021

White House tapped Georges Bergès to vet art sales for ethical conflicts

 

 

White House Wants Maximum Secrecy for Hunter Biden Art Deal

Thursday, July 8th, 2021

Ethics experts concerned buyers could gain White House influence

 

 

Hunter Biden Consulted for Oil Man Connected to Notorious Congolese Warlord, Emails Show

Tuesday, July 6th, 2021

David Axelrod's son helped connect mogul with multiple ambassadors

 

 

Hunter Biden-Linked Law Firm Dodged Lobbying Disclosures for Burisma Work

Tuesday, June 29th, 2021

Emails from Biden's laptop reveal relationship with Boies Schiller Flexner

 

 

DOJ Nominee Worked with Hunter Biden at Law Firm Tied To Ukrainian Energy Giant

Monday, June 21st, 2021

Hunter Biden laptop emails indicate he attended private dinner with DOJ nominee Hampton Dellinger

 

 

Hunter Biden Art Sales Raise Alarm With Ethics Watchdogs

Monday, June 21st, 2021

Sales could leave Biden admin vulnerable to foreign influence

 

 

Hunter Biden Facilitated Deal for Democratic Consultants Now Under Federal Investigation

Wednesday, June 9th, 2021

Emails show Biden served as conduit between Burisma Holdings and Blue Star Strategies

 

DONALD TRUMP: DOCUMENTED MORON

ONE REALLY GETS AN IDEA OF HOW UTTERLY CORRUPT OUR COUNTRY IS WHEN IT COMES TO PROTECTING WHITE-COLLAR CRIMINALS LIKE THIS PIG TRUMP WHOSE ENTIRE LIFE HAS BEEN SPENT STEALING FROM EVERYONE HE'S EVER SPOKEN TO AND THEN HIDING HIS CRIMES IN BANKRUPTCY COURTS.

Trump's 30 Biggest Broken Promises | Robert Reich



Donald Trump Book REJECTED by ALL Publishers



Trump's Post-White House Grift



Trump 'Will Likely Be Indicted Between Now And 2024 More Than Once'



Trump faces flurry of investigations beyond Jan. 6 probe

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NEW YORK (AP) — As Donald Trump's lawyers try to block the White House from releasing records to the congressional committee investigating the Jan. 6 Capitol insurrection, the former president faces a flurry of other investigations that could come to a head in the coming weeks and the new year.

That includes two major state criminal investigations — one in New York and one in Georgia — and lawsuits concerning sexual assault allegations, a fight over an inheritance and questions of whether he should be held personally liable for inciting the insurrection.

Trump has long dismissed the investigations as nothing more than a politically motivated “witch hunt” that began with the probe into Russian meddling in the 2016 election. But while Trump has spent most of his life dodging legal consequences, he is no longer shielded by the protections against indictment enjoyed by sitting presidents. And any charges — which would be the first against a former president in the nation's history — could affect both his businesses and his future political prospects as he mulls running for a second term.

Here's the latest on where the cases stand:

NEW YORK

New York prosecutors are investigating the former president's business dealings and recently convened a new grand jury to hear evidence after the previous panel’s term ran out.

The Manhattan district attorney’s office is weighing whether to seek more indictments in the case, which resulted in tax fraud charges in July against Trump’s company, the Trump Organization, and its longtime chief financial officer, Allen Weisselberg. They are accused of cheating tax authorities through lucrative, untaxed fringe benefits.

Weisselberg is due back in court in July 2022.

Trump himself remains under investigation after District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr., who is leaving office at the end of the year, spent years fighting to access the former president's tax records. Prosecutors have also been considering whether to seek charges against the company’s chief operating officer, Matthew Calamari Sr.

Investigators working for Vance and New York Attorney General Letitia James have spent more than two years looking at whether the Trump Organization misled banks or tax officials about the value of the company’s assets, inflating them to gain favorable loan terms or minimizing them to reap tax savings.

“I think it’s pretty clear that our investigation is active and ongoing,” Vance said Tuesday.

James’ office is involved in Vance’s criminal probe and is conducting its own civil investigation.

Separately, Trump is facing scrutiny over properties he owns in the New York City suburbs. Westchester County District Attorney Mimi E. Rocah subpoenaed records from the town of Ossining as it investigates whether Trump’s company misled officials to cut taxes for a golf course there, two people familiar with the probe told The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly on the matter.

GEORGIA

In Atlanta, Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis opened an investigation in January into possible attempts to interfere with the administration of the state's 2020 election, which Trump narrowly lost.

In letters sent in February to top elected officials in the state — including Gov. Brian Kemp and Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger — Willis instructed them to preserve all records related to the election, particularly those that may contain evidence of attempts to influence election officials.

The investigation includes a Jan. 2 phone call between Trump and Raffensperger in which Trump repeatedly and falsely asserts that the Republican secretary of state could change the certified results of the presidential election. A recording of the call was obtained the next day by multiple news organizations, including The Associated Press.

“I just want to find 11,780 votes, which is one more than we have,” Trump said. “Because we won the state.”

Willis has been relatively tight-lipped about the investigation, but her office has confirmed it is ongoing.

"All available evidence is being analyzed, whether gathered by this office, another investigative body or made public by the witnesses themselves. A decision on whether criminal charges are appropriate against any individual will be made when that process is complete,” spokesperson Jeff DiSantis said in an email.

Among the sources sure to be examined by Willis' team is a book written by Raffensperger and published Nov. 2. It includes a transcript of the Jan. 2 call with Trump annotated with the secretary of state's observations, including his belief that the president was threatening him at multiple points.

Willis earlier this year said she was also interested in the circumstances surrounding the sudden resignation on Jan. 4 of Bjay Pak, the U.S. attorney in Atlanta. Pak told the Senate Judiciary Committee that he had originally planned to stay in the position until Inauguration Day, Jan. 20, but resigned weeks earlier because of pressure from Trump.

WASHINGTON

The attorney general for the District of Columbia, Karl Racine, said early this year that district prosecutors were investigating Trump's role in the Jan. 6 insurrection and considering whether to charge him under a local law that criminalizes statements that motivate people to act violently.

There has been no indication, however, that that is likely. If Trump were to be charged, it would be a low-level misdemeanor, with a maximum sentence of six months in jail.

LAWSUITS

In addition to the criminal probes underway, Trump also faces a number of civil suits, from scorned business investors, to his estranged niece, to Democratic lawmakers and Capitol Police officers who blame him for inciting the violence on Jan. 6.

That includes a lawsuit brought by the House Homeland Security chair, Democratic Rep. Bennie Thompson, under a Reconstruction-era law called the Ku Klux Klan Act of 1871, which prohibits violence or intimidation meant to prevent members of Congress or other federal officials from carrying out their constitutional duties.

In October, Trump was questioned behind closed doors under oath in a deposition for a lawsuit brought by protesters who say his security team assaulted them outside Trump Tower in the early days of his presidential campaign in 2015.

Trump is also facing a defamation case brought by columnist E. Jean Carroll, who says Trump raped her in the mid-1990s in an upscale Manhattan department store. Trump has said that Carroll is “totally lying” and that she is “not my type.” U.S. Justice Department lawyers argued earlier this year that Trump cannot be held personally liable for “crude and disrespectful” remarks he made about a woman who accused him of rape because he made the comments while he was president. The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals is set to hear oral arguments in the case Friday.

Trump had faced a similar defamation lawsuit from Summer Zervos, a former “Apprentice” contestant who had accused Trump of kissing and groping her against her will in 2007, but she unexpectedly dropped the suit last month.

Separately, Trump's estranged niece, Mary Trump, has sued him and other family members, accusing them of defrauding her of millions of dollars of inheritance money. Trump has filed his own suit against Mary Trump and The New York Times over a 2018 story about his family’s finances that was based partly on confidential documents she provided to the paper. He accuses her of breaching a settlement agreement that barred her from disclosing the documents.

Lawyers for Mary Trump filed paperwork Thursday seeking to dismiss her uncle’s lawsuit against her.

___

Brumback reported from Atlanta. Associated Press writers Bernard Condon in New York and Eric Tucker in Washington contributed to this report.

 
 
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Trump Slams Meghan Markle for ‘Disrespecting’ Queen, ‘Horribly’ Using Harry

Britain's Queen Elizabeth II (R) laughs with US President Donald Trump during a State Banquet in the ballroom at Buckingham Palace in central London on June 3, 2019, on the first day of the US president and First Lady's three-day State Visit to the UK. - Britain rolled out the …
DOMINIC LIPINSKI/POOL/AFP via Getty Images
3:38

Former U.S. President Donald J. Trump has criticised Meghan Markle for being “disrespectful” to Queen Elizabeth II and for “using” her husband, Prince Harry, during a Nigel Farage interview to be aired on Wednesday night.

Excerpts of the interview to be aired on GB News during a special episode entitled Farage: The Trump Interview revealed the Anglophile former President speak of his respect for Queen Elizabeth II, who he had visited with twice during official trips to the UK during his term in office, and criticised Meghan the Duchess of Sussex for being “disrespectful” to the 95-year-old Monarch.

“I think she’s been very disrespectful to the Queen, who’s such a great woman, such a great person, a historic person.

“I think she’s very disrespectful to the Royal Family and most importantly to the Queen,” former President Trump told Nigel Farage in comments previewed by UK newspaper the Daily Mail.

Accusations have been levelled at the woke royals of disrespecting the Queen since their abrupt announcement that they would be withdrawing from public duties in January 2019, and particularly for their tell-all interview with Oprah Winfrey earlier this year, during which they made allegations about the Royal Family including of racism and neglecting Meghan when she was experiencing mental health issues.

“I’m not a fan of hers. I wasn’t from day one,” Mr Trump said of the TV actress turned royal, continuing to tell Nigel Farage: “I think Harry has been used horribly and I think some day he will regret it.

“I think Harry’s been used and been used terribly. I think it’s ruined his relationship with his family, and it hurts the Queen.”

There have been reports of an ongoing rift between Prince Harry and brother Prince William, which likely were exasperated following other interviews since returning to bury his grandfather, the Duke of Edinburgh, including insinuating Prince Charles was a bad father.

Mr Trump also said Meghan’s behaviour had been “very inappropriate” after she had lobbied Congress using Sussex-branded headed paper over issues such as paternity leave, signing off one letter, “Meghan, The Duchess of Sussex”, sparking claims Meghan had used her royal title to meddle in American politics.

“She is trying to do things that I think are very inappropriate,” the former President said during the interview recorded in Florida on Monday.

This is not the first time Mr Trump clashed with Meghan. In June 2019, then-President Trump expressed surprise when confronted by previous comments from Markle who said she would move to Canada if Trump were elected president, calling her remarks “nasty”.

Last September, Mr Trump was more blunt in his criticism of the Duchess of Sussex, saying he was “not a fan of hers, and I would say this, and she has probably heard that”.

“I wish a lot of luck to Harry. Because he’s going to need it,” Mr Trump added.

During his time in office, the half-Scottish heritage Mr Trump had often expressed his affection for the United Kingdom, the Special Relationship, and the Queen, having called her a “fantastic woman” and “wonderful lady” when he first met her during a working visit in July 2018.

Farage: The Trump Interview will air on GB News on Wednesday the 1st of December at 7 pm UK time, and will be conducted by Brexit leader Nigel Farage, with whom the former President has maintained a friendship for several years.

“As ever, Donald Trump doesn’t hold back, and tells you what he thinks,” Mr Farage said on Tuesday ahead of the interview.

Jeffrey Epstein’s Former Pilot Testifies Clinton, Trump Flew Aboard Epstein’s Private Plane

Acting US Attorney for the Southern District of New York, Audrey Strauss, announces charges against Ghislaine Maxwell during a July 2, 2020, press conference in New York City. - Maxwell, the former girlfriend of late financier Jeffrey Epstein, was arrested in the United States on July 2, 2020, by FBI …
Johannes Eisele/AFP/Getty Images
3:58

NEW YORK (AP) — A longtime pilot for Jeffrey Epstein told a jury Tuesday at Ghislaine Maxwell’s sex trafficking trial that he never saw evidence of sexual activity on planes as he flew his boss and others — including a prince and ex-presidents — for nearly three decades.

Lawrence Paul Visoski Jr., the trial’s first witness, was responding to questions by a defense lawyer when he acknowledged that he never encountered sexual activity aboard two jets he piloted on roughly 1,000 trips between 1991 and 2019.

He said he stayed in the cockpit for the majority of flights but would sometimes emerge to go to the bathroom or get coffee.

Although he was called as a witness by the government, Visoski’s testimony seemed to aid the defense of Maxwell as he answered questions posed by Maxwell attorney Christian Everdell about what he saw when he straightened up the aircraft after a flight.

Visoski didn’t hesitate when Everdell asked him if he ever saw sexual activity when he went for coffee or found sex toys when he cleaned up.

“Never,” the pilot answered to both questions. He said he never saw used condoms either.

And when he was asked if he ever saw sex acts with underage females, he answered: “Absolutely not.”

The pilot said Epstein never warned him to stay in the cockpit during flights and also encouraged him to use a bathroom near the rear of the plane that would require him to walk past the plane’s couches.

He said he never saw any children on his planes who were not accompanied by their parents.

When Everdell asked him about a teenager who prosecutors say was sexually abused by Epstein before she became an adult, Visoski said he believed she was “mature” when he was introduced to her.

He also acknowledged that Clinton was a passenger on a few flights in the 2000s and he had piloted planes with Britain’s Prince Andrew, the late U.S. Sen. John Glenn of Ohio — the first American to orbit Earth — and former presidents Donald Trump and Bill Clinton, “more than once.”

Visoski said Epstein gave him 40 acres of land to build a house on the financier’s New Mexico property and paid for his daughters’ college education.

Epstein’s plane was derisively nicknamed “The Lolita Express” by some in the media after allegations emerged that he had used it to fly teenage girls to his private island, his New Mexico ranch, and his New York City townhouse.

Flight records, made public as part of civil litigation, also showed that Epstein had used the plane to fly celebrities, influential academics, and politicians around the globe.

Luminaries who flew with Epstein have had to beat back speculation that their presence on the flights meant they must have been aware of the millionaire’s crimes. Clinton, like others who took rides from Epstein, has said he was unaware of any misconduct.

Maxwell, 59, traveled for decades in circles that put her in contact with accomplished and wealthy people before her July 2020 arrest.

Asked by Assistant U.S. Attorney Maurene Comey where Maxwell stood in the hierarchy of Epstein’s world, Visoski said Maxwell “was the Number 2.” He added that “Epstein was the big Number 1.”

The testimony supports what Assistant U.S. Attorney Lara Pomerantz told jurors in her opening statement Monday when she said Epstein and Maxwell were “partners in crime.”

Pomerantz said Maxwell recruited and groomed girls for Epstein to sexually abuse from 1994 to at least 2004.

Maxwell has pleaded not guilty and one of her lawyers said in an opening statement Monday that she’s being made a scapegoat for Epstein, who killed himself in his Manhattan jail cell at age 66 in August 2019 as he awaited a sex trafficking trial.

Visoski testified briefly on Monday before beginning Tuesday on the witness stand.

Prince Andrew is named for the first time in Ghislaine Maxwell trial by pilot who confirms he WAS on 'Lolita Express' private jet that also carried Donald Trump, Bill Clinton and Kevin Spacey

  • Prince Andrew, 61, seemed in high spirits as he rode through Windsor and drove his Range Rover this morning 
  • Photos of the Duke emerged just hours after Ghislaine Maxwell's sex trafficking trial began in New York 
  • Andrew has been accused by Jeffrey Epstein 'sex slave' Virginia Giuffre of raping her - allegations he denies
  • Epstein's pilot Larry Vososki said in damning testimony that Prince Andrew flew on the paedophile's plane 
  • Giuffre described Epstein's former 'madam' as a 'Mary Poppins' figure who recruited young girls for Epstein
  • Maxwell, who was dubbed a 'dangerous predator' in court, is known to have introduced Andrew to Epstein

Prince Andrew was dragged into the Ghislaine Maxwell sex trafficking trial yesterday as one of several high-profile names who flew on the private jets of paedophile Jeffrey Epstein.

Epstein’s chief pilot told how he flew a string of VIPs including the Duke of York, Bill Clinton and Donald Trump, along with disgraced actor Kevin Spacey, on the financier’s luxury fleet.

After it was thought Maxwell may try to protect her friends in high places, it was her own lawyer who introduced the topic of Andrew.

In the court in New York, Christian Everdell asked pilot Larry Visoski: ‘Are you aware of Prince Andrew, the Duke of York, he is the son of Queen Elizabeth II of England?’

The pilot said: ‘Yes.’

Mr Everdell said: ‘Did he fly on Epstein’s planes?’

Again Mr Visoski said yes, but could not recall when.

During his testimony Mr Visoski described Maxwell as Epstein’s ‘number two’ when asked by prosecutor Maurene Comey what place she occupied in the paedophile’s ‘hierarchy’. Epstein, he said, was ‘definitely number one’.

The pilot, the trial’s first witness, said he was used to flying high-profile passengers but that he never encountered sexual activity aboard three jets he piloted for Epstein during roughly 1,000 trips between 1991 and 2019.

Prince Andrew (pictured yesterday enjoying an early morning ride at Windsor) was dragged into the Ghislaine Maxwell sex trafficking trial yesterday as one of several high-profile names who flew on the private jets of paedophile Jeffrey Epstein

Prince Andrew (pictured yesterday enjoying an early morning ride at Windsor) was dragged into the Ghislaine Maxwell sex trafficking trial yesterday as one of several high-profile names who flew on the private jets of paedophile Jeffrey Epstein 

Epstein¿s chief pilot told how he flew a string of VIPs including Donald Trump (pictured together in 2000) on Epstein's planes

Epstein’s chief pilot told how he flew a string of VIPs including Donald Trump (pictured together in 2000) on Epstein's planes

Donald Trump, pictured with Melania, while Prince Andrew, centre, stands in front of Jeffrey Epstein, while Ghislaine Maxwell, right walks into frame

Donald Trump, pictured with Melania, while Prince Andrew, centre, stands in front of Jeffrey Epstein, while Ghislaine Maxwell, right walks into frame

Former US President Bill Clinton, pictured boarding Jeffrey Epstein's private jet along with Ghislaine Maxwell

Former US President Bill Clinton, pictured boarding Jeffrey Epstein's private jet along with Ghislaine Maxwell

Mr Trump flew ‘a number of times’, he said. The pilot recalled how he would have to make the aircraft ‘look nice’ for Mr Clinton.

Mr Visoski said he stayed in the cockpit for the majority of flights, but would sometimes emerge to go to the bathroom or get coffee.

Although he was called as a witness by the US government, the pilot’s testimony seemed to aid the defence of Maxwell as he answered questions from Mr Everdell about what he saw when he checked the planes over after a flight.

Mr Visoski didn’t hesitate when Mr Everdell asked him if he ever saw sexual activity aboard Epstein’s Gulfstream G2B or Boeing 727 jets or found sex toys when he cleaned the planes up.

‘Never,’ the pilot answered to both questions. He said he never saw used condoms either. And when he was asked if he ever saw sex acts with under-age females, he answered: ‘Absolutely not.’

The pilot said Epstein never warned him to stay in the cockpit during flights and also encouraged him to use a bathroom near the rear of the plane that would require him to walk past the aircraft’s couches. He said he never saw any children on his planes who were not accompanied by their parents.

On the second day in New York, Pilot Larry Visoski said during the trial of Ghislaine Maxwell how he could recall having to make Epstein's planes 'look nice' for US President Clinton (pictured with Epstein and Maxwell at the White House in 1993)

On the second day in New York, Pilot Larry Visoski said during the trial of Ghislaine Maxwell how he could recall having to make Epstein's planes 'look nice' for US President Clinton (pictured with Epstein and Maxwell at the White House in 1993)

The scene was a world away from the packed court room which greeted his friend Maxwell last night as she faced allegations of recruiting minors for Jeffrey Epstein to sexually abuse from 1994 to 2004

The scene was a world away from the packed court room which greeted his friend Maxwell last night as she faced allegations of recruiting minors for Jeffrey Epstein to sexually abuse from 1994 to 2004

The Boeing has been dubbed the ‘Lolita Express’ amid claims Epstein flew under-age girls around the world to sexually abuse them, including at his ranch in New Mexico and private island in the Caribbean.

Maxwell, 59, is accused of grooming young girls and sex trafficking them to be ‘served up’ to be assaulted by her powerful boyfriend Epstein.

Her trial will feature four women who allege she facilitated Epstein’s sexual abuse of them. She denies all of the charges.

Yesterday the chief pilot said that while he remembered the famous names, he had no recollection of three of the accusers, known in court as Annie, Kate and Carolyn.

The other woman, known as Jane, was allegedly just 14 when Maxwell trapped her in a nightmare of abuse that lasted years.

Mr Visoski said he remembered meeting Jane in the mid to late 1990s but did not know how old she was. He told jurors: ‘Mr Epstein brought her to the cockpit and introduced her to me.’

The Duke of York, 61, appeared to be in high spirits and was joined by three others on his ride through Windsor, the scene a world away from the packed court room which greeted his friend Ghislaine Maxwell (sketched in court on Monday) last night as she faced allegations of recruiting minors for Jeffrey Epstein to sexually abuse from 1994 to 2004

The Duke of York, 61, appeared to be in high spirits and was joined by three others on his ride through Windsor, the scene a world away from the packed court room which greeted his friend Ghislaine Maxwell (sketched in court on Monday) last night as she faced allegations of recruiting minors for Jeffrey Epstein to sexually abuse from 1994 to 2004

Andrew, who was also seen driving his Range Rover this morning, has been accused by Epstein sex slave Virginia Giuffre of raping her, allegations which he denies

Andrew, who was also seen driving his Range Rover this morning, has been accused by Epstein sex slave Virginia Giuffre of raping her, allegations which he denies

He said she had ‘piercing powder-blue eyes’, but added: ‘She looked like a mature woman.’ Mr Everdell asked him: ‘You remember she had large breasts?’ The pilot replied: ‘She was a mature woman... like she was in her twenties.’

The court was shown photos of the luxury airliners Epstein owned, along with his array of homes. Mr Visoski said Epstein gave him 40 acres of his New Mexico estate to build a house on and paid for his daughters’ college education.  

The shocking claim that Prince Andrew was onboard the paedophile Epstein's private jet comes as the Duke of York was pictured grinning while riding his horse through Windsor on Tuesday morning - just hours after Maxwell's trial began in New York.

The Duke of York, 61, appeared to be in high spirits and was joined by three others on his ride through Windsor, the scene a world away from the packed court room which greeted his friend Maxwell last night as she faced allegations of recruiting minors for Jeffrey Epstein to sexually abuse from 1994 to 2004. 

Andrew, who was also seen driving his Range Rover this morning, has been accused by Epstein 'sex slave' Virginia Giuffre of raping her, allegations which he denies. 

Giuffre, who has filed a related civil lawsuit against Andrew but is not part of the criminal case against Maxwell, has previously described Epstein's former 'madam' as a 'Mary Poppins' figure who made young girls feel comfortable as they were being lured into the paedophile's web. Maxwell is known to have introduced the prince to Epstein. 

Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell attend an event in New York in 2005

Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell attend an event in New York in 2005

This is Jeffrey Epstein's infamous 'Lolita Express' - a private Boeing 727 airliner that carried prominent passengers and allegedly underage girls

This is Jeffrey Epstein's infamous 'Lolita Express' - a private Boeing 727 airliner that carried prominent passengers and allegedly underage girls

Ms Giuffre has sued the duke in New York, alleging he had sex with her more than 20 years ago when she was a minor under US law. That civil lawsuit is expected to be heard before a jury in late 2022. Andrew has not been criminally charged and has 'unequivocally' denied the allegations.

Photos of Andrew riding today come after a court was told that Maxwell was a 'dangerous predator' who 'served up' girls for sexual abuse. The British socialite was billionaire paedophile Jeffrey Epstein's 'second in command' and lured vulnerable teenagers for him to assault, a jury in New York heard. 

The courtroom was packed as Maxwell's trial on sex trafficking charges got under way, with observers queuing in the freezing cold from 5am to guarantee a seat. They were silent throughout as lurid claims against Epstein's alleged madam were aired. 

During the trial, Maxwell listened intently, occasionally scribbling in a notebook and turning to look at her sister, as Assistant US Attorney Lara Pomerantz accused her of 'heinous crimes'.

The prosecutor warned the jury that some of the evidence they will hear over the course of the six-week trial may make them uncomfortable. 

But, after hearing it, she added, they would 'reach the only verdict possible – that Ghislaine Maxwell is guilty'. Miss Pomerantz accused Maxwell of being one half of a powerful couple with Epstein, devising a sick 'pyramid scheme of abuse' in which they bribed schoolgirls to recruit their friends.

The 59-year-old former girlfriend of Wall Street financier Epstein was his 'partner in crime', the jury was told – putting young girls at ease so they could be 'molested by a middle-aged man'.

The jury of seven women and five men, plus several substitutes, heard how the daughter of the late media tycoon Robert Maxwell went after young girls with 'difficult home lives', often daughters of single mothers, and would 'promise them the world'.

'They lured their victims with a promise of a brighter future then destroyed their lives,' the prosecutor said in a blistering 25-minute opening statement in the grand Thurgood Marshall Courthouse.

Miss Pomerantz said: 'They were wealthy, powerful and well connected. They often targeted the daughters of single mothers, struggling to make ends meet.

'They made young girls believe that their dreams could become true. They made them feel seen. They made them feel special.'

But instead the girls were recruited into a 'nightmare' of abuse. 'Between 1994 and 2004 the defendant preyed on vulnerable young girls, manipulated them and served them up for sexual abuse.

Maxwell denies sex trafficking and other charges and has been awaiting trial for over a year in 'hell-hole' Brooklyn prison

Maxwell denies sex trafficking and other charges and has been awaiting trial for over a year in 'hell-hole' Brooklyn prison 

Ghislaine Maxwell (pictured here in 2013) listened intently as the prosecution opened its case, occasionally scribbling in a notebook and turning to look at her sister, while Assistant US Attorney Lara Pomerantz accused her of ¿heinous crimes¿

Ghislaine Maxwell (pictured here in 2013) listened intently as the prosecution opened its case, occasionally scribbling in a notebook and turning to look at her sister, while Assistant US Attorney Lara Pomerantz accused her of 'heinous crimes'

 

Maxwell, 59, who is accused of procuring underage girls for paedophile Jeffrey Epstein, is on trial for sex trafficking charges

Maxwell, 59, who is accused of procuring underage girls for paedophile Jeffrey Epstein, is on trial for sex trafficking charges

In a courtroom sketch, Judge Alison Nathan instructs the sworn-in jury at the start of Ghislaine Maxwell's sex-trafficking trial

In a courtroom sketch, Judge Alison Nathan instructs the sworn-in jury at the start of Ghislaine Maxwell's sex-trafficking trial

'She was trafficking them for sex. That's what this trial is about,' Miss Pomerantz said.

Maxwell has been described as gaunt and degraded by 17 months in a New York detention centre awaiting her trial.

But yesterday, wearing a cashmere turtleneck, black trousers and black low-heeled shoes, she looked relaxed, confident and healthy as she conferred with her high-powered legal team and smiled behind her white mask.

Miss Pomerantz began her presentation with the line: 'I want to tell you about a young girl named Jane,' adding that 'Jane' – a pseudonym for a victim – was just 14 when she was introduced to a man and a woman at a summer arts camp. They said they sponsored youngsters of talent.

'What Jane didn't know then is that man and woman were predators. Who was that woman targeting young girls for sexual abuse? It was the defendant: Ghislaine Maxwell,' she said, pointing.

'She was Epstein's second in command. During ten years, the defendant was the lady of the house. She imposed rules. Employees were to hear nothing, see nothing, say nothing. There was a culture of silence. That was by design – the defendant's design.

'Behind closed doors, the defendant and Epstein were committing heinous crimes, sexually abusing teenage girls. They were partners in crime.' 

Following the opening statements, Epstein's pilot said on the witness stand that Prince Andrew was a passenger on the Lolita Express, adding that Donald Trump also flew on the private plane. 

Visoski said: 'I certainly remember President Trump, but not many people associated with him,' adding that Trump's flights were before he was president. 

Visoski also said he was introduced to Minor Victim 1 - known by the pseudonym 'Jane' - in the cockpit of the 'Lolita Express' in the mid to late 90s. 

'Mr. Epstein brought her to the cockpit. She had piercing power blue eyes,' Visoski said.

When asked if he remembers Virginia Roberts, Visoski replied, 'Yes. A shorter woman with dirty blonde hair.' 

'She didn't look young. I mean, whatever you decipher is the definition of young. But she was a woman in my category,' he added.  

Asked what he had made of Epstein's relationship to Ghislaine Maxwell, he said it was 'more personal than business', but added: 'I wouldn't characterize it as romantic.'

Visoski said he had been hired in 1991 and had flown Epstein around roughly 'every four days'. The pilot was so close to his boss that his daughter was reportedly married at Epstein's New Mexico ranch. 

The pilot captained Epstein's Boeing 727 jet - known infamously as the 'Lolita Express' - just one of several private aircraft which prosecutors believe was used to shuttle underage girls between Epstein's residences in New York and Palm Beach. 

The trial was watched by several women who were victims of Epstein. Maxwell – said to have been Epstein's lover and then, when they broke up, his 'best friend' – is accused of acting as the financier's chief enabler, recruiting and grooming young girls for him to abuse.

She denies all six charges, but faces up to 80 years behind bars if found guilty. He killed himself in 2019 in a Manhattan jail cell before he could be tried.

Going into disturbing details, Miss Pomerantz said Epstein 'directed girls to massage him while he masturbated' and would receive 'oral sex and sometimes penetrate the girls'.

The prosecutor said of Maxwell: 'She knew exactly what Epstein was going to do to these children when she sent them to this massage room.

'She was in on it from the start. The defendant was getting in private planes and living in extraordinary luxury.

'These girls were just a means to support the lifestyle to which she had become accustomed.'

Miss Pomerantz told the jury they would hear from 'Jane', and other victims too. They included a 16-year-old taken to Epstein's ranch in New Mexico where Maxwell 'got the girl on a massage table and started touching the girl's breasts'.

Another was a 17-year-old whom Maxwell allegedly spotted while driving in her car, ordering her driver to pull over 'to recruit her'.

The abuse 'evolved' over the decade, said the prosecutor.

Donald Trump flew on Jeffrey Epstein 's private planes, the pilot of the Lolita Express has revealed on the witness stand. They are shown in 1997
Jeffrey Epstein's 'Lolita Express' pilot, Lawrence Visoski, is shown arriving at court on Tuesday. He didn't say exactly when Trump flew on the plane that Epstein used to ferry around young girls

Donald Trump and Jeffrey Epstein are shown, left, in 1997. The pilot of the Lolita Express, Lawrence Visoki, right, testified on Tuesday that Trump flew on the plane  

Virginia Roberts Giuffre will not be testifying during Maxwell's trial but will be giving off-the-record briefings to reporters

Virginia Roberts Giuffre will not be testifying during Maxwell's trial but will be giving off-the-record briefings to reporters

Journalists set up their shots outside the Manhattan Federal Courthouse where Ghislaine Maxwell's trial is set to start today

Journalists set up their shots outside the Manhattan Federal Courthouse where Ghislaine Maxwell's trial is set to start today

At first, Epstein and Maxwell found the victims themselves, but then in the 2000s they found a 'more convenient way', said Miss Pomerantz.

'They devised a pyramid scheme of abuse,' she said. 'They encouraged girls to bring other girls.'

The youngsters were handed wads of cash, but Miss Pomerantz said: 'These girls were not professional masseuses, they were kids being sexually abused.'

The young women, she said, had been scarred for life: 'They were exploiting kids. They were trafficking kids for sex. They were dangerous predators who exploited and sexually abused young girls for a decade.'

One of those accused of being a recruiter was Virginia Roberts – the woman who has accused Prince Andrew of raping her, which he denies. Maxwell's defence lawyer Bobbi Sternheim told jurors one of the alleged victims in the case was introduced to Epstein 'not by Ghislaine Maxwell' but by Roberts, now Virginia Giuffre, who was being paid by Epstein 'to recruit women for massages'. Mrs Giuffre is not taking part in this trial.  

Sarah Ransome, one of several women who have accused Epstein and Ghislaine of sexual abuse, was seen arriving to the courthouse
Sarah Ransome, one of several women who have accused Epstein and Ghislaine of sexual abuse, was seen arriving to the courthouse

Sarah Ransome, one of the women who accused Epstein and Ghislaine of sexual abuse, was seen arriving to the courthouse

Miss Pomerantz said the abuse occurred at Epstein's homes, including his estate in Palm Beach, Florida; his Manhattan townhouse; a ranch in Santa Fe, New Mexico; a Paris apartment; and a luxury estate in the Virgin Islands.

Authorities charged Maxwell in July 2020, a year after Epstein's suicide, after tracking her to a New Hampshire estate.

She has been jailed in Brooklyn since, calling the claims against her 'absolute rubbish'. Her family say she was Epstein's pawn, and was paying 'a blood price' to satisfy public desire to see someone held accountable.

As Maxwell left court, her lawyer Jeff Pagliuca gave her a hug and said: 'Sleep tight, don't let the bedbugs bite'.

Outside the courthouse, Lisa Bloom, a lawyer who represents eight alleged victims of Epstein and one in the Maxwell case, said Epstein could not have abused the women without Maxwell's help.

'My clients are hoping she is convicted of all charges, and that she spends the rest of her life in prison.'

The trial kicked off a day after Maxwell's brother claimed Andrew had been 'cancelled' on 'dubious grounds'. 

Ian Maxwell said that he hopes that his sister will be 'exonerated at the end of her trial and that that will in some way assist Prince Andrew clear his own name from the charges that he too is facing'.

Speaking to LBC's Nick Ferrari today, Mr Maxwell was also asked if he had ever discussed his sister's friendship with the Queen's son. He replied: 'I met Prince Andrew at my sister's home on a couple of occasions, so I didn't really need to talk to her about it.

'I knew they were friends, and he's found himself in this terrible position where he's effectively been ''cancelled'' as a member of the Royal Family, I think on very dubious grounds.

'So I hope that clearly my sister will be exonerated at the end of her trial and that that will in some way assist Prince Andrew clear his own name from the charges that he too is facing – although those are civil charges – from a very vocal accuser of both of them – who, I might add, is not testifying at the trial, which tells you all you need to know about her credibility.'

Ghislaine Maxwell accuser 'Jane' testifies that Jeffrey Epstein drove her to Mar-a-Lago to meet Donald Trump when she was 14 and recalls flying with Prince Andrew on the 'Lolita Express'

  • Ghislaine Maxwell's first accuser known as 'Jane' resumed testimony Wednesday under cross examination from the defense 
  • She claimed Epstein drove her to Mar-A-Lago to meet Donald Trump when she was 14 years old
  • Jane said she recalls taking flights with Prince Andrew on Epstein's private planes 
  • Maxwell's lawyer Laura Menninger questioned the alleged victim - who is using the pseudonym Jane - and attempted to undermine the accuser's memory 
  • Menninger then told the court that Jane does not recall whether Maxwell ever touched her. 'That's not true,' Jane said 
  • On Tuesday she said under oath that she was 14 years old when she first had 'sexual contact' with Jeffrey Epstein 
  • She told Prosecutor Alison Moe that Ghislaine Maxwell was in the room during the abuse and joined in 
  • She detailed how Epstein would have her 'straddle his face', 'pinch his nipples' and took her into a pool house and then 'proceeded to masturbate on me'     

Ghislaine Maxwell's first accuser known as 'Jane' testified that Jeffrey Epstein drove her to Mar-A-Lago to meet Donald Trump when she was 14 years old. 

The alleged victim - who is using the pseudonym Jane - resumed testimony on Day Three of Maxwell's sex trafficking trial under cross examination from the defense.   

Maxwell's lawyer Laura Menninger asked if Epstein introduced her to Donald Trump. Jane said that was 'correct.'

Menninger asked: 'He took you to Mar-a-Lago, right? When you were 14?' 

Jane said: 'Yes.'

Menninger asked: 'He took you in a dark green car?' Jane said yes. The meeting would have been in 1994, long before Trump was president. 

Menninger questioned if Jane remembered being on flights on Epstein's planes with a 'number of individuals' and she said yes, one of them being Prince Andrew. 

However, Jane claimed that she was never directed to have sex with any of Epstein's associates nor was she asked to recruit other girls.  

Maxwell's lawyer Laura Menninger questioned the alleged victim - who is using the pseudonym Jane - and attempted to undermine the accuser's memory

Maxwell's lawyer Laura Menninger questioned the alleged victim - who is using the pseudonym Jane - and attempted to undermine the accuser's memory

Jane testified that Jeffrey Epstein drove her to Mar-A-Lago to meet Donald Trump when she was 14 years old

Jane testified that Jeffrey Epstein drove her to Mar-A-Lago to meet Donald Trump when she was 14 years old

Jane said she recalls taking flights with Prince Andrew on Epstein's private planes

Jane said she recalls taking flights with Prince Andrew on Epstein's private planes

Menninger asked Jane to describe the other women who took part in the 'orgies'.

One of them was named Sophie and Jane agreed that she was 'tall and thin' with 'nice legs' and a 'tan' and was an actual masseuse.

Jane agreed with Menninger that Sophie 'knew the routine' and that she would 'make out with other girls during the intercourse' - Jane said 'yes' to all these questions.

A second woman was named 'Eva' and asked if she 'knew the routine' as well, Jane said: 'Yes.'

Maxwell did not appear to react to any of the woman's testimony, including when Jane pointed her out in court to identify her. The government submitted this photo of Maxwell into evidence

Maxwell did not appear to react to any of the woman's testimony, including when Jane pointed her out in court to identify her. The government submitted this photo of Maxwell into evidence 

A third woman was British.

Recounting Jane's account to prosecutors during interviews with them, Menninger said: 'She was nice and cool?' Jane said: 'Yes.'

Menninger said: 'She was involved with the sexual contact?'

Jane said: 'Yes.'

Menninger said: 'She was in this group that sexualized massage with you? Jane said: 'Yes'.

A fourth woman was named 'Michelle' and Jane confirmed that she was 'involved in the sexualized contact'.

A fifth woman was older and named Kelly and Jane agreed that she 'thought she was a model.'

Among the sharp exchanges between Menninger and Jane was when the defense lawyer asked: 'You continued to travel on Mr. Epstein's dime after you 'escaped' from him in 1999, that's right?'

Jane said: 'That's not true.'

Menninger said that Jane continued to call Epstein after she moved to Los Angeles and sent him a photo when she was 19 which said: 'You rock my world'.

Jane said that her mother had made her send it.

Menninger grew frustrated at one point after prosecutor Alison Moe objected and said that 'I know Miss Moe would like to come and do this for me but I object to that'.

Judge Alison Nathan said the objection was 'not objectionable' and moved on.

Giving evidence, Jane wore a blue sweater and black pants and black heels. She remained calm and composed and during a brief pause in the evidence she met the eyes of a male juror and smiled.

Maxwell wore a dark gray roll neck, a change from the usual beige one she has been wearing and stared intently at Jane as she gave evidence.

Her brother Kevin was in court for the first time and sat next to a Maxwell family lawyer, with Isabel Maxwell on the other side.

Kevin stared intently at Jane as well, leaning forward in his seat and taking his glasses on and off.

During another sharp exchange, Menninger interrogated Jane about her visits to New Mexico where she claimed in her testimony she was abused by Epstein and teared up as she described one time when she desperately did not want to go into his bedroom.

Menninger said that Jane 'told the government that you don't remember any specific acts that occurred in New Mexico on these trips that you took to New Mexico'.

Jane said: 'I don't recall'.

Menninger said: 'Yesterday you testified about an incident in New Mexico that you specifically remember, two years later?'

Jane said: 'That's right'.

Menninger said: 'So today you remember it, but in 2020 you did not?'

Jane said: 'I don't recall saying any of what's written here', referring to the notes from her 2020 interview with prosecutors.

Menninger said that Jane has given different accounts of her first meeting with Epstein and Maxwell at the Interlochen arts academy in Michigan in 1994. This photo of Epstein in front of one of his planes was submitted into evidence

Menninger said that Jane has given different accounts of her first meeting with Epstein and Maxwell at the Interlochen arts academy in Michigan in 1994. This photo of Epstein in front of one of his planes was submitted into evidence 

Ghislaine Maxwell's first accuser known as 'Jane' resumed testimony Wednesday under cross examination from the defense

Ghislaine Maxwell's first accuser known as 'Jane' resumed testimony Wednesday under cross examination from the defense

Jennifer Kalin spotted outside the Ghislaine Maxwell trial
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This came after Menninger attempted to undermine the accuser's memory by highlighting differences between the account that Jane gave in court and what she told prosecutors during meetings in 2019 and 2020. 

Menninger said that during a December 2019 interview, Jane said she could not remember a specific first time she had sex with Maxwell.

'Victim' who claims Jeffrey Epstein forced her into a sham marriage attends Maxwell trial 

A woman who claims she was forced into a sham marriage by Jeffrey Epstein attended court to see Ghislaine Maxwell face trial.

Jennifer Kalin sat in the overflow room of the federal court in New York for the morning as Ghislaine Maxwell's first accuser was cross examined.

Wearing a dark coat and looking nervous, she was accompanied by her lawyer Brad Edwards, who represents numerous Epstein victims.

Edwards said that Kalin was there to 'show solidarity with the other victims' and wanted to see the trial.

Kalin's story is one of the most appalling to emerge from Epstein's world.

She was reportedly forced to marry Karyna Shuliak, Epstein's final girlfriend who he called from prison before killing himself.

Shuliak was from Belarus and the wedding is said to have been so she could stay in the US and be with Epstein

A photo posted onto Kalin's Facebook page before it was taken down shows her smiling with Shuliak.

The marriage happened in October 2013 and Kalin divorced Shuliak in July 2019 after he was arrested, the New York Daily News has reported.

In her evidence the previous day Jane had described in vivid detail how Maxwell and Epstein led her upstairs to the bedroom of his Palm Beach mansion.

Menninger said: 'You came up with that memory in the last two years? The one you told the jury yesterday?'

Jane said: 'I don't believe I came up with a memory, no.'

Menninger said: 'You gave a memory to the jury yesterday that you didn't have in December 2019?'

Jane said: 'I don't recall.'      

Earlier in her testimony Jane said that a different discrepancy could be explained by a 'typo' in the write up of her interview with the FBI.

Menninger said that speaking to the FBI in February 2020 she said there were other women involved the first time she had sexual activity with Maxwell, another difference from her testimony.

Menninger said sarcastically: 'Another typo by the government?'

Jane said: 'Yes.'

Menninger challenged Jane on multiple aspects of her testimony including her claim that Maxwell called her house to ask her to come to Epstein's home

In her 2019 interview with the FBI, Jane said that 'Epstein or his office would call your home', to which Jane replied: 'I guess so.'

Menninger said: 'Two years later, you remember that Ghislaine used to call your home to make appointments?'

Jane replied: 'Right.'

Menninger said witheringly: 'That memory has come back to you in the last two years?'

Jane said: 'Memory is not linear.'

Menninger challenged Jane on her claim that Maxwell was there the first time she met her when she was 14 at the Interlochen arts camp in Michigan.

But Jane didn't tell her two brothers about Maxwell and didn't tell a journalist about her either, Menninger said.

Menninger said: 'You didn't say anything to the reporter about Ghislaine being there?'

Jane replied: 'Correct.'

Just before the break for morning, Menninger pressed Jane repeatedly on some of her claims about Maxwell being there for sexual episodes with Maxwell.

She said that when Jane spoke with prosecutors in December 2019, Jane told them she was 'not sure where Maxwell ever touched you during these encounters?'

Jane said: 'I don't recall.'

Menninger said You told the government that you are not sure that Maxwell ever kissed you, correct?'

Jane said: 'I don't recall.'

Menninger said: 'You told the government Ghislaine never used sex toys or vibrators on you, correct?'

Jane said: 'That's correct.'

Menninger said: 'You told the government that Ghislaine never saw you perform oral sex on Epstein, correct?'

Jane said: 'That's correct.' 

Menninger said: 'You told the government Ghislaine never saw you perform a hand job on Epstein, correct?'

Jane said: 'I don't recall.'

The six charges against Ghislaine Maxwell: 

THE CHARGES

Conspiracy to entice minors to travel to engage in illegal sex acts (5 years max sentence)  

 Enticement of a minor to travel to engage in illegal sex acts (20 years)

Conspiracy to transport minors with intent to engage in criminal sexual activity (20 years)

Transportation of a minor with intent to engage in criminal sexual activity (10 years minimum, life maximum)

Sex Trafficking Conspiracy

Sex Trafficking of a Minor 

Ghislaine Maxwell also faces two charges of perjury but those counts are due to be tried after her sex crimes trial. 

The charges relate to testimony she gave in 2016 in a defamation case filed against her by Epstein accuser Virginia Giuffre.  

THE 'FACTS' 

Prosecutors say Maxwell groomed three girls between 1994 and 1997 for Epstein. 

They are not named in the indictment, but she allegedly targeted them in London, Florida, New York and New Mexico.

Maxwell, it is alleged, would befriend the girls by asking them about their life and their schooling. She would put them at ease by taking them to the movies and taking them shopping, winning their trust to later deliver them to Epstein, it's alleged.

To 'normalize' the abuse that would come later, prosecutors say she undressed in front of the girls herself and asked them sexual questions. 

She then not only facilitated Epstein abusing them, prosecutors say, but took part in some of it herself. 

The alleged sex abuse includes 'sexualized group massages'. 

The indictment also says Maxwell made the girl feel 'indebted' to Epstein by encouraging them to take money from him and let him pay for their education and travel. 

Maxwell, 59, who is accused of procuring underage girls for pedophile Jeffrey Epstein, is on trial for sex trafficking charges. She has pleaded not guilty to all charges

Maxwell, 59, who is accused of procuring underage girls for pedophile Jeffrey Epstein, is on trial for sex trafficking charges. She has pleaded not guilty to all charges

Ghislaine's siblings Isabel and Kevin are seen outside the NYC courthouse to attend the third day of her sex trafficking trial

Ghislaine's siblings Isabel and Kevin are seen outside the NYC courthouse to attend the third day of her sex trafficking trial 

Ghislaine Maxwell's brother and sister attend her trial in NYC
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Menninger said that Jane told prosecutors that Maxwell was not involved in 'masturbation' with Epstein. Jane said she didn't remember.

Menninger said: 'You told the government you have no memory of Ghislaine being present when you claim Epstein engaged in any sexual contact with you, correct?

Jane said: 'I don't recall'.

As you sit here today you are not sure whether you were ever in a room alone with Ghislaine and Epstein, correct?

Jane said: 'No'.

Earlier in the day Jane confirmed that a letter of application she sent to Interlochen made no mention of Epstein or Maxwell.

The 'glowing' letter from the head of an arts school in Palm Beach said that Jane and her brothers were so talented at singing, music and acting they could be the 'rebirth of the Von Trapp family', referring to the Austrian family of singers.                  

The prosecution have entered several photos of Epstein and Maxwell into evidence, but without a time stamp or explanation behind them. 

Jane Testimony Day 1

'Jane' took the stand to testify that she was 14 years old when she first had 'sexual contact' with Jeffrey Epstein

In testimony Tuesday afternoon, the woman said Maxwell was in the room during the alleged abuse. Wearing a gray wrap-around sweater, a black dress and black boots, she pushed back her jet black hair and took off her mask after the judge reassured her that the sketch artists could not draw her likeness. 

She detailed to Prosecutor Alison Moe how Epstein would have her 'straddle his face', 'pinch his nipples' and described the first sexual encounter that took place in 1994 when he took her into a pool house and  'proceeded to masturbate on me.'

Jane said Epstein was talking to her about 'what I wanted to do' with her life and said that she had to choose between being an opera singer or an actress or a model. She recalled: 'He said I know everybody, I know agents, photographers, I can make things happen but you have to be ready for it.

'The conversation ended abruptly, we were in his office, and he said follow me'. 

They went outside to the pool house and Epstein sat on a couch to the right hand side. 

'He pulled his pants down, he pulled me on top of himself and he proceeded to masturbate on me. Then he just got up and went into the bathroom and cleaned himself up and acted as if nothing had happened.' she said. 

'I was frozen in fear. I had never seen a penis before let alone something like this. I was terrified and I felt gross. I felt ashamed'.

Despite this she continued spending time with Epstein and Maxwell and shortly after, she had her first sexual encounter with Maxwell. 

Epstein and Maxwell were talking when 'all of a sudden they said follow me' and led her to Epstein's bedroom in his Palm Beach home. 

'They came into the bedroom and took their clothes off. They started sort of fondling each other and kind of casually giggling,' Jane said. 'I was just standing there and he asked me to take my top off and then their hands [were] everywhere and Jeffrey proceeded to masturbate and Ghislaine was rubbing him and kissing him and fondling.'  

Jane said Maxwell was 'very casual' about the encounter and acted 'like this was entirely normal. I was confused. When you are 14 you have no idea what is going on.' 

The prosecutor asked, 'Did Maxwell touch your body?' 

'Yes,' Jane replied, saying the sexual abuse happened 'every time I visited his house'. 

When asked if Epstein touched her, Jane replied, 'Yes. Everywhere.'  

The woman spoke in a strong, deep, voice that only faltered when she was describing in graphic detail the sex acts Epstein and Maxwell allegedly did to her. 

Maxwell did not appear to react to any of the woman's testimony, including when Jane pointed her out in court to identify her.

Wearing a black high-neck top and grey cardigan, Jane  had a tissue scrunched up in her hand and nabbed her nose when she became emotional. Her voice began shaking when she told how Epstein would 'touch her everywhere'.

Ghislaine Maxwell's first accuser known as 'Jane' took the stand Tuesday to testify that she was 14 years old when she first had 'sexual contact' with Jeffrey Epstein

Ghislaine Maxwell's first accuser known as 'Jane' took the stand Tuesday to testify that she was 14 years old when she first had 'sexual contact' with Jeffrey Epstein

She detailed how Epstein would have her 'straddle his face', 'pinch his nipples' and took her into a pool house and then 'proceeded to masturbate on me'

She detailed how Epstein would have her 'straddle his face', 'pinch his nipples' and took her into a pool house and then 'proceeded to masturbate on me'

She shuffled in her seat and took off her cardigan, appearing hot and a bit flustered.

In brief breaks, Jane avoided any eye contact with Maxwell, who looked away from the witness box.

On the one occasion Jane did look over in her direction Maxwell was joking with her lawyers. 

As her visits to Epstein's home became more regular, Jane said that both Epstein and Maxwell would instruct her on how to massage him.

Jane said: 'He liked it very hard, like rubbing his shoulders very hard, twisting his nipples hard'.

Ghislaine Maxwell faces up to 80 years in prison if found guilty. This photo was entered into evidence yesterday

Ghislaine Maxwell faces up to 80 years in prison if found guilty. This photo was entered into evidence yesterday

Jane would later say that Epstein liked her to twist his nipples while he was abusing her.

Asked what Maxwell's demeanor was like during this, Jane said: 'It seemed very casual, it was very normal. It's not a big deal'.

Jane said it made her feel 'confused because that did not feel normal to me because I had never seen anything like that and it was very embarrassing….when you're 14 you have no idea what's going on'.

Asked if Epstein touched her body, Jane said that he touched her 'breasts, vagina'.

Moe asked if Epstein used sex toys, telling her: 'I'm sorry to ask you this but could you please describe what happened'.

Jane appeared to come close to tears as she said: 'He liked vibrators, they were different sizes, even a back massager. He'd put it on my vagina, even if I said it hurt'.

Asked where Maxwell touched her, Jane said it was 'mainly my breasts'.

Moe asked where Epstein liked to be touched and Jane said that it was 'from head to toe' and that this happened 'every visit to his house'.

Moe asked if there were times when other people took part in sex and Jane said yes, adding that it usually happened in the massage room or the bedroom in Epstein's Palm Beach home.

She said that Maxwell would encourage others to 'start taking their clothes off, Jeffrey would get on the massage table and it would turn into this orgy'.

Jane said: 'It was kissing, oral sex with each other, oral sex with Jeffrey, full on intercourse'.

Asked if sex toys were used, Jane said yes and that vibrators were used on girls' vaginas.

Moe asked the gender of the other people in the orgy and Jane said: 'Female'.

Asked their age, she said: 'Older than me but I don't know'.

Moe asked how often these kind of sex sessions took place when she was aged between 14 and 16 and she said: 'Almost every visit with him. (I was going) every two weeks'.

Jane said that she traveled with Epstein and Maxwell about 10 times when she was aged between 14 and 16 and flew to his homes in New York and New Mexico.

She found his New York mansion 'creepy' because of all the pictures of naked girls on the walls, she told the jury.

Lisa Bloom representing Epstein victims speaks to press on trial
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Jane said during her testimony Tuesday that the abuse at his New York home would happen in the massage room. The prosecution submitted this photo of Epstein's Manhattan mansion into evidence

Jane said during her testimony Tuesday that the abuse at his New York home would happen in the massage room. The prosecution submitted this photo of Epstein's Manhattan mansion into evidence 

During the trips to New Mexico, Jane said she spent most of her time at his Zorro Ranch 'in the middle of nowhere'. She recalled a time when she was 15 and someone came into her room and said, 'Jeffrey wants to see you' and escorted her to see him

During the trips to New Mexico, Jane said she spent most of her time at his Zorro Ranch 'in the middle of nowhere'. She recalled a time when she was 15 and someone came into her room and said, 'Jeffrey wants to see you' and escorted her to see him 

Jane described how in 1993 she was '12, going on 13' and living in Palm Beach, Florida with her family when tragedy struck - her father, a composer, died of leukemia. Pictured is Epstein's Palm Beach mansion submitted by the prosecution as evidence

Jane described how in 1993 she was '12, going on 13' and living in Palm Beach, Florida with her family when tragedy struck - her father, a composer, died of leukemia. Pictured is Epstein's Palm Beach mansion submitted by the prosecution as evidence 

Jane described how she first came to know Epstein in 1993. She was '12, going on 13' and living in Palm Beach, Florida with her family when tragedy struck - her father, a composer, died of leukemia.

His employers had canceled his health insurance and when he did their family 'went into complete bankruptcy and lost everything', Jane said.

The following summer, relatives cobbled together the money to pay for her and her brothers to go to Interlochen, a summer arts camp in Michigan.

It was nine months after her father died, Jane said.

She remembered that one day she and her classmates were 'on a bench eating ice cream' when a 'tall, thin woman approached us'.

Jane said: 'She was walking a cute little Yorkie and we asked if we could pet the dog. We started chit chatting and the rest of my classmates had to go to class'.

Shortly after a man came to join Jane and Maxwell. Jane said: 'I was still eating my ice cream...he seemed very interested to know what I thought of the camp. They said they were big benefactors of this camp and gave out different kinds of scholarships and wanted to know the students' perspective'.

When Jane said she was from Palm Beach, Epstein replied: 'What a coincidence! We live there too. What are your parents names? (I said) my father has just died'.

Epstein said that he 'definitely' knew her mother and then asked for her number which Jane handed over.

She seemed surprised but handed it over and the conversation ended with 'nice to meet you.'

Around a month later, when Jane was back at middle school, somebody from Epstein's office called her home and asked her and her mother round for tea at his mansion in Palm Beach

Their visit lasted around 30 minutes and Epstein told Jane's mother that he was 'very impressed' with her and wanted her to come back next time and sing for him.

So began Jane's regular visits to Epstein's house where Maxwell would often be at home.

Jane said she was 'confused' by the exact relationship between the two of them and initially thought they were married but later wasn't sure.

She said that Maxwell was approximately the same age as her older sister .

Prosecutor Moe asked: 'How old were you when you first started spending time with Epstein and Maxwell?

Jane said: 'Fourteen.'

An early incident which left Jane 'shocked' was one day when she went out by the pool and saw Maxwell and four other women topless. Jane 'hadn't seen that before', she told the jury.

Jane described Maxwell as 'a bit odd and quirky' and said she 'used to tease me, but she was nice.'

Jane said: 'I think she may have said I'm like an older sister (to you)'. At the time Jane's older sister was 27 and Maxwell was in her early 30s.

Epstein began to give Jane money as she left the house after each visit, which were around every week or two, telling her that her 'mother was having a hard time, it's not a big deal.'

Epstein began to buy Jane clothes and other things.

Jeffrey Epstein's pilot attends trial of Ghislaine Maxwell
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She gave Jane advice about her boyfriends, once telling her: 'If you f*** them once you can f*** them again because they are grandfathered in'.

Jane said: 'I giggled because I didn't understand what grandfathered meant'.

Epstein and Maxwell took her to Victoria's Secret to buy her underwear: Jane said she bought the 'basic white kind' that younger people buy.

Maxwell and Epstein would brag about knowing famous people like Donald Trump and Bill Clinton which left Jane feeling 'intimidated', she told the jury.

She said she traveled to his other homes about ten times in New York and New Mexico on Epstein's private plane  and described the décor. 

'Art, sculptures. Pictures of famous people, presidents. I thought some of the art was odd - naked women, creepy animals,' she recalled. 

She said the abuse at his New York home would happen in the massage room. 

During the trips to New Mexico, Jane said she spent most of her time at his Zorro Ranch 'in the middle of nowhere.'

Jane cried when she talked about how one of Epstein's aides entered her guest room at his ranch, saying the financier wanted her in his bedroom. 'I felt my heart sink. I didn't want to go see him.'

She asked the prosecutor 'do you need me to explain in detail?' as she appeared pained when describing the abuse in detail. She repeatedly asked Moe to repeat questions, failing to understand. 

Jeffrey Epstein's 'Lolita Express' pilot has taken the stand as the prosecution's witness in Day 2 of Ghislaine Maxwell's trial

Maxwell's lawyer Laura Menninger cross examined Jane, asking her if it was correct that she waited 20 years to speak to law enforcement.

Jane said that was correct.

Menninger asked if it was correct that Jane said she 'escaped' Epstein in 1999 and she confirmed that it was.

Menninger said: 'The first time you spoke to law enforcement was after Epstein was dead.' Jane said: 'Yes.'

Menninger said that during the last 20 years Jane had spoken to family members and a boyfriend about Epstein.

Menninger said that Jane had 'never mentioned that Ghislaine Maxwell had sexually assaulted you' to any of them.

Jane said: 'I don't know.'

Jane said: 'I was reluctant to go into details about embarrassing, shameful and despicable things...I didn't want to share it with them in the first place'

Menninger said: 'Did you tell them about Epstein?'

Jane replied: 'Yes I did.'

Menninger said: 'Did you talk to them about Ghislaine Maxwell?'

Jane said: 'I don't know.'

Asked why she wanted to give evidence using a pseudonym, Jane said that she had a family and children.

She said: 'I work in the entertainment industry and victim shaming is still very present to this day and I was afraid it was going to affect my career if somebody looks at me and that's all they see and wouldn't hire me based on that.

Cross examination of Jane will continue on Wednesday. 

'Lolita Express' Pilot 

Earlier on Tuesday, Larry Visoski, Epstein's chief pilot who flew the pedophile financier for more than 25 years, said he was introduced to Jane  in the cockpit of the 'Lolita Express' in the mid to late 90s. 

'Mr. Epstein brought her to the cockpit. She had piercing powder blue eyes,' Visoski said. 

Maxwell's attorney Christian Everdell asked during cross examination, 'And beyond the striking blue eyes, you have said she had large breasts, right?' 

Visoski answered that she was 'a mature woman.'  

When asked if he remembers Virginia Roberts, Visoski replied, 'Yes. A shorter woman with dirty blonde hair.' 

'She didn't look young. I mean, whatever you decipher is the definition of young. But she was a woman in my category,' he added. 

Despite being called as a prosecution witness, Visoski's testimony appeared to aid the defense. 

 'I never saw any sexual activity, no,' Visoski said, but admitted that he could not see everything that went on. Asked if he ever saw any sex toys, condoms or clothing strewn about the plane, he said no and denied seeing any sexual activity of any kind. 

Maxwell's sister tries to hide from view of press outside court
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Pictured: Visoski in the cockpit of Epstein's Gulfstream G550 - another one of his private aircraft

Donald Trump and Jeffrey Epstein are shown, left, in 1997. The pilot of the Lolita Express, Lawrence Visoki, right, testified on Tuesday that Trump flew on the plane  

Maxwell entered the Manhattan courtroom Tuesday morning wearing a cream sweater, black slacks and looked on as Visoski was questioned.

Visoski revealed Donald Trump flew on Epstein's private plane.

'I certainly remember President Trump, but not many people associated with him,' Visoski said, adding that Trump's flights happened before he was president. 

Visoski also confirmed that President Bill Clinton, Prince Andrew and Kevin Spacey were all aboard his flights. He added that he was asked to clean up after Clinton's flight, but did not elaborate.   

Visoski said that the doors to the cabin on Epstein's planes were always shut and he had no way of observing what was going on. 

The famous names came up in the context of whether Visoski knew who was flying on the Gulfstream G2B and Boeing 727, known as the Lolita Express.

During cross examination,  Everdell asked Visoski: 'Are you aware of Prince Andrew, the Duke of York, he is the son of Queen Elizabeth II of England.'

Visoski replied: 'Yes.'

Everdell said: 'Did he fly on Epstein's planes?'

Visoski replied: 'Yes'

Everdell asked: 'Do you recall the first time he flew on a plane?'

Visoski said: 'No I don't.

Earlier Everdell asked Visoski if he knew the names of all the people who flew on his plane, and he said no.

Everdell said: 'Former President Bill Clinton flew on Epstein's plane a few times in the 2000s?'

Visoski replied: 'Yes he did.'

Everdell said: 'You might be told that information in advance so you might make sure the plane was looking nice, special catering?'

Visoski replied: 'Sure.'

Visoski also confirmed that Les Wexner, the founder of The Limited, which owns Victoria's Secret, was on planes that he flew. 

Visoski said that doors between the cockpit and the passenger cabin were closed but he said that he could go to the back whenever he wanted to use the toilet. He again said he never saw any sexual activity.

Previously unsealed flight logs revealed that Trump was among passengers on a flight from Palm Beach to Newark in 1997 along with Eva and Glenn Dubin

Previously unsealed flight logs revealed that Trump was among passengers on a flight from Palm Beach to Newark in 1997 along with Eva and Glenn Dubin 

A photo from 2002 on a trip to Africa shows Clinton standing on the steps of Epstein's plane with his arm on the shoulder of a smiling Maxwell

A photo from 2002 on a trip to Africa shows Clinton standing on the steps of Epstein's plane with his arm on the shoulder of a smiling Maxwell 

Curiously, during his cross examination by Everdell, Visoski was asked: 'Ghislaine never appeared to be pregnant?'

Visoski said no.

Everdell asked: 'Did anyone ever tell you she was pregnant?'

Visoski said that nobody ever said that.

Everdell asked if the pilot ever saw pictures of her pregnant. He replied: 'No I did not.'

Visoski said Maxwell 'was the Number 2' and that 'Epstein was the big Number 1' when asked about their relationship. 

When asked how many other assistants Epstein had in addition to Maxwell, he replied that there were many, identifying Maxwell's own assistants. 

He specifically named Sarah Kellen - who has been accused of playing a pivotal role in Epstein's empire: procuring girls, coaching them and acting as a 'lieutenant' to Maxwell.  

Visoski was also asked to identify parts of Epstein's 10,000-acre Zorro Ranch in New Mexico where airplanes were parked. 

He said he would often go to the main residence to pick up luggage and help install electronics. Visoski said he performed similar tasks on Epstein's private Caribbean island Little St. James and would also fly the helicopter to the island from nearby St. Thomas. 

He added that the island could also be reach by boat. 

Defense's Opening Statement 

On Monday during opening statement, Maxwell's defense attorney Bobbi Sternheim began by introducing 'Jane' as a 'talented musician and a singer from a musical family.'

She took aim at Jane and attempted to discredit her account.  

She described Jeffrey Epstein as a 'patron of the arts and a supporter of young talent, sponsored musicians and artists and actresses and others.'

Epstein, Sternheim said, became Jane's benefactor and paid for her schooling, vocal lessons and even cosigned  for an apartment on Wall Street where Jane lived with her mother and brothers.  

 'A month before Epstein's arrest in 2019, Jane did not want to be involved in any criminal case regarding Epstein,' Sternheim said. 'But after Epstein died, she changed her mind.  

'When money was on the line, she changed her mind. She hired a lawyer, she became a client, they got in touch with the government, and said she changed her mind. 

'Why? Because assisting the government would help a claim with the Epstein fund.'

Lawyer Bobbi Sternheim took the floor to deliver the defense's opening statements Monday, saying she is 'proud' to represent Maxwell

Lawyer Bobbi Sternheim took the floor to deliver the defense's opening statements Monday, saying she is 'proud' to represent Maxwell

Sterheim added that once Epstein died and Jane had a lawyer by her side she suddenly 'remembers all this horror that happened to her and places Ghislaine at the center of it all.'  

'Hundreds of things that happened to her that no one knew about, not her mother, not her brothers, not her teachers, not staff at the house, not her coaches, all of this that the government claims happened and she didn't skip a beat, nobody ever noticed anything amiss.'

Sternheim said that 'Jane' is a now a successful actress on a soap opera and has been on sitcoms, reality shows, movies, podcasts and drama series. 

'She is a consummate actress. She is a pro at playing roles. And as her scripts and characters change, so has her story that you will hear in this courtroom,' Sternheim said. 

'I ask you to examine her testimony, and you will find internal inconsistencies. When money was on the line, she tagged Ghislaine.'

Sternheim revealed that Jane received $5million from the victims fund. 

Accuser says Ghislaine Maxwell and Jeffrey Epstein picked her up at summer camp when she was 14 years old and sexually abused her for 5 years

Accuser says Ghislaine Maxwell and Jeffrey Epstein picked her up at summer camp when she was 14 years old and sexually abused her for 5 years
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ghislaine maxwell courtroom sketch
Ghislaine Maxwell sits during jury selection in the trial of Maxwell, Jeffrey Epstein's associate accused of sex trafficking, in a courtroom sketch in New York City, U.S., November 17, 2021.REUTERS/Jane Rosenberg
  • The first accuser in Ghislaine Maxwell's sex-trafficking trial said she and Jeffrey Epstein abused her for years starting when she was 14 years old.

  • "Jane" said Epstein and Maxwell presented themselves as wealthy benefactors shortly after her family became homeless.

  • She testified that Maxwell and Epstein pulled her into sexually abusive orgies multiple times a month over the course of around five years.

The first of four accusers in Ghislaine Maxwell's child-sex-trafficking trial testified Tuesday afternoon, alleging in searing testimony that Jeffrey Epstein and the British socialite preyed on her beginning when she was 14 years old and groomed her for sex in his mansions in Manhattan, New Mexico, and Palm Beach, Florida.

The accuser, testifying under the pseudonym "Jane," said she first met Epstein and Maxwell the summer after completing seventh grade, while at a performing arts summer camp in Michigan in 1994.

Her father, a composer, had died of leukemia the previous fall. The medical expenses bankrupted their family, which lost their home and were forced to live in a pool house in someone else's backyard in Palm Beach, she testified.

That summer, Jane testified, other family members pitched in to send her and her two brothers to the Interlochen Center for the Arts, located a short drive from the shore of Lake Michigan, while their mother stayed home in Palm Beach. Jane said that Epstein and Maxwell approached her while she was eating ice cream with friends, between music lessons at the camp.

Epstein said he was a donor to the camp, Jane said, and wanted to know what the attendees thought of it. When he learned Jane lived in Palm Beach, she said, he asked for her mother's phone number.

A few weeks later, Jane's mother received a call: It was Jeffrey Epstein, and he wanted to invite Jane and her mother over for tea.

It was the first of a series of meetings that prosecutors alleged were meant to normalize Jane's subsequent sexual abuse. Jane said she went to Epstein's homes "every week or two" for the next five years, she said, until leaving his grasp in 1999 when she moved across the country.

She kept her experience a secret for years.

"I felt very ashamed, I felt disgusted, I was confused. And I didn't know whether it was my fault," Jane said.

"Casual" hangouts escalated to sexual abuse

Epstein had attended the summer camp himself, according to Maxwell's defense attorneys. Friends of Epstein say he was passionate about music, and he often played a piano in his mysterious temple located on one of his private islands in the US Virgin Islands.

Epstein told Jane and her mother in that first meeting that he liked to give scholarships to young, passionate musicians, Jane said. After that first meeting, he sent members of his Palm Beach household staff to pick Jane up and drive her over to his home in meetings that were arranged by Maxwell, Jane said.

Jane testified that, at first, Epstein and Maxwell had "casual" hangouts with Jane, taking her to movies, inviting her to the pool in Epstein's backyard, and having meals with her. They made her feel special, Jane said, by asking about what was going on with her life — something she found difficult to talk about at home since her father died. Epstein also paid for private school tuition, Jane said.

Jane Ghislaine Maxwell trial
Witness "Jane" testifies during Ghislaine Maxwell's trial on charges of sex trafficking, in a courtroom sketch in New York City, U.S., November 30, 2021.REUTERS/Jane Rosenberg

The Palm Beach home, Jane said, was filled with paintings of naked or half-naked women, as well as "creepy-looking animals." Jane testified that Epstein and Maxwell namedropped people like then-President Bill Clinton, Donald Trump, and journalist Mike Wallace, giving the impression that they were connected to powerful people.

In one early meeting, Maxwell and Epstein brought her to a Victoria's Secret — owned by Epstein's longtime friend and patron Leslie Wexner — to buy white panties, Jane said. Epstein also sometimes gave Jane wads of cash and told her it was for her mother.

Several adult women, including Maxwell, were also often in Epstein's Palm Beach home, sometimes spending time by the pool topless or entirely naked, according to Jane.

"I was pretty shocked because I hadn't seen that before," Jane said.

Jane said the first time Epstein sexually abused her was after a conversation about her artistic ambitions. He said that he could use her connections to make sure she succeeds in whatever discipline she wanted — opera, theater, or modeling.

Then, Jane testified, Epstein told her to follow him from the house to the pool house in his backyard. There, Jane testified, Epstein pulled her over to a couch, pulled down his sweatpants, and stimulated himself until he climaxed on her.

"I was frozen. I'd never seen a penis before, let along anything like this," Jane said, telling the jury she was 14 years old at the time.

Jane testified that she was too afraid or fearful to speak to family members or friends about what she experienced. She continued to visit Epstein.

On an occasion soon after, Epstein pulled her and Maxwell into his master bedroom, Jane said. There, he and Maxwell took off their clothes and fondled each other while "casually giggling about it," Jane testified. Epstein instructed her to take her top off and stimulated himself while Maxwell continued to touch him, she alleged on the stand.

'It all started to seem the same after awhile'

From there, Maxwell and Epstein trained Jane to give sexualized massages, Jane testified. She described on the stand how the two detailed Epstein's specific preferences — hard twisting of his nipples, allowing him to stick his fingers into her genital area, aggressive use of vibrators.

Maxwell treated it all very casually, Jane testified.

"It made me feel confused," Jane said. "Because this was not normal to me."

Ghislaine maxwell sister

By the time she turned 16, the abuse became more extreme, Jane said.

Epstein would have more people spending time at his house in situations that would seem casual at first, Jane said.

"Abruptly, everything would stop and either Ghislaine or Jeffrey would tell everyone to follow them into a room," Jane testified.

Jane said they'd all go into Epstein's bedroom or his "massage room." Then, she said, everyone would take their clothes off and begin participating in an orgy. Jane said everyone but her seemed to be adults. Epstein came to call the incidents "a massage," Jane said.

Within a few weeks, the "massages" turned into a pattern, Jane testified, happening on almost every visit. On several occasions, Epstein also flew Jane to his home in Manhattan and ranch in New Mexico for sex, Jane said.

"It all started to seem the same after a while," Jane said. "I was numb to it."

Jane testified she needed to fly back home for school after the experience on Epstein's 10,000-acre ranch in New Mexico. But because she was 15, she didn't have a driver's license and couldn't get on the commercial flight that was booked for her, she said.

Panicking, she called Maxwell, who made arrangements and helped her get on the plane, she testified.

Jane testified that she escaped their grasp in 1999

Jane moved to New York City in around 1998, completing her senior year of high school at an elite performing arts school where Epstein paid for the tuition. She had continued the "massages" with Epstein and Maxwell while living in New York, she testified.

In October of 1999, soon after graduating, Jane got an acting job in California and moved there. She said the sexual abuse stopped at around that time, once there was more physical distance between them.

Jane remained in touch with Maxwell and Epstein until 2002, when she had fallen "madly in love" with another person who encouraged her to stop picking up the phone whenever Epstein called, she testified.

ghislaine maxwell trial jane cross examination

As Jane ignored Epstein, he left "increasingly agitated voicemails," Jane testified. He demanded that she show gratitude to him, and reminded her that her mother continued to live in an apartment he paid for, she said.

Jane said she first opened up about her experience to another boyfriend, in around 2008, when Epstein was sentenced to a jail term after pleading guilty to prostitution charges in Florida and his name was in the news.

She said her experience with Epstein and Maxwell damaged her future relationships and made it hard to trust other people. She considered self-harm for awhile, and believed "there didn't seem like there was any joy to look forward to" in life, she said.

"How do you navigate a relationship with a broken compass?" Jane said. "I didn't even know what real love was supposed to look like."

Jane is one of four accusers expected to testify

Prosecutors have accused Maxwell of sex trafficking girls with Epstein, sexually abusing them herself, and lying about her actions in a deposition. The allegations in the indictment focus on activity between 1997 and 2004, and concerns misconduct against four accusers, who were as young as 14 at the time.

Jane's description of her time with Epstein and Maxwell follows testimony from Lawrence Visoski, who worked as a pilot for Epstein's private jets between 1991 and 2019. Visoski denied any awareness of misconduct.

Numerous other women have accused Maxwell of sexual misconduct in civil litigation as well. Prosecutors have also brought two perjury charges against Maxwell, alleging she lied in a deposition taken for a civil lawsuit brought by accuser Virginia Giuffre. Prosecutors haven't identified Giuffre as a victim for the purposes of the sex crimes trial, and the perjury charges are set to be tried at a later date.

Maxwell has pleaded not guilty to the charges against her and denied all accusations of wrongdoing.

Jane's hadn't completed her testimony as court ended Tuesday evening, and she is set to continue it Wednesday morning.

During direct examination, she told Assistant US Attorney Alison Moe that she wanted to remain anonymous because she feared victim-shaming from her industry in members of the public, but that she was proud to have built a life, career, and family of her own.

"I've always wanted to put this past me and move on with my life," she said.

Read the original article on Insider