&w=3840&q=100)
Epstein case: Trump faces tough questions over Ghislaine Maxwell ties
The clamour for releasing the Epstein files has overshadowed Trump's desperate bid to highlight the success of his first six months in power because it's not his rivals but his own base, which is up in arms. File image
'I FORGOTTI,' the New York Daily News tabloid front-page headline screamed in March 1986.
Around two years ago, on September 11, 1984, John Gotti, a caporegime (captain) of the Gambino crime family—the second most powerful of New York's Five Families—and his associate Frank Colletta had assaulted a burly refrigerator repairman named Romual Piecyk and robbed him of $325 outside the Cosy Corner Bar, Queens.
Piecyk lodged a police complaint, and Gotti and Colletta were arrested and charged with felony assault and theft.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
When the trial started more than a year later, Piecyk was unaware that Gotti, with the assistance of other caporegimes, including Salvatore 'Sammy the Bull' Gravano, had become the family boss by murdering Constantino Paul Castellano.
Piecyk started receiving threatening calls, and his van's brake wire was cut. During the trial in the State Supreme Court in Queens, he pretended to have a memory lapse and refused to recognise Gotti and Colletta.
Assault and robbery charges against Gotti, the 'Teflon Don', were dropped. The moniker stuck to the mob boss, who would remain unscathed in two other high-profile cases after intimidating witnesses and tampering with the jury.
However, Gotti's Teflon coating gave away a few years later when the FBI used electronic surveillance to arrest him and Gravano for violating the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organisations (RICO) Act, and loan-sharking, murder, and conspiracy to commit murder.
On April 2, 1991, Gotti was convicted of racketeering and murder and awarded life imprisonment after Gravano turned into a government witness, confessed to 19 murders, and revealed the Gambino family's crimes. In June 2022, Gotti died of throat cancer.
Teflon Don of American Politics
Fast forward more than four decades later. Donald Trump is the new Teflon Don—of American politics.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
The resemblance is striking.
Mark Pomerantz, one of the prosecutors in the tax fraud case against Trump, compares him to Gotti in his book The People vs Donald Trump: An Inside Account (2023).
'He [Trump] demanded absolute loyalty and would go after anyone who crossed him. He seemed always to stay one step ahead of the law. In my career as a lawyer, I had encountered only one other person who touched all of these bases: John Gotti, the head of the Gambino organised crime family,' Pomerantz writes.
Like Gotti's several brushes with the law that seemed to end his gangland reign but didn't, Don-ald's political career was about to get over when he made a stunning comeback slinging a flamethrower that scorched the Democrats and scripted history.
In a surprising turn of events, Trump — the first US president with a felony conviction — managed to avoid conviction in three indictments and jail time in one.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
The charges for allegedly trying to overturn the 2020 presidential election and illegally retaining classified documents at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida were dropped. Department of Justice (DoJ) policy prevents indictment and prosecution of a sitting US president.
In Georgia, Trump's trial for attempting to overturn the 2020 election is on hold. In the New York hush money case, the only instance where he was convicted, sentencing is delayed with his lawyers fighting to get the case transferred to a federal court.
In fact, the four cases, which Trump dubbed as a 'witch-hunt' and the DoJ's 'weaponisation' against him, and his 'Big Lie' allegation about the 'rigged' 2020 election—which he lost to Joe Biden—were instrumental in his thumping 2024 victory.
Trump Looks to Maxwell to Wriggle Out
Trump's smartness in conflating his problems with those of ordinary Americans has always reaped rich dividends, with voters coalescing into a formidable force.
Except in one case—the Jeffrey Epstein scandal.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
A problem that Trump never saw in the worst of his nightmares has come to bite him hard.
On the campaign trail, Trump promised his Make America Great Again (Maga) supporters and their captains that he would release all Epstein files. When he didn't, his army rebelled.
Now, the clamour for releasing the Epstein files has overshadowed Trump's desperate bid to highlight the success of his first six months in power because it's not his rivals but his own base, which is up in arms.
In his last-ditch effort to wriggle out of the morass and pacify his base, Trump has thrown the Ghislaine Maxwell bait.
Hours after the House Oversight Committee voted to subpoena Maxwell—Epstein's socialite-pimp girlfriend, jailed for 20 years for recruiting and trafficking minor girls—Deputy US Attorney General Todd Blanche announced that he will meet her soon. It's a unique precedent in which a senior law officer decided to meet a convicted sex trafficker.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
'If Ghislaine Maxwell has information about anyone who has committed crimes against victims, the FBI and the DoJ will hear what she has to say,' he posted on social media.
WILL SHE TALK?
• Amid Epstein files furor, feds will ask jailed pal Maxwell if she has anything new to say https://t.co/Jw23ZunNUx
• Congress takes early vacation, avoids issuehttps://t.co/PhQmNzpteh
ROCK LEGEND OZZY DIES AT 76
Black Sabbath front man lived the 'dream'… pic.twitter.com/xH2W6o206y — New York Daily News (@NYDailyNews) July 23, 2025
Maxwell and her attorney, David Oscar Markus, met Blanche at the federal courthouse and talked for nine hours in Tallahassee, Florida, on Thursday and Friday.
Describing the meeting as 'very productive', Markus told the media that Maxwell 'answered every single question'. 'She never stopped. She never invoked her privilege. She never declined to answer. She answered all the questions truthfully, honestly, and to the best of her ability.'
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
However, Trump's latest move is more suspicious for several reasons.
First, Blanche didn't reveal what transpired in the meeting and only tweeted, 'The Department of Justice will share additional information about what we learned at the appropriate time.'
If a video or a transcript of the meeting isn't made public, it will only fuel the suspicions of a cover-up.
Second, Maxwell is the only living source of Epstein's crimes. If the DoJ and FBI were so eager to 'hear what she has to say about anyone who has committed crimes against victims', as Blanche said earlier, why did they wait for several months?
Third, Maxwell should have been interviewed by a prosecutor involved in the case, not a political appointee and Trump's former personal defence lawyer, who is also friends with Markus. It's a glaring case of conflict of interest. 'You are by far the best out there,' Blanche told Markus during a joint appearance on a podcast last year and labelled him a .
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
Fourth, less than two weeks ago, on July 14, the DoJ opposed Maxwell's appeal to the US Supreme Court in April.
In a plea deal with Florida prosecutors in 2008, Epstein pleaded guilty to soliciting prostitution and soliciting minors to engage in prostitution on the assurance that the US attorney's office for the Southern District of Florida would not pursue federal criminal charges against him and his co-conspirators.
Maxwell argued in her petition that the plea deal also shielded her from criminal charges. However, the DoJ urged the court to reject her appeal because she had 'coordinated, facilitated and contributed to' Epstein's 'sexual abuse of numerous young women and underage girls' and that the plea deal didn't apply to New York prosecutors from bringing charges against her.
Now, the same DoJ wanted to hear what Maxwell had to say or reveal, exposing the frantic bid to shield Trump.
Fifth, Maxwell is a habitual liar. 'The defendant lies when it suits her,' her sentencing document reads. Therefore, she can't be trusted with what she told Blanche or tells Congress or the court unless backed by evidence. 'If she lies, they could charge her with lying,' Markus told reporters.
Not only the court but even the DoJ questioned her credibility in 2020.
In a , Maxwell, who lured and recruited minor girls for Epstein's sexual depravity, claimed not to know about Epstein's 'scheme to recruit underage girls for sexual massages'.
In 2020, the DoJ charged Maxwell with two counts of perjury. Prosecutors never tried for perjury as she was convicted of more serious charges. However, , the DoJ said that her 'willingness to brazenly lie under oath about her conduct … strongly suggests her true motive has been and remains to avoid being held accountable for her crimes'.
Now, the DoJ has granted her proffer immunity, meaning her responses, even if lies, can't be used against her.
Sixth, has Maxwell got any new information regarding Epstein? According to Markus, she answered questions about '100 different people' linked to Epstein. But Blanche has neither made the questions nor the names of the people public.
A give-and-take sweetheart deal with Maxwell?
In 2020, Trump twice wished Maxwell 'well' after her arrest in July.
In August, he told Axios in an interview, 'I wish her well. Her friend or boyfriend was either killed or committed suicide in jail. She's now in jail … Let them prove somebody was guilty.' In July, he told reporters that he had 'met her numerous times over the years, especially since I lived in Palm Beach, and I guess they lived in Palm Beach. But I wish her well.'
Interestingly, the DoJ approached Maxwell before her tentative deposition to the House on August 11 following the subpoena.
If she 'agrees to testify before Congress and not take the 5th [Amendment]—and that remains a big if—she would testify truthfully as she always has said she would and as she will with Mr Blanche,' Markus told reporters before the meeting.
The DoJ also ensured to meet Maxwell before the Supreme Court, which is in recess, fixes a trial date for her appeal.
According to her brother Ian, Maxwell is collecting 'new evidence' to present to the court that 'was not available to the defence at her 2021 trial, which would have had a significant impact on its outcome'.
It's too early to predict the outcome of the Blanche-Maxwell meeting—but Maxwell wouldn't have spoken in Trump's favour, if not against, unless she gets something in return.
What Maxwell says in her House deposition or presents to the court will depend on what transpired with Blanche.
The possibility of Maxwell turning hostile or naming Trump to damage him is not high.
On the other hand, she could have claimed that Trump wasn't involved in the sexual exploitation of minor girls, which would end the controversy.
In return, Maxwell would seek leniency or commutation or even pardon from Trump. Since she was charged in a federal court, the president can commute her sentence or pardon her.
Though Markus told ABC News that 'there have been no asks and no promises'.
'We haven't asked for anything. This is not a situation where we are asking for anything in return for testimony or anything like that, he said, but added that she 'would welcome any relief.'
However, on his way to Scotland, Trump didn't shut the door to a pardon for Maxwell. 'Well, I don't want to talk about that,' he said, but added, 'It's something I haven't thought about. I'm allowed to do it.'
Later, Markus said that they haven't approached Trump for a pardon but added, '… the president this morning said he had the power to do. So, we hope he exercises that power in the right and just way.'
Markus had already hinted at a possible arrangement. 'We are grateful to President Trump for his commitment to uncovering the truth in this case,' he had said before the meeting, adding that Trump is the and praising his .
In fact, Trump considered pardoning Maxwell in his first term, as he was 'very wary' about what she might reveal, claims American author and journalist Michael Wolff.
'The president became very wary about the arrest of Ghislaine Maxwell. He asked, 'What could she say? What would she say?' And should he pardon her?' Wolff said on the Daily Beast podcast earlier this month.
According to famous lawyer Alan Dershowitz, who represented Epstein, Mike Tyson, and Julian Assange and was part of the defence team of Trump during his first impeachment trial in 2020, 'She's [Maxwell] going to make a deal.'
Dershowitz, who allegedly had sex with Epstein's late victim Virginia Giuffre, at least, six times and watched the sexual abuse of other minors, added, 'That's the way things are done. They make deals with the Mafia. So, I'm certain they are going to try to make a deal with her.'
The Epstein Problem is Trump's Own Making
The Epstein controversy arose after Trump's DoJ . Earlier this month, Attorney General Pam Bondi said in an unsigned memo that there was no 'incriminating 'client list''. Did the notorious sex offender have a client list that wasn't incriminating?
The DoJ and FBI also concluded that Epstein's death was a suicide, the biggest U-turn considering their boss had doubts about Epstein's suicide in his first term.
'…how did it happen? Was it suicide? Was he killed?' Trump had said in the Axios interview in August 2020.
When a Maga heavyweight rebelled, Trump jumped to Bondi's defence—like he did for then-NSA Mike Waltz and Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth in the Signalgate blowback.
That didn't help calm down the furious Maga members, several of whom strongly believe QAnon's paedophile ring conspiracy theory and that a deep state run by government and intelligence elites hides the truth about issues like child sex trafficking.
Far-right activist Laura Loomer, who has Trump's ear, demanded the appointment of a special counsel to look into the matter.
Moreover, Bondi's comment to Fox News in February that she had an Epstein 'client list' that was 'sitting on my desk right now to review' following a Trump directive stoked the fire.
Kash Patel, before being appointed FBI director, publicly said that paedophiles were on the Epstein list and derided House GOP members for failing to release it.
After the tottering defence of his loyalists, the President lost his mind and slammed his core base of 'weakling' voters and accused them of backing the Epstein 'hoax' created by the 'radical left' and the Democrats.
Trump got a little reprieve with Maga heavyweights, like Bannon and Loomer, rallying behind him after The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) reported last week that he had sent a bawdy birthday letter, including his signature and an outline of a naked woman, to Epstein when he turned 50 in 2003.
As Trump comprehensively denied the report, Maga stars were back defending Trump.
However, the Epstein problem refuses to go away.
Several polls show that an increasing number of Americans disapprove of Trump's handling of the Epstein investigation and want all files to be released.
A CBS News/YouGov poll showed that around 90 per cent of Americans, including 83 per cent of Republicans, think that the DoJ should release all the information regarding Epstein.
According to a Quinnipiac University poll, about 66 per cent of Americans, including 36 per cent of GOP supporters, disapprove of Trump's handling of the release of Epstein files.
An Economist/YouGov poll showed that 56 per cent of Americans 'strongly or somewhat' disapprove of Trump's handling of the Epstein probe. Moreover, 89 per cent of Democrats and 73 per cent of Republicans want all documents to be made public. Eighty-four per cent of Democrats and 53 per cent of Republicans believe that the Trump administration is covering up evidence.
Even House Republicans are divided with some openly defying Speaker Mike Johnson and joining the Democrats.
An increasing bipartisan chorus of lawmakers has called for a full release of the Epstein files, forcing Johnson to adjourn them to an early recess. However, the House Oversight Committee voted before adjournment to subpoena the DoJ to provide the Epstein files to Congress.
House Oversight Chairman James Comer (Kentucky) told reporters that the panel will 'move quickly' to issue a subpoena to the DoJ.
Now, even Johnson says that the Epstein case isn't a 'hoax' and wants 'full transparency'. 'We want full transparency,' he told CBS News.
Despite the DoJ concealing the Epstein files, information that Trump's association with the rapist-financier ran deeper than believed is trickling in bit by bit every other day to unnerve him.
Trump is making the mess messier by denying or rubbishing every new secret tumbling out of the closet or giving concessions.
The latest bombshell was dropped by WSJ on Wednesday. In May, Bondi informed Trump that his name was among the many high-profile people in the Epstein files. Last week, Trump said, 'No, no,' when asked whether Bondi told him he was named in the files. However, now the White House has termed the WSJ report fake news.
Trump reacted similarly to the exclusive CNN archived video footage and photos showing the rapist attending his second marriage (with Marla Maples) at the NYC's Plaza Hotel in 1993.
New Trump–Epstein Videos and Photos Uncovered
Newly uncovered photos and video show Donald Trump socializing with Jeffrey Epstein at high-profile events in the 1990s—including Trump's 1993 wedding and a 1999 Victoria's Secret show.
The footage, revealed by CNN, predates… pic.twitter.com/ehtIj74c3w — Clash Report (@clashreport) July 23, 2025
'You've got to be kidding me,' he told CNN's Andrew Kaczynski over the phone, called the network 'fake news' and hung up after 30 seconds.
They were also seen together at the opening of the Harley Davidson Café in the same year, at a 1997 Angels party and Victoria's Secret fashion event—all in New York.
Similarly, Trump shot back at the WSJ birthday letter report despite evidence to the contrary. 'I never wrote a picture in my life. I don't draw pictures of women,' he told the newspaper and sued it for $20 billion.
However, Lowery Lockard, who ran the auction for Hattie Larlham, a nonprofit foundation, told CNN that Trump sent her two signed drawings for an Ohio charity auction in 2004. She collected around 150 drawings from celebrities for the auction. Trump drew the New York City skyline with a signed waiver.
The Trump administration's actions after mid-May triggered suspicions of a cover-up and ended in a disaster.
What started as a much-hyped promise by Bondi in February and March to release 'a truckload of evidence' and 'full Epstein files' to Trump's April comment that '100% of all of these documents are being delivered' fizzled out by mid-May.
Both Patel and his deputy, Dan Bongino, claim that Epstein committed suicide. A week later, Bongino says, 'There is nothing in the file at this point on the Epstein case.'
On July 7, the DoJ released the memo—and the deluge of suspicions, conspiracy theories, and allegations of a cover-up swamp Trump and his coterie.
When Trump's bile failed to stem the Epstein tide, he relented.
Following the WSJ letter report, Trump ordered Bondi to unseal 'pertinent' grand jury transcripts from the Epstein case. However, the move has already backfired in Florida, where a judge denied Bondi's request to release additional jury transcripts. Several such requests are pending.
The writer is a freelance journalist with more than two decades of experience and comments primarily on foreign affairs. He tweets as @FightTheBigots. Views expressed in the above piece are personal and solely those of the writer. They do not necessarily reflect Firstpost's views.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


India Today
a few seconds ago
- India Today
Modi misread Trump: Now India pays the price
A war of words has erupted between New Delhi and Washington, exposing the fragility of what was once hailed as a geopolitical success story. India has hit back hard at US President Donald Trump's threat to hike tariffs on Indian goods over continued imports of Russian oil, calling the targeting "unjustified and unreasonable" whilst slamming what it perceives as Washington's double The so-called Modi-Trump bromance, once paraded as diplomatic triumph, is now cracking under the weight of harsh reality. What began with mutual praise and public spectacle, from the "Howdy Modi" event in Houston to the grand "Namaste Trump" reception in Ahmedabad, has devolved into accusations, tariffs, and transactional Fatal MiscalculationOne of New Delhi's fundamental missteps was assuming that warm handshakes and mega-rallies could override hard economic interests. Modi's outreach to Trump was personal, public, and passionate, but Trump doesn't separate business from bromance. The "great friend" narrative gave India false confidence that proved Modi threw his weight behind Trump, literally sharing the stage with him in Houston and Ahmedabad, it was a bet on personal chemistry over policy complexity. India saw Trump not as a volatile businessman-president, but as a dealmaker who'd favour "friends." The reality? Trump doesn't do friendships, he does leverage. And India misread that playbook temples in Varanasi to villages in Gujarat, people performed pujas praying for Trump's victory. Modi had pulled off spectacular diplomatic theatre, and India felt it had America in its corner. Yet Trump's loyalty lies only with the US balance sheet, viewing India as a trade surplus machine rather than a strategic Russian Oil WedgeIndia's dependence on Russian oil has become the new wedge in this deteriorating relationship. With crude prices volatile and energy security paramount, India turned to Moscow for discounted supply, with Russia now accounting for up to 40% of India's oil imports. Trump, who views foreign policy through a profit-loss lens, sees this as lashed out, accusing India of undermining the West's Ukraine strategy and "helping Putin," with tariffs becoming punishment. Worse still, he's framed it as India profiting from global chaos. Modi's government finds itself caught in a trilemma: oil security, global optics, and Trump's offensive 4th August 2025, India's Ministry of External Affairs dropped a diplomatic bombshell in response. Calling Trump's tariff threats "unjustified and unreasonable," the MEA emphasised that India's oil purchases are driven by survival, not sympathy for Moscow. With Middle Eastern oil redirected to Europe after the Ukraine war, India had little choice but to buy discounted Russian crude to shield its economy. India's anger wasn't merely economic, it was moral. The statement highlighted US and EU hypocrisy, pointing out how the West continues trading heavily with Russia in everything from uranium to fertilisers, yet singles out India for 25% Tariff HammerTrump's imposition of a 25% tariff on all Indian goods wasn't just economic muscle-flexing, it was a warning shot. The US goods trade deficit with India stood at $45.7 billion in 2024, which Trump views as theft, plain and simple. His administration has revived old complaints about high tariffs, restricted market access, regulatory red tape, and "unfair" practices in pharmaceuticals, agriculture, and most jarring for India was Trump's renewed outreach to Pakistan, military meetings, energy cooperation discussions, and vague proposals of "regional balance." For a country that expected Trump to be firmly in its anti-Pakistan corner, this felt like betrayal, exposing another blind spot in India's strategic Path ForwardIndia must now abandon illusions of personal diplomacy. Trump is a negotiator, not a friend, he respects leverage, not loyalty. New Delhi must shift from sentimentality to strategy, from ceremonial displays to pragmatic biggest lesson? Don't tie national strategy to individual leaders. American policy is shifting toward hard realism, and India must do the same. This means engaging not as a junior partner seeking approval, but as a sovereign power navigating a multipolar obsession with optics, handshakes, stagecraft, mega-events, must give way to tough negotiations, quiet diplomacy, and pragmatic positioning. Because Trump isn't here to dance at "Namaste Trump" events, he's here to deal. And if Modi wants to succeed, it's time to stop praying and start playing hardball politics.- Ends

Time of India
a few seconds ago
- Time of India
‘US Hegemony Cracking': Russia Blasts Trump For Blackmailing BRICS Nations
/ Aug 05, 2025, 11:40PM IST Russia has accused the Trump administration of pushing a "neocolonial" economic agenda against the Global South through politically motivated sanctions and tariffs. Moscow says the U.S. is trying to maintain its global dominance as a multipolar world emerges. Citing Trump's latest tariff wave, Russia vowed to strengthen ties with BRICS and other like-minded nations. India also hit back at U.S. threats over its Russian oil trade, exposing Western double standards.
&w=3840&q=100)

Business Standard
a few seconds ago
- Business Standard
US rejects India's WTO tariff talks request on steel, aluminium: Govt
The US did not accept India's request for consultations under an agreement of the World Trade Organisation (WTO) concerning American tariffs on steel, aluminium, and related derivative products, Parliament was informed on Tuesday. The US has maintained that these measures were introduced on the grounds of national security, Minister of State for Commerce and Industry Jitin Prasada said in a written reply to the Lok Sabha. India, however, considers these measures to be safeguard actions that should have been notified and subjected to consultations under the WTO's Agreement on Safeguards (AoS). "India has accordingly reserved its right to suspend substantially equivalent concessions (right to impose equal trade measures in response) due to the US's non-compliance with its obligations under the AoS," he said. In a separate reply, the minister said India is actively involved in the discussions with the US on the Bilateral Trade Agreement (BTA) with the aim to expand trade and investment. India-US bilateral trade agreement negotiations were launched in March 2025. Five rounds of negotiations have been held, the last being from July 14-18th, 2025, at Washington, USA. "To safeguard the interests of farmers and the domestic industry, international trade negotiations allow for the inclusion of sensitive, negative, or exclusion lists -- categories of goods on which limited or no tariff concessions are granted," he said. In addition, in case of surge in imports and injury to the domestic industry, a country is allowed to take recourse to trade remedial measures such as anti-dumping and safeguards on imports. In another reply, the minister said India has not taken any decision to suspend or restrict trade or tourism activities with Turkey and Azerbaijan. However, the import from Turkey has declined from USD 3.78 billion in 2023-24 to USD 2.99 billion in 2024-25. The major items imported from Turkey during 2024-25 include Petroleum Crude, Gold, Inorganic Chemicals, Granite, Natural Stones and Aircraft & Spacecraft parts. The major items of import from Azerbaijan during 2024-25 include Finished Leather, Medical and Scientific Instruments, Raw Hides and Skins, Fruits/Vegetables Seeds and Hand Tools, Cutting Tools of Metals.