
Ghislaine Maxwell's immunity request denied by House Oversight Committee
The former accomplice and girlfriend of Jeffrey Epstein was hit with a subpoena last week to testify before Congress – from prison – amid a probe from lawmakers seeking to uncover more information about the disgraced financier's sex crimes. The subpoenaed deposition was scheduled for August 11.
On Tuesday, Maxwell's attorneys sent a letter to Chairman Comer indicating she would invoke her Fifth Amendment rights and stay silent in front of Congress, unless the immunity request was agreed upon. In Maxwell's immunity request, her attorney's offer clemency as a possible solution as well, indicating Maxwell "would be willing—and eager—to testify openly and honestly, in public, before Congress" if it were granted to her.
"The Oversight Committee will respond to Ms. Maxwell's attorney soon, but it will not consider granting congressional immunity for her testimony," a spokesperson told Fox News Digital after receiving the letter.
In their letter to Comer, Maxwell's attorneys said their client's testimony could pose both legal and security risks for their client. Maxwell's legal team also requested questions their client would be asked in advance of her testimony in front of Congress, but the Oversight spokesperson did not directly speak to that request.
Another request from Maxwell's attorneys was that the deposition date be delayed until after the Supreme Court rules on Maxwell's latest bid for an appeal. On Monday, Maxwell's attorneys asked the High Court to hear their client's appeal in her 2021 sex trafficking conviction, arguing the federal government "has an obligation to honor" a 2007 non-prosecution agreement that they believe should shield her from criminal charges.
"Ms. Maxwell should never have been charged in the first place. In 2008, the United States government promised, in writing, that she would not be prosecuted," Maxwell's attorneys wrote in their correspondence to Comer, adding she did not receive a fair trial when convicted in the Southern District of New York for sex trafficking in 2021. "[The government] broke that promise only after Mr. Epstein died in 2019—at which point Ms. Maxwell became a convenient scapegoat."
According to the attorneys, during Maxwell's case in the Southern District of New York prosecutors "wrongfully convinced the trial judge to unfairly limit Ms. Maxwell from presenting her defense, and at least one juror lied about a material fact during voir dire in order to serve on the jury."
Fox News Digital reached out to Maxwell's attorney, David Oscar Markus, for comment, but did not immediately receive a response.

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Politico
37 minutes ago
- Politico
A war is brewing over the future of the Republican Party. It's getting messy.
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CNN
37 minutes ago
- CNN
Trump and his allies mount a pressure campaign against US elections ahead of the midterms
A few weeks ago, Republican election officials in Colorado began receiving unsolicited calls and texts from a GOP consultant who said he was working with the Trump administration on 'election integrity.' In a text to one of the officials, the consultant, Jeff Small, indicated he was acting on a request from Stephen Miller, the White House deputy chief of staff. In a phone call with another clerk, Small said he was coordinating with the White House and the Justice Department to 'implement' an elections executive order signed by President Donald Trump, recalled Justin Grantham, the top election official in Fremont County. Grantham and Carly Koppes, who oversees elections in Weld County in northern Colorado, told CNN that Small made a specific request: Would they give a third party access to their election equipment? Both declined. 'Not only is that a hard no, I mean, you're not even going to breathe on my equipment,' Koppes said. The outreach to the Colorado clerks is just one of a flurry of recent federal actions launched by the Trump administration and groups aligned with the president. While the White House distanced itself from Small, Trump and his allies are collecting vast amounts of voter data and working to change the ground rules for next year's midterms, often by invoking federal government authority. Next year's midterms hold enormous stakes for Trump and his opposition. Democrats need to net just three seats in the US House in 2026 to flip control of the chamber from Republicans. A Democratic-led House could block Trump's legislative agenda and launch investigations of the president in the second half of his second term. Samantha Tarazi, CEO of the nonprofit Voting Rights Lab, which has closely tracked state developments, said she believes Trump is gearing up 'to use the power of his office to interfere in the 2026 election.' 'What started as an unconstitutional executive order — marching orders for state action regardless of its fate in court — has grown into a full federal mobilization to seize power over our elections,' she said. White House spokesperson Harrison Fields said Trump is 'fighting for election integrity' and will keep doing so 'despite Democrat objections that reveal their disdain for commonsense safeguards like verifying citizenship.' 'Free and fair elections are the bedrock of our Constitutional Republic, and we're confident in securing an ultimate victory in the courtroom,' he said in an email. Restricting who can access election machines and sensitive voting software has grown even more important to election officials in recent years following voting system breaches in states such as Colorado and Georgia. Trump allies had sought access to machines to find evidence that could back up the president's claim that widespread fraud marred the 2020 election. But election watchdogs and some Democratic election officials say activity by Trump and aligned groups since his return to the White House has raised fears of a broader effort to reshape elections. Recent actions by the administration and its allies include: Trump signing an executive order in March that sought to force states to require proof of citizenship to register to vote and take 'enforcement action' against states that accept mail ballots after Election Day. Federal judges have blocked parts of the executive order, noting that the power to regulate elections rests with the states and Congress, not the president. The Republican National Committee pushing to obtain voter registration records from states. On the day Trump signed the executive order, the RNC sent records requests to 48 states and Washington, DC, seeking information on how they maintain voter registration lists. And the RNC has sued New Jersey – home to a closely watched gubernatorial race this fall – alleging officials there have failed to respond to its requests for voter data and documents related to voting machine audits. A spokesperson for New Jersey's elections division declined to comment on the litigation. The Justice Department asking more than a dozen states in recent weeks to provide voter lists, explain their procedures for removing potential ineligible voters from their rolls or discuss entering into information-sharing agreements to help the agency root out election fraud. The demands range from seeking copies of voting rolls in political battlegrounds such as Michigan to a broad request in Colorado to provide election records as far back as 2020. Republicans in Texas undertaking a rare mid-decade redistricting, following entreaties from Trump. A map released Wednesday by GOP lawmakers who control the state legislature aims to take over five additional Democratic seats, which would to give the GOP the edge in 30 of the state's 38 congressional districts. The Republican-controlled House in April approving the SAVE Act, which mirrors parts of Trump's executive order requiring proof of citizenship to register to vote. The proposed legislation also would make it a crime for election officials to mistakenly register someone to vote who has not provided proof of citizenship. Critics note that it's already illegal for noncitizens to cast ballots in federal elections and say requiring proof of citizenship could disenfranchise eligible voters who lack the needed documents or changed their name through marriage. To justify the redistricting in his state, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott cited a letter from Harmeet Dhillon, head of the Justice Department's civil rights division, that challenged the legality of four existing congressional districts. Dhillon said in a statement: 'Clean voter rolls and basic election safeguards are requisites for free, fair, and transparent elections.' She said the agency 'has a statutory mandate to enforce our federal voting rights laws, and ensuring the voting public's confidence in the integrity of our elections is a top priority of this administration.' Trump has been blunt about his partisan goals in Texas, and he has suggested that other GOP-controlled states should pursue their own redistricting efforts – a move that threatens to set off an all-out redistricting war this year with Democrats in California and other Democrat-led states. The administration's recent actions have unsettled some election officials, who have endured years of threats and harassment following the 2020 election and the conspiracy theories about election fraud that flourished in its aftermath. Election officials 'are surfing on quicksand,' said David Becker, executive director and founder of the nonpartisan Center for Election Innovation & Research and a former DOJ voting rights attorney. 'They don't know what the executive order means, if it has any meaning whatsoever,' he said. 'They don't know if they will be investigated just for having done their jobs. They don't know if the vast power of the federal government is going to be weaponized against them. They don't know if the Department of Justice is going to be suing them.' A recent survey of 858 local election officials by the liberal-leaning Brennan Center for Justice at New York University's Law School bears that out. It found more than half of local election officials – 59% – say they are concerned about political leaders engaging in efforts to interfere with how election officials do their jobs. And 46% said they were concerned about politically motivated investigations of their work or that of their fellow election officials. In early July, as previously reported by The Washington Post and media outlets in Colorado, Republican election clerks began receiving calls and texts from Small. Small, who has worked for Colorado GOP Rep. Lauren Boebert and for the US Interior Department during Trump's first term, now is a principal with a Denver public affairs firm. County officials interviewed by CNN said Small told them he was reaching out specifically to Republican clerks in blue states in a push to help advance Trump's executive order. Grantham, the election clerk in Fremont County, said Small's outreach to only Republican officials was an early red flag during their conversation. Another concern arose, he said, when Small mentioned gaining access to the county's election equipment. 'My response was, 'I didn't believe that the president had the authority in the Constitution to write executive orders to affect elections and that until the Supreme Court found that he could, I would not let anybody access my voting equipment.' CNN reached out to Small, and his attorney, Suzanne Taheri, responded to CNN's inquiry. In a text, Taheri said Small's outreach 'supported efforts by allies in the administration to encourage officials to participate in President Trump's election security executive order.' He undertook the activity 'on a volunteer basis, during his own free time, while on paternity leave,' she added. Neither Small nor Taheri answered questions about who exactly in the administration asked him to contact the clerks. The White House distanced itself from Small's actions in a statement. 'Jeff Small does not speak for the White House nor was he ever authorized to do official business on behalf of the White House,' a White House spokesperson said in an email to CNN. Miller did not respond to CNN requests for comment. In Colorado, election officials say, there is heightened sensitivity around who can access election equipment, after the high-profile prosecution of former Mesa County elections clerk, Tina Peters. She became a celebrity among pro-Trump activists who have advanced false claims that voting machines had been rigged to flip votes from Trump to then-candidate Joe Biden in the 2020 election. Many state laws set strict security standards for voting machines to prevent tampering with elections. Colorado has specifically barred third parties from accessing election equipment. 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Yahoo
43 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Puppy prison: Inside Ghislaine Maxwell's new home
When Ghislaine Maxwell was convicted of sex trafficking underage girls to the paedophile Jeffrey Epstein in December 2021, her victims rejoiced, no doubt imagining the British socialite under lock and key, wearing orange overalls. But the reality of Maxwell's life behind bars is very different. Having been transferred to a minimum security prison in Texas from Florida, Epstein's ex-girlfriend can spend the rest of her 20-year sentence cuddling puppies and pampering herself with anti-ageing face creams. Similar to the upmarket retreats she no doubt grew accustomed to during her former life of luxury, the Federal Prison Camp (FPC) Bryan in Texas offers yoga classes and a fully-stocked gym. Described as a 'luxury' facility by her victims, Maxwell will be rubbing shoulders with other wealthy inmates and can spend the earnings from her prison jobs on cosmetics. Bryan grants its female prisoners the freedom to roam the facility's expansive grounds with limited to no perimeter fencing to pen them in. There are gardening opportunities for the green-fingered criminals. The 37-acre all-female facility, located 100 miles outside of Houston, is home to 635 inmates, according to the prison's website, most of whom are serving time for non-violent offences and white-collar crimes. Inmates sleep in bunk beds with four people per room. Julie Howell, 44, who self-surrendered in July to serve time at Bryan, said that the prison is 'nothing like you see on TV or in the movies because it's a camp, which only houses non-violent offenders'. Since arriving, she has enroled in the 'puppy programme', which involves playing with a 12-week old labrador all day and even sleeping in the same room as each other, she wrote on Facebook. The prison has a partnership with Canine Companions for Independence, which allows prisoners to train dogs to become service animals and is said to 'boost the inmates' morale, provide them with a sense of responsibility and improve overall behaviour', according to the programme's website. 'We do water and mud play and keep them busy from morning until night with some kennel rests in between,' Mrs Howell said. 'This is my 'job' while I'm here and it's literally 24/7 as the puppies stay in the room with us. It's me, my bunkie, and a puppy and we have to supervise the puppy at all times…I absolutely love it.' Besides Maxwell, the prison's celebrity clientele includes Elizabeth Holmes, the founder of Theranos, who is serving an 11-year sentence for defrauding investors by falsely claiming her company's blood-testing technology was revolutionary. Jen Shah, the Real Housewives of Salt Lake City star, is also doing a six-year stretch for conspiracy to commit wire fraud. Other high-profile inmates include Michelle Janavs, the Hot Pockets heiress, who served five months in Bryan for bribing university officials to inflate her daughters' exam scores. Lea Fastow, the wife of Enron chief executive and fellow convicted felon Andrew Fastow, also spent 11 months at the facility in 2005 for tax fraud after the Texas energy company collapsed. Holmes and Shah have each been pictured exercising in the prison camp's grounds, with the latter's team sharing an image of her skipping in May while wearing grey workout gear. 'I am in great spirits and well,' she captioned the post. 'I wanted to share a personal image that I mailed to my team of one of my shah-mazing workouts.' The facility is among the best in the country for convicts to serve time in, according to multiple lists compiled by inmates' rights groups. According to the prison handbook, life at the prison is centred around work, with prisoners earning up to $1.15 an hour for their jobs – many of which involve food service and factory work. These can even be off-site opportunities, for the best behaved prisoners. They can spend up to $360 a month of their earnings during assigned shopping days at a commissary, which sells beauty products including L'oreal Revita anti-ageing cream for $26.00, a Kerasal nailcare product for $20, and chest binders for trans prisoners for $26. Beyond work, inmates may take classes on foreign languages, gardening and beautification. They can play sports, watch television and attend religious services. They are also granted freedoms not available in most low security prisons, including more relaxed visiting hours and more time outside, and lower guard-to-inmate ratios. For inmates trying to trim down, the prison has a gym kitted out with treadmills, elliptical trainers, stairmasters and a range of weights. Outside, convicts can take part in sports including football, table tennis, softball, volleyball, weightlifting, yoga, Pilates and the Jumpstart weight loss programme. There are also picnic tables, bleachers and televisions available for prisoners to wind down. The Bryan prison camp also subscribes to rehabilitation programmes, such as one called 'assert yourself for female offenders', where 'women learn to be assertive without trampling the rights of others', according to a DoJ document from 2020. As she embarks on life at the new facility, Maxwell will rise at 6am each day for a roll-call with the other female inmates and will have to dress in a prison-issue khaki shirt and fatigues, according to the handbook. Inmates are permitted to have one approved radio or MP3 player and can wear minimal jewellery, such as a playing wedding band or a chain worth under $100. Breakfast consists of a choice of a hot or continental-style breakfast, while the lunch and dinner menu offers standard federal prison fare consisting of chicken, hamburgers, hotdogs, macaroni and tacos. Inmates are also allowed visitors during weekends and holidays, but along with other inmates, Maxwell would be allowed only limited physical contact with friends and family. Maxwell's victims blasted the decision to allow her to move prisons, saying the move 'smacks of a cover up'. 'Ghislaine Maxwell is a sexual predator who physically assaulted minor children on multiple occasions, and she should never be shown any leniency. Yet, without any notification to the Maxwell victims, the government overnight has moved Maxwell to a minimum security luxury prison in Texas,' the statement said. 'The American public should be enraged by the preferential treatment being given to a pedophile and a criminally charged child sex offender. 'The Trump administration should not credit a word Maxwell says, as the government itself sought charges against Maxwell for being a serial liar. This move smacks of a cover up. The victims deserve better.' The reason for her move to the less secure facility remains unclear, but comes a week after she was interviewed by Todd Blanche, Donald Trump's deputy attorney general, about information she holds on the Epstein Files. Capitalising on the recent attention her case has drawn, Maxwell's legal team have said she is willing to testify before Congress in exchange for a presidential pardon or having her sentence commuted – a possibility Mr Trump has not ruled out. Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.