A few days ago I wrote up our first bit on the Mossad Maxwell trial. You can read that here. We haven’t given this enough coverage, but we’ll be doing similar to what we did with the Smollett trial. In that trial, we started about a week late, and got caught up through multiple days until the end of the trial.
The Ghislaine “Mossad” Maxwell trial was supposed to take about six weeks, so I thought I had all the time in the world to get caught up. Unfortunately, probably in order to throw the case, the prosecution has rested their case after just 10 days, so I have to start a little early.
Here’s a blitz through the first week of the trial, which will take us up to about a week ago. We will write another article to get live, and then cover the trial every day until its conclusion.
AP:
The first week of the sex-abuse trial of Ghislaine Maxwell saw the first of her four main accusers taking the witness stand to give emotional testimony accusing the British socialite of coaxing her — at just 14 — into sexual encounters with financier Jeffrey Epstein.
The jury at the federal trial in Manhattan also heard from former employees who offered an inside look at a lavish lifestyle Epstein shared with Maxwell, who was his girlfriend and then his employee. Her lawyers say she’s a scapegoat for Epstein, who killed himself in 2019 while awaiting trial behind bars.
Yeah, about that.
We’ll have to write an article on the Epstein Murder. Everything from the two security guards “falling asleep,” to all the cameras mysteriously not working, to Epstein killing himself by hurling himself at Mach 2 from a kneeling start and breaking his neck.
Just know that 45% of Americans are sure that he was murdered, 39% are “undecided” fags, and only 16% are true NPC fleshbots who uncritically repeat whatever the WMD Liars tell them to believe. So don’t be gaslit into thinking that Epstein killing himself is a thing that people actually believe.
The first Maxwell accuser’s story began innocently enough: She was a 14-year-old eating ice cream at a music camp in 1994 when she was approached by Epstein and Maxwell, walking her Yorkie. What followed over the next few years, the accuser said, scarred her for life.
The witness — a woman now in her early 40s who was introduced to jurors as “Jane” to protect her privacy — testified that Maxwell and Epstein groomed her by taking her shopping and inviting her and her mother to Epstein’s mansion in Palm Beach, Florida.
Soon she was visiting the home by herself when, she said, Maxwell and Epstein lured her into unwanted sexual contact that Maxwell treated as “no big deal.” It was a pattern prosecutors hope to prove was repeated over and over with other girls and young women.
On Friday, the prosecution unfolded a green massage table from the Epstein home to corroborate the accuser’s testimony that massages were used as pretense for the sexual encounters.
The defense demanded to know why “Jane” had taken so long to come forward.
“I was scared,” she said, choking back tears. “I was embarrassed, ashamed. I didn’t want anybody to know any of this about me.”
One of the ways (((propagandists))) are trying to keep a lid on this trial is, in addition to not covering it, pretending that this was all about getting underage girls for Epstein to rape. This is of course complete nonsense. Ghislaine Maxwell was the daughter of a Mossad bigwig, and Maria Farmer made it extremely clear that these people are jew supremacists, who believe non jews are simply subhuman cattle that exist to serve them.
The purpose of getting underage girls is so that they can get blackmail on various important people. I know this is obvious, but it needs to be repeated. This was an Israeli operation.
Prosecutors say Maxwell created “a culture of silence” to shroud her and Epstein’s crimes. And a piece of evidence seemed to put that culture in writing.
Those instructions were part of a 58-page booklet with rules for staff working at the mansion. As if to drive home the point about keeping Maxwell and Epstein’s secrets, prosecutors say Epstein ordered the construction of a detached staff quarters surrounded by a tall wall that prevented any view of the main house.
Juan Alessi, a former estate manager, testified he considered the privacy measure “a kind of warning that I was supposed to be blind, deaf and dumb, to say nothing of their lives.”
The defense displayed some of the tactics it plans to use to discredit “Jane” and three other key accusers who are slated to testify before the end of the month.
Maxwell’s lawyers are seeking to portray their accounts of abuse as unreliable, suggesting they have faulty memories and are being manipulated by lawyers encouraging them to play up Maxwell’s role in civil claims after Epstein died. One of the lawyers went so far as to infer that “Jane” — a veteran television actor — could be using her acting skills to embellish her testimony.
The lawyer ran down some of the plot lines “Jane” has tackled over the years: protective mom, victim of bullying, someone stalked by serial killers, prostitute. “Not my favorite role,” the witness said of the last.
When asked whether her background made her adept giving a “melodramatic and sentimental treatment of interpersonal situations,” she demurred.
“Hopefully, not melodramatic,” she said. “Just dramatic.”
Manlets everywhere nodding their heads in agreement.
But seriously, the first week was nothing too dramatic of surprising. They had a woman accuse them of grooming her, Maxwell’s team tries to do character assassination.
Coming up next, we see three more accusers, logs from Epstein’s flights, and some fedex receipts showing gifts.
Except of course that this isn’t really the interesting details from the Maxwell trial. Or maybe it is from the trial itself, but not so much from the entire Maxwell Affair more broadly.
Unfortunately the Maxwell Tracker Telegram channels that I was following appear to be, on closer inspection, QAnon retard shit, calling for “muh patriots,” to something something globalist elite. Sending me down rabbit holes that lead to absolutely nothing of value or interest.
The truly spicy details may well be lost for now, which is why it is so important we blitz through the old stuff, get up to date, so I can follow the case live and decide what is and is not important. I’ll keep you posted.
[…] part 2 here, and part 1 […]
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