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Mega Edition: The Unsealing Of The Ghislaine Maxwell Deposition (5/17/26)
Published 8 hours ago
Description
Loretta Preska played a central role in the gradual unsealing of deposition transcripts and sealed court records tied to the defamation lawsuit brought by Virginia Giuffre against Ghislaine Maxwell. The lawsuit stemmed from Maxwell publicly calling Giuffre’s allegations “lies,” prompting Giuffre to sue her in federal court in 2015. For years, many of the filings, depositions, and exhibits remained hidden from public view under seal, triggering a lengthy legal battle involving media organizations, attorneys, and interested parties seeking transparency. Preska eventually ordered large portions of the material unsealed after appeals courts pushed for greater public access, especially given the enormous public interest surrounding the Jeffrey Epstein scandal. The released material included deposition testimony, emails, flight references, and discussions involving numerous powerful and high-profile individuals connected in some fashion to Epstein’s social orbit.
The unsealing process accelerated after Epstein’s 2019 arrest and Maxwell’s later criminal prosecution, with Preska repeatedly rejecting broad attempts to keep the records permanently hidden. In 2021, she also ordered portions of Maxwell’s 2016 deposition testimony released over Maxwell’s objections, ruling that Maxwell had only a minimal privacy interest in keeping the material secret. Those transcripts later became especially significant because prosecutors used parts of the deposition as the basis for perjury charges against Maxwell in her criminal case. By early 2024, thousands of additional pages tied to the Giuffre litigation were publicly released under Preska’s supervision, revealing names and details that had fueled speculation for years. While many of the names mentioned in the records were not accused of crimes, the release intensified scrutiny over the extent of Epstein’s network and renewed criticism that the courts had allowed sensitive material tied to one of the largest sex trafficking scandals in modern history to remain sealed for so long.
to contact me:
bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
The unsealing process accelerated after Epstein’s 2019 arrest and Maxwell’s later criminal prosecution, with Preska repeatedly rejecting broad attempts to keep the records permanently hidden. In 2021, she also ordered portions of Maxwell’s 2016 deposition testimony released over Maxwell’s objections, ruling that Maxwell had only a minimal privacy interest in keeping the material secret. Those transcripts later became especially significant because prosecutors used parts of the deposition as the basis for perjury charges against Maxwell in her criminal case. By early 2024, thousands of additional pages tied to the Giuffre litigation were publicly released under Preska’s supervision, revealing names and details that had fueled speculation for years. While many of the names mentioned in the records were not accused of crimes, the release intensified scrutiny over the extent of Epstein’s network and renewed criticism that the courts had allowed sensitive material tied to one of the largest sex trafficking scandals in modern history to remain sealed for so long.
to contact me:
bobbycapucci@protonmail.com