Court Filing: 660
Summary
The US Attorney's Office files a motion to exclude time for Counts Seven and Eight under the Speedy Trial Act until the scheduled sentencing date of June 28, 2022, in the case against Ghislaine Maxwell. The government intends to dismiss these counts at sentencing but seeks the exclusion as a precaution. Defense counsel consents to this exclusion.
This document is from the epstein-docs Archive.
View Source CollectionPersons Referenced (10)
Related Documents (6)
Court Filing: 541
The US Attorney's office submits a letter to Judge Alison J. Nathan arguing that a statement in an email is not admissible and requires additional context, and therefore refuses to enter into a stipulation regarding Robert Glassman's testimony. The government had previously conferred with defense counsel on the matter. The letter is in relation to the ongoing case against Ghislaine Maxwell.
Court Filing: 486
The document is a letter from the US Attorney's Office to Judge Alison J. Nathan, informing her that the government is filing a motion to quash a subpoena and related documents with proposed redactions to protect the privacy of minor victims and witnesses. The defense has indicated they are not seeking redactions.
Court Filing: 509
The US Attorney's office requests permission to file a reply brief regarding the defendant's opposition to the government's motion to preclude Dr. Ryan Hall's testimony, addressing new arguments about hearsay exceptions and the report's relevance.
Court Filing: 524
The US Attorney's office requests that the court inform the jury that Witness-3's testimony is limited by the court's instructions, to mitigate potential prejudice to the Government. The proposed jury instruction aims to clarify the relevance and limitations of Witness-3's testimony regarding interactions with Ghislaine Maxwell and Jeffrey Epstein.
Court Filing: 539
The US Attorney's office requests that the court order Ghislaine Maxwell's defense team to provide the government with a list of witnesses they plan to call, along with the order in which they will be called. The defense had previously provided a list of 35 witnesses in alphabetical order but did not provide the order. The government argues that this information is necessary and cites their own prior disclosures as precedent.
Court Filing: 603
The US Attorney's Office responds to Ghislaine Maxwell's proposed redactions to court briefing regarding Juror 50, arguing that they are overbroad and inconsistent with the court's previous order. The government advocates for making Juror 50's questionnaire public and opposes redactions of legal arguments about the jury pool composition.
This document was digitized, indexed, and cross-referenced with 1,400+ persons in the Epstein files. 100% free, ad-free, and independent.