NEW After hearing thousands of last words, this hospital chaplain has advice for the living
Hospital chaplain J.S. Park opens up about death, grief and hearing thousands of last words, and shares his advice for the living.
Ghislaine Maxwell's defence attorneys sought Wednesday to undermine a key accuser's allegation that the British socialite helped financier Jeffrey Epstein sexually abuse the woman for years, starting when she was 14.
The trial witness, who has said she's using the pseudonym “Jane” to protect her 22-year acting career, had testified in graphic detail on Tuesday about the alleged encounters in the 1990s, portraying Maxwell as an active participant.
During a methodical cross examination, defence attorney Laura Menninger confronted the woman with FBI documents from 2019 and 2020, saying she had told the government her memory was foggy on whether Maxwell was present when Epstein molested her and on whether she ever touched her.
Other documents claimed she said that no abuse occurred during a visit to Epstein's ranch in New Mexico. That contradicted her testimony about alleged encounters with him there that she said made “my heart sink into my stomach.”
The witness denied ever changing her story. She challenged the accuracy of the documents, saying her statements were never recorded.
“This was just someone jotting down notes. A lot of these are not correct,” she said.
At another point, she responded, “I don't recall saying what's written here.”
She did not dispute other documents saying she had named several “model types” and other women she said witnessed participating in group massages with Epstein. She also confirmed telling the FBI she once flew on a private jet with Britain's Prince Andrew.
Maxwell, 59, has pleaded not guilty to charges that prosecutors say show that she and Epstein were “partners in crime.” The defence has countered by claiming she's being made a scapegoat for 66-year-old Epstein, who killed himself in his Manhattan jail cell in 2019 as he awaited his own sex trafficking trial.
On Tuesday, the accuser described numerous sexual encounters with Maxwell and Epstein that began in 1994 and continued through 1997. When recounting the first time she was abused by Epstein, she said she was “frozen in fear.”
Another time, she said she was taken to a massage room where he and Maxwell both took advantage of her. Other encounters involved sex toys or turned into oral sex “orgies” with other young women and Maxwell, she added.
On cross examination, the defence also attacked the witness' credibility by asking why she waited over 20 years to report the alleged abuse by Maxwell to law enforcement. And Maxwell's attorney asked Jane, an actor, about her television roles - a cancer patient, a car crash victim, someone with mental health issues, a prostitute - suggesting she may have applied her professional craft to her testimony.
The last one “was not my favorite role,” Jane said before pushing back on Menninger's characterizations of her work as melodramatic.
“You want to call it `melodramatic.' I prefer `dramatic,”' she said.
She later choked up when a prosecutor asked her at the conclusion of her testimony why she didn't reveal everything about her experience with Epstein in her initial meetings with prosecutors.
“Because it was too difficult - too difficult emotionally, too difficult on every level,” she said.
Two of Maxwell's siblings, Kevin and Isabel, were among the spectators in the courtroom on Wednesday. The family has insisted she's innocent.
Outside court, Kevin Maxwell told reporters it was the first time he'd seen his jailed sister in more than 500 days and thanked deputy U.S. Marshals for allowing her to briefly speak to him before they took her out of the courtroom.
“Personally, it gave me a tremendous sense of to be close to her, to be able to actually see her in the flesh,” he said.
Hospital chaplain J.S. Park opens up about death, grief and hearing thousands of last words, and shares his advice for the living.
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