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Right after her arrest in July 2020, Ghislaine Maxwell went into survival mode — and behind the polished courtroom façade, she began quietly fishing for a pardon. Her legal team and inner circle floated the idea that she could “name names” connected to Jeffrey Epstein’s trafficking network if she were granted immunity or clemency. At the time, Donald Trump was still in office, and Maxwell’s camp appeared to believe they could leverage his public comments — particularly his infamous “I wish her well” remark — into something more substantial. Rumors circulated through legal and political channels that Maxwell’s attorneys were probing whether a preemptive pardon could be arranged before trial, suggesting she might have valuable information to trade. It was a desperate gambit, driven by the awareness that the evidence against her was overwhelming and that Epstein’s death had made her the last major target standing.
But the pardon never came. Trump, already under scrutiny for the Epstein connection, backed away publicly, saying he hadn’t considered it and that “no one had asked.” Inside the White House, advisers reportedly warned that granting clemency to Maxwell — a woman accused of grooming and trafficking minors — would be political suicide. As a result, her quiet lobbying efforts died on the vine. When the administration’s final list of pardons was released in January 2021, her name was nowhere to be found. Instead, she was left to face the full weight of the justice system alone — a would-be power player turned prisoner, watching the man she once might have counted on to save her walk away without lifting a finger.
to contact me:
[email protected]
Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.
But the pardon never came. Trump, already under scrutiny for the Epstein connection, backed away publicly, saying he hadn’t considered it and that “no one had asked.” Inside the White House, advisers reportedly warned that granting clemency to Maxwell — a woman accused of grooming and trafficking minors — would be political suicide. As a result, her quiet lobbying efforts died on the vine. When the administration’s final list of pardons was released in January 2021, her name was nowhere to be found. Instead, she was left to face the full weight of the justice system alone — a would-be power player turned prisoner, watching the man she once might have counted on to save her walk away without lifting a finger.
to contact me:
[email protected]
Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.
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