Former British socialite Ghislaine Maxwell has appealed her 20-year prison sentence in New York for sex trafficking underage girls for the benefit of financier Jeffrey Epstein, according to a court document released Thursday.
The document does not detail the arguments of his lawyers, who had already announced their intention to appeal when the sentence was pronounced on June 28.
The daughter of British media magnate Robert Maxwell (died in 1991) and accomplice of Jeffrey Epstein – who committed suicide in prison in New York in August 2019 before his trial for sex crimes against minors – faced 55 years in prison.
She had been found guilty at the end of December of five of the six charges against her, including the most serious of sex trafficking of minors on behalf of Epstein, a financier with powerful economic and political relays.
During the trial, four victims of the system of sexual exploitation of underage girls set up by Jeffrey Epstein, had testified to the role played by Ghislaine Maxwell, his former companion, to recruit them, between 1994 and 2004.
The defense had tried to play down the role played by the former figure of the international jet set, who had herself blamed Jeffrey Epstein, presenting him as “a manipulator” when she spoke in court Manhattan Federal on June 28.
His lawyers also argued that among the victims, aged 14 to 17, some had exceeded the age of consent at the time of the facts, in the States where they had been committed.
Finally, they had questioned the impartiality of one of the jurors of the Manhattan court where she had been found guilty, because he had failed to reveal during the jury selection process that he himself had been a victim. sexual abuse in his childhood.